Current:Home > NewsIn Lebanon, thousands are displaced from border towns by clashes, stretching state resources -Clarity Finance Guides
In Lebanon, thousands are displaced from border towns by clashes, stretching state resources
View
Date:2025-04-12 01:31:18
TYRE, Lebanon (AP) — More than 4,200 people have been displaced from villages in south Lebanon by clashes on the border with Israel, and local officials said Friday that they are ill-prepared for the much larger exodus that would ensue if the the limited conflict escalates to an all-out war.
Some 1,500 of the displaced are staying in three schools in the coastal city of Tyre, about 20 kilometers (12 miles) north of the border.
As children ran through the courtyard and women hung out clothes to dry on chairs at one of those schools on Friday, Mortada Mhanna, head of the disaster management unit of the municipalities in the Tyre area, said hundreds of newly displaced people are arriving each day.
Some move on to stay with relatives or rent apartments, but others have no place to go besides the makeshift shelter, while Lebanon’s cash-strapped government has few resources to offer.
“We can make the decision to open a new school (as a shelter), but if the resources are not secured, we’ll have a problem,” Mhanna said. He appealed to international organizations to “give us enough supplies that if the situation evolves, we can at least give people a mattress to sleep on and a blanket.”
The Lebanese militant group Hezbollah and allied Palestinian groups in Lebanon have launched daily missile strikes on northern Israel since the outbreak of the latest Israel-Hamas war on Oct. 7, while Israel has responded by shelling border areas in south Lebanon. To date, the clashes have killed at least 22 people in Lebanon, four of them civilians.
Sporadic skirmishes continued Friday while a number of airlines canceled flights to Beirut. Countries including the United States, Saudi Arabia and Germany have warned their citizens to leave Lebanon.
For many of the displaced, the current tensions bring back memories of the brutal one-month war between Hezbollah and Israel in 2006, during which Israeli bombing leveled large swathes of the villages in south Lebanon and in Beirut’s southern suburbs.
The tactic of overwhelming force to strike civilian infrastructure as a measure of military deterrence was dubbed the “Dahiyeh Doctrine,” named after the area south of the capital that was targeted.
Should another full-blown war erupt between Hezbollah and Israel, “even the city of Tyre will no longer be safe ... because all of the south was subject to bombing” in 2006, Mhanna said.
Among the school’s temporary residents is Mustafa Tahini, whose house in the border town of Aita al Shaab was destroyed in 2006, along with most of the village.
Back then, aid flowed into Lebanon from Qatar and other countries for reconstruction, but this time, Tahini said, “God knows if someone will come to help us.”
“I am not a political analyst. I hope things will calm down, but the things you see in the news aren’t reassuring,” said Tahini, whose wife and children are staying with relatives in Beirut while he remains closer to home. Still, he said, he is mentally prepared for another war. “We’ve been through it before.”
Sixty-two-year old Nasmieh Srour from the town of Duhaira has been staying in the school with her husband and two daughters for a week, along with many of the village’s residents. Like Tahini, she was displaced in 2006; she is also stoic about the prospects of a wider conflict.
“Maybe it will get bigger, maybe it will calm down - there’s no way to know,” Srour said.
Should the displacement become protracted, said Edouard Beigbeder the representative in Lebanon of UNICEF, the U.N. agency for children, said education will be one of the main casualties.
Already 52 of the 300 schools in south Lebanon are closed due to the hostilities, leaving more than 8,000 children out of education in addition to those enrolled in the schools that are now being used as shelters, he said. A wider conflict would also threaten key infrastructure including electric supplies and, by extension, water supplies.
“In any escalation,” Beigbeder said, “it is the most vulnerable and the children who are (left) in dire situation.”
veryGood! (13335)
Related
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Turkey cave rescue survivor Mark Dickey on his death-defying adventure, and why he'll never stop caving
- A suburban Georgia county could seek tax increase for buses, but won’t join Atlanta transit system
- Untangling Elon Musk's Fiery Dating History—and the 11 Kids it Produced
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Savannah city government to give $500,000 toward restoration of African American art museum
- $245 million slugger Anthony Rendon questions Angels with update on latest injury
- 'I have to object': Steve Martin denies punching Miriam Margolyes while filming 'Little Shop of Horrors'
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Fulton County judge to call 900 potential jurors for trial of Trump co-defendants Chesebro and Powell
Ranking
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- 2 pilots killed after their planes collided upon landing at air races in Reno, Nevada
- Photographer captures monkey enjoying a free ride on the back of a deer in Japanese forest
- Lee makes landfall with near-hurricane strength in Canada after moving up Atlantic Ocean
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- Lee makes landfall in Canada with impacts felt in New England: Power outages, downed trees
- North Korean state media says Kim Jong Un discussed arms cooperation with Russian defense minister
- 2 pilots killed after their planes collided upon landing at air races in Reno, Nevada
Recommendation
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
Lee makes landfall with near-hurricane strength in Canada after moving up Atlantic Ocean
Author Jessica Knoll Hated Ted Bundy's Story, So She Turned It Into Her Next Bestseller
Texas AG Ken Paxton is back on job after acquittal but Republicans aren’t done attacking each other
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Zimbabwe’s reelected president says there’s democracy. But beating and torture allegations emerge
Chiefs overcome mistakes to beat Jaguars 17-9, Kansas City’s 3rd win vs Jacksonville in 10 months
Iranian authorities detain Mahsa Amini's father on 1-year anniversary of her death