At least nine people have been killed and several others injured when two adjoining buildings collapsed in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli, according to officials.
Civil defence director general Imad Khreish told Lebanese media late on Sunday that nine people had been killed, but that six others who were rescued were taken to hospital.
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The building consisted of two blocks, each containing six apartments, he added. Residents estimated that some 22 people were inside at the time of the collapse, he said.
Search-and-rescue operations were under way, with civil defence teams, supported by the Lebanese Red Cross and emergency and relief agencies, leading the efforts.
Residents of the neighbourhood also took part in rescue efforts, rushing to help remove debris and create openings in the collapsed building.
Mayor Abdel Hamid Karimeh told journalists that “we declare Tripoli a disaster-stricken city” due to the unsafe buildings.
“Thousands of our people in Tripoli are threatened due to years of neglect,” he said. “The situation is beyond the capabilities of the Tripoli municipality.”
Rescue workers and residents search for survivors in the rubble of a building that collapsed in the northern city of Tripoli, Lebanon, Sunday, February 8, 2026 [AP]
Members of the Internal Security Forces and Tripoli municipal police have evacuated residential buildings adjacent to the collapsed building, fearing their collapse, Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency (NNA) reported.
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun ordered all emergency services to be on high alert to assist in rescue operations and to provide shelter for the residents of the neighbouring buildings, according to the NNA report.
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Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said in a statement that the government is fully prepared to provide housing allowances for all residents of buildings that need to be evacuated.
“Given the magnitude of this humanitarian catastrophe, the result of years of accumulated neglect, and out of respect for the lives of the victims, I urge all those involved in politics, in Tripoli and elsewhere, to refrain from exploiting this horrific disaster for cheap and short-sighted political gains,” he said.
Minister of Justice Adel Nassar asked the public prosecutor in the north to open an immediate investigation into the incident, the NNA said, reporting that procedures had begun.
This latest disaster came after another deadly building collapse in Tripoli late last month.
In January, the head of the higher relief authority, Bassam Nablusi, citing Tripoli municipality statistics, said 105 buildings required “immediate warning notices to their residents to evacuate”.
Lebanon is dotted with derelict buildings, and many inhabited structures are in an advanced state of disrepair.
Many buildings were built illegally, especially during the 1975-1990 civil war, while some owners have added new floors to existing apartment blocks without permits.
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