Lebanon crisis update - OCHA, UNHCR
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Edited News | OCHA , UNHCR

Lebanon crisis update - OCHA, UNHCR

Story: Lebanon crisis update – OCHA, UNHCR

 

Speakers:

  • Imran Riza, Humanitarian Coordinator in Lebanon
  • Gonzalo Vargas Llosa, UNHCR Representative in Syria

TRT: 03’29”
SOURCE: UNTV CH
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
ASPECT RATIO: 16:9
DATELINE:  27 September 2024 - GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
RESTRICTIONS: None



SHOTLIST

  1. Exterior medium shot: UN flag alley.
  2. Wide shot of the UN Geneva Press room.
  3. SOUNDBITE (English) Imran Riza, Humanitarian Coordinator in Lebanon (from Beirut): “We are witnessing the deadliest period in Lebanon in a generation and many expressed their fear that this is just the beginning. The UN and its partners are closely coordinating with the Lebanese government to support the response efforts. This includes aligning aid distribution, conducting joint assessments, and identifying urgent needs for affected populations.”
  4. Medium shot of Press room and participants.
  5. SOUNDBITE (English) Gonzalo Vargas Llosa, UNHCR Representative in Syria (from the Syria-Lebanon border): “Tens of thousands of people have fled Lebanon for the relative safety of Syria, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) confirmed. “Over the past 72 hours the four border points where there are UNHCR staff, there are much more importantly, where people are crossing into Syria, so far they are safe and they have been open 24 hours a day. And we of course would make an appeal not only for the bombings in general to stop but also of course to avoid bombing people who are trying to flee.”
    Wide shot, Press room.
  6. SOUNDBITE (English) Gonzalo Vargas Llosa, UNHCR Representative in Syria (from the Syria-Lebanon border): “In terms of what we have been witnessing at the border over these last 72 hours, I mean, large numbers of people are returning. The estimate is that this figure is now well over 30,000 with about 75-80 per cent of those Syrians and the other 20 per cent or so Lebanese.”
  7. Medium-wide, Press room.
  8. SOUNDBITE (English) Gonzalo Vargas Llosa, UNHCR Representative in Syria (from the Syria-Lebanon border): “We have seen quite a few injured arriving; people who have been injured not only through the very arduous journey on the way here, but also injured as a direct result of the bombings in Lebanon. Yesterday, for example, we were here also and we saw a woman crossing with two dead children from Lebanon who were to be buried here in Syria.”
  9. Medium, Press room and podium, TV screen showing external speaker.
  10. SOUNDBITE (English) Imran Riza, Humanitarian Coordinator in Lebanon (from Beirut): “The health sector is completely overwhelmed at this time; we have done a great deal of preparedness work and luckily we have managed to get trauma kits and the like in and tried to have them distributed also throughout the country because now the displacement is happening not just in south; for the first 11 months it was mainly the south it was mainly the Bekaa, and within particular parameters there. But now it’s throughout the country.”
  11. Medium-wide, Press room and podium.
  12. SOUNDBITE (English) Imran Riza, Humanitarian Coordinator in Lebanon (from Beirut): “Here in Beirut, you have thousands of people that have arrived and are wondering where they go next. Many people, I mean anecdotally, we are running into people that are saying, ‘What’s the way to Tripoli? How do we get to there?'”
  13. Medium, journalists, participants, TV screens showing external speaker.
  14. Medium, Press room, participants.
  15. Medium, moderator at podium.
  16. Medium, Press room, participants.

Lebanon crisis: ‘This is just the beginning’ say communities impacted by deadly escalation

The sudden and massive escalation between Israel and the Hezbollah armed group in Lebanon has created widespread fear that even worse is to come, UN humanitarians said on Friday.

“We are witnessing the deadliest period in Lebanon in a generation and many expressed their fear that this is just the beginning,” said Imran Riza, the UN’s top aid official in Lebanon. “The UN and its partners are closely coordinating with the Lebanese government to support the response efforts. This includes aligning aid distribution, conducting joint assessments, and identifying urgent needs for affected populations.”

Speaking from Beirut, Mr. Riza, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Lebanon, said that for nearly a year, the country’s people – and especially those in the south – had “lived in fear” that the war in Gaza could come to them.

