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.”
Story: Lebanon crisis update – OCHA, UNHCR
Speakers:
TRT: 03’29”
SOURCE: UNTV CH
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
ASPECT RATIO: 16:9
DATELINE: 27 September 2024 - GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
RESTRICTIONS: None
SHOTLIST
 
                                                            1
1
1
Edited News | OHCHR , UNOG
The telecommunications shutdowns in Afghanistan in September had serious and far-reaching impacts on people’s lives, according to a briefing paper published today by the UN Human Rights Office and the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA).
 
                                                            1
1
1
Edited News | OHCHR , UNOG
UN Human Rights Office spokesperson Jeremy Laurence at the UN Geneva press briefing made the following comment on the ASEAN declaration on the right to a healthy environment.
 
                                                            1
1
1
Edited News | IFRC , OCHA , WMO
‘Catastrophic’ Hurricane Melissa hours from landfall in Jamaica as humanitarians rush to save lives
Millions in Jamaica and across the Caribbean are bracing for massive impact from Hurricane Melissa on Tuesday as the UN and partners are warning of a “severe” and “immediate” humanitarian threat.
 
                                                            1
1
Edited News | WHO
‘We need all routes to open’: in Gaza WHO calls for ramp-up of medevacs, easier access for essentials
Two weeks since a ceasefire agreement entered into force in Gaza the World Health Organization (WHO) noted progress on the flow of aid while calling for more evacuations of critical patients and eased entry for essential medicines and supplies.
 
                                                            1
12
1
1
Edited News | WMO , UNITED NATIONS
UN chief urges boost to life-saving weather warning systems, stresses role of climate change science
No country is safe from the devastating impacts of extreme weather — and saving lives means making early-warning systems accessible to all, UN chief António Guterres said on Wednesday.
 
                                                            1
1
1
Edited News | WFP
Gazans’ response to food distributions ‘overwhelming’ as humanitarians scale up under fragile ceasefire
In Gaza, the ceasefire is enabling UN humanitarians to reach more desperate people with life-saving food, but greater access is needed to contain the spread of famine.
 
                                                            1
1
1
Edited News | WFP , OCHA
UN urges opening of all Gaza crossings to deliver three-month food supply
The UN World Food Programme (WFP) has warned food aid cannot reach everyone in Gaza unless all border crossings are opened, particularly in the north where famine was declared in August. The agency says it already has enough supplies in place to feed the entire population of the Strip for three months – if full access is granted by Israel.
 
                                                            1
1
1
Edited News | UNDP , UNICEF , OCHA , ICRC
Around $70 billion will be needed to reconstruct Gaza and make it safe after two years of war, UN development experts said on Tuesday, while aid agencies reported that far too little aid continues to reach desperate Palestinians.
 
                                                            1
1
1
Edited News | OHCHR
The UN human rights office, OHCHR, on Friday welcomed the Nobel Peace Prize committee’s decision to name Maria Machado as this year’s laureate, in recognition of her work promoting the Venezuelan people’s democratic hopes.
 
                                                            1
1
1
Edited News | UNRWA , UNICEF , WHO
As Gazans jammed the main route leading north on Friday after a ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas was announced, UN aid teams repeated their call to open all crossings into the devastated enclave to prevent famine spreading.
 
                                                            1
1
1
Edited News | OCHA , UNICEF , WHO
Two years of Gaza-Israel war bring ‘indescribable’ pain: UN humanitarians
Two years since the Hamas-led terror attacks on Israel, UN humanitarians on Tuesday reiterated calls for the release of all hostages in Gaza, an immediate ceasefire and an aid surge to alleviate Palestinians’ suffering, as talks on a US-driven peace plan continued in Egypt.
 
                                                            1
1
1
Edited News
Syria prison survivor seeks justice for the missing with UN backing.