Kuwait’s "Terror List": When Healing Becomes a Crime

The Kuwaiti regime has officially designated eight major Lebanese hospitals as "terrorist entities." This isn't just a legal filing; it is the criminalization of healthcare and a direct assault on the survival of the Lebanese people.
The Target List: (Al-Rasoul Al-Aazam, Sheikh Ragheb Harb, Salah Ghandour, Al-Amal, Dar Al-Hikma, Al-Batoul, Saint George - Hadath, and Al-Shifa). These are licensed, civilian medical institutions. They are lifelines for hundreds of thousands in the South, the Bekaa, and Beirut—regions already enduring the dual fires of military aggression and economic strangulation.
By blacklisting emergency rooms and surgical theaters without a shred of evidence, Kuwait is weaponizing counter-terrorism laws to serve a political vendetta.
This move mirrors the logic of the occupier: if you cannot break a people's will on the battlefield, you starve them of medicine and hope.
When a regime classifies a hospital as "terrorist," it provides the political cover for its eventual destruction. While some choose the path of complicity and siege, these hospitals will remain—as they always have—fortresses of resilience for the wounded and the weary.