Today across Lebanon, thousands of people in rural communities previously unaffected by Israeli targeting of Hezbollah infrastructure have fled bombardment and widespread destruction that have claimed at least 700 lives, injured thousands and uprooted around 120,000 people “within mere hours”, he said, adding: “We are running into people that are saying, ‘What’s the way to Tripoli? How do we get to there?’”

The UN aid coordinator’s comments come amid increasingly intense exchanges of fire across the UN-patrolled line of separation between Lebanon and Israel since 7 October when war erupted in the Gaza Strip. Last week’s extraordinary targeting of Hezbollah pagers and walkie-talkies left hundreds dead and signalled the start of intense Israeli bombardment in Lebanon and retaliatory strikes by Hezbollah.

Crossing to relative safety

Tens of thousands of people have fled Lebanon for the relative safety of Syria at various crossing points which have been open 24 hours a day, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) confirmed. “Where people are crossing into Syria, so far they are safe,” said Gonzalo Vargas Llosa, UNHCR Representative in Syria, at the Syria-Lebanon border. “We of course would make an appeal not only for the bombings in general to stop but also of course to avoid bombing people who are trying to flee.”

Mr. Vargas Llosa described “large numbers of people” returning to Syria, a reference to some of Lebanon’s approximately 1.5 million Syrians who have fled their country’s civil war since 2011. “The estimate is that this figure is now well over 30,000 with about 75-80 per cent of those Syrians and the other 20 per cent or so Lebanese,” the UNHCR official said.

“We have seen quite a few injured arriving; people who have been injured not only through the very arduous journey on the way here, but also injured as a direct result of the bombings in Lebanon. We saw a woman crossing with two dead children from Lebanon who were to be buried here in Syria.”

Back in Lebanon, UN humanitarians continue to provide aid coordination to assist the Lebanese government. Nearly 500 shelters have been opened for around 80,000 displaced people, including 300 schools that have been repurposed, impacting the education of over 100,000 students.

But “critical funding gaps” persist in many areas, including shelter repair, site management, food stocks, fuel and coordination, Mr. Riza said, before warning that Lebanon’s health system has been “completely overwhelmed” by the serious escalation in hostilities.

“We have done a great deal of preparedness work and luckily we have managed to get trauma kits and the like in and tried to have them distributed also throughout the country because now the displacement is happening not just in south,” he explained. “For the first 11 months it was mainly the south - it was mainly the Bekaa (Valley)... But now it’s throughout the country.”

Teleprompter
we had about 110,000 displaced in Ireland as we are
witnessing the deadliest period in Lebanon in a generation,
and many expressed their fear that this is just the beginning.
The UN and its partners are closely coordinating with
the Lebanese government to support the response efforts.
This includes aligning aid distribution, conducting joint assessments
and identifying urgent needs for affected populations
over the past 72
hours, the full border points where there are
UNHCR stuff there.
But much more importantly, where people are crossing into Syria so far,
they are safe
and they have been open 24 hours a day.
And we of course, we would make a plea not only for the bombings in general
to stop, but also, of course to to to to avoid bombing people who are trying to,
uh, to flee
the people
of
Syria. In terms of what we have been witnessing at
the border over these last 72 hours, I mean large numbers of people returning.
The estimate is that this figure
is now well over 30,000.
Um, a about, uh, 75 80% of those Syrians and and and the other 20% or so,
Um uh, Lebanese
opens.
We have seen quite
a few injured arriving people who have been injured not only through the very
journey on the way
here, but also injured as direct result of the bombings in Lebanon.
Yesterday, for example, we were here also,
and we saw
a
woman
crossing with two dead Children from Lebanon
who were to be buried here in in, In in Syria, including
the
health sector is completely overrun at this time.
Um, we had done a great deal of preparedness work. Um, and luckily, we had had
managed to do to get trauma kits and the like in,
um and try to have them distributed also throughout the country.
Because now the displacement is happening, not just in the South.
For the 1st 11 months, it was mainly the South. It was mainly the beer,
um, and and within particular parameters there.
But now it's throughout the country.
Here in Beirut, you have
thousands of people that have arrived,
um, and are wondering where they go next.
Um, many people, I mean, anecdotally,
you're running into people that are saying what's the way to Tripoli?
How do we get to there
to widespread destruction of homes and infrastructure.
Rebuild critical infrastructure and restore is
coming back at
home or crossing back home
and, um, arrivals,
Um