"Pls pray for Lebanon country (sic)," reads the caption of the footage published on Facebook.
The 30-second video clip shows clouds of dark smoke billowing from a large fire on the side of a road where vehicles are parked. Several people can be seen dragging what appears to be an injured person away from the inferno.
Also Read: Aftermath Image Of 2015 Warehouse Explosion In China Shared As Beirut
The video was also published in another Facebook post with the same claim.
However, it does not show the scene of the two explosions that devastated Beirut on August 4, 2020. This video was shot along Ismailia Road in a suburb of Cairo on July 14, 2020, when a fire broke out due to a leaking crude oil pipeline.
Using the InVID WeVerify tool, AFP Fact Check ran reverse image searches on keyframes of the video and found it was published by several news channels that reported on the incident, including American broadcaster ABC News.
Canada's Global News shared the footage on Twitter.
New on YouTube: Cars set ablaze after massive fire breaks out along pipeline in Egypt https://t.co/y187qaCiEm
— Globalnews.ca (@globalnews) July 14, 2020
These reports explained that the video shows blazes along the Shuqair-Mostorod crude oil pipeline in Cairo.
BBC journalist Mohamed Yehia also posted the footage on Twitter, explaining that it was filmed along Ismailia Road.
At the 46th second of a longer version of the video published by Global News, AFP Fact Check observed a blue signpost along the road with an indicator for "Cairo Airport".
Google Maps shows that Cairo International Airport is indeed situated along the same road where the fire broke out.
Two news agencies, Reuters and AP, also reported on the incident.
"A major fire broke out after a leak of oil from the Shuqair-Mostorod pipeline next to a busy highway in a Cairo suburb on Tuesday and 17 people were injured, authorities said," Reuters reported on July 14, 2020.
This video thus has no link to the explosions in Beirut.
Also Read: Video Claiming Missile Strike Caused Blast At Beirut Port Is Doctored
At least 150 people were killed and more than 6,000 injured in major blasts resulting from the ignition of a huge depot of ammonium nitrate in Beirut's port, as AFP reported here.
Numerous photos and videos of the Beirut blasts circulated on social media, including photos taken by AFP journalists.
Since the Beirut explosions, several false and misleading claims have circulated on social media, including that they were caused by a nuclear explosion. AFP Fact Check has debunked this claim.