Pregnant British woman who fled Lebanon feels ‘helpless’

by Pelican Press
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Pregnant British woman who fled Lebanon feels ‘helpless’

BBC Alla Ghalayini standing in Heathrow airport and looking straight at the camera. She is wearing a black hooded top, and a light gold coloured head scarf, gripping onto her luggage. Behind her people can be see sitting on airport seats, with a large arrival sign obscured behind a column. BBC

A British woman who fled Lebanon after fighting between Israel and Hezbollah intensified has said she feels “terrible and guilty” for leaving.

“I’m still in denial,” Alla Ghalayini told the BBC. “I can’t sleep. I still hear the bombs in my head.”

The 28-year-old is nearly two months pregnant with her first child. She looked exhausted as she arrived at London’s Heathrow Airport aboard a Middle East Airlines flight with two large suitcases on Sunday morning.

She says she left her husband behind – along with the life she loved.

There has been fighting between Israel and Hezbollah across the Lebanese border since the 7 October attack on Israel by Hamas. The Iran-backed militia, which is based in Lebanon, said it would continue until there was a ceasefire in Gaza.

In recent weeks, Israel has attacked areas it says are Hezbollah strongholds in different parts of Lebanon, including the capital, Beirut.

On Saturday, an Israeli strike in southern Beirut killed Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah, with Israel saying 20 more of the group’s senior members were killed in the attack.

Ms Ghalayini moved to Beirut from north London when she married in August last year.

She said she had no idea when she would see her husband again, or if she will be able to return to Lebanon before her baby is born.

Ms Ghalayini said the only commercial airline she could find leaving Beirut was Middle East Airlines – and she was only able to get a seat because her husband is a pilot for the company.

“I feel terrible and guilty that I have been able to leave,” she said.

“I didn’t want to leave my husband. My heart is with him.”

She said Beirut Airport, where she departed from, was “chaotic” and “rammed with people”, adding that the plane did not have an empty seat.

“[The flight] was obviously emotional – everyone had a story.

“Everyone on the plane felt at ease as soon as the airplane left Lebanese airspace. That’s because areas very close by to the airport were being bombed.”

Supplied Alla Ghalayini is sitting in a restaurant covered in festive lighting. She is smiling and wearing a dark headscarf, with a white top and a gold necklace. She appears to be holding the hand of whoever is taking the picture. Supplied

Ms Ghalayini left her life behind in Lebanon and does not know when she will be able to return

Ms Ghalayini said that, before she had left, the situation in the country felt “unbearable”.

“I was seeing buildings bombed, buildings falling, huge fires. It wouldn’t just be one bomb, it would be 20 explosions, one after the other,” she added.

“We were screaming. Hiding in the bathroom. I live on the 23rd floor, so I was seeing my city burn. You feel helpless.

“You smell flesh, see people still stuck under rubble.

“Being born and raised in London, I’ve never experienced anything like this.

“No one should have to go through what we’ve gone through.”

BBC News understands there are between 4,000 and 6,000 UK nationals including their dependents in Lebanon.

The Foreign Office told UK nationals in Lebanon to leave immediately on Saturday due to the escalating violence.

“We encourage you to book the next available flight, even if it is not a direct route,” it said in its official advice.

In a post on X, it said it was working “to increase capacity and secure seats for British nationals to leave”.

UK nationals in Lebanon have been told to register their presence to receive the latest information.

Alaa Ghalayini The skyline of Beirut, with a plume of smoke seen rising up on the horizon against a burnt orange skyline. Alaa Ghalayini

From her apartment on the 23rd floor, Alaa Ghalayini observed bombs falling on Beirut



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