UN says 600,000 displaced by Israel's war on Lebanon

UN says 600,000 displaced by Israel's war on Lebanon
The report noted that some 350,000 children in Lebanon have also been displaced, according to figures from UNICEF.
2 min read
10 October, 2024
Israel's air force has been bombarding Lebanon, including Beirut's southern suburbs [AFP via Getty Images]

The UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) announced on Wednesday that 600,000 people have been internally displaced across Lebanon since Israel intensified its assault on the country.

UNICEF recorded 350,000 children displaced by the war, and that 80 percent of the 978 collective shelters that are hosting Lebanon’s internally displaced are at capacity, the report added.

OCHA has received $51 million for its $425.7 million flash appeal to support Lebanon, but the report warned that "more is urgently needed to be able to continue to support Lebanese people in these challenging times".

The report comes as Israel's aerial bombardment and attempted ground invasion intensified, with an airstrike on Wednesday night killing five health workers in the town of Derdghaiya.

According to the Lebanese health ministry, Israel's bombardment has killed 2,141 people and wounded 10,099 more.

The Israeli military announced that overnight strikes also hit Beirut's southern suburb of Dahiyeh and areas across southern Lebanon.

This includes strikes that killed two Hezbollah commanders which the Israeli military claims were responsible for operations in the south.

The Israeli military also announced the death of a reservist soldier in fighting in southwest Lebanon who was part of the 146 Division's Alon Brigade, while a second reservist from the unit was wounded in the same incident.

Israel has confirmed the deaths of 12 soldiers since the beginning of ground operations in late September.

According to UNIFIL, Israeli soldiers fired on three position held by UN peacekeepers in the last 24 hours, with one incident on Wednesday saw the use of Israeli tank fire, with two peacekeepers being injured as a result. 

Two Israeli civilians were also killed after Hezbollah rockets struck the border town of Kiryat Shmona with more fire wounding eight in Haifa.

The US is increasingly viewing Israel's assault on Lebanon as an opportunity to end Hezbollah's role in Lebanese politics and elect a new president, according to The Wall Street Journal.

According, the report, both Secretary of State Antony Blinken and special envoy Amos Hochstein have spoken with Arab officials about the opportunity, and although the initiative has support from Saudi Arabia, both Egypt and Qatar have called the plan unrealistic.

Lebanon's speaker of parliament Nabih Berri told Asharq al-Awsat newspaper that the US government was doing nothing to stop Israel's invasion, even if it publicly supported a ceasefire.