The UN says over 400,000 children in Lebanon have been displaced in 3
weeks by war
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[October 15, 2024]
BEIRUT (AP) — More than 400,000 children in Lebanon have
been displaced in the past three weeks, a top official with the U.N.
children’s agency said Monday, warning of a “lost generation” in the
small country grappling with multiple crises and now in the middle of
war.
Israel has escalated its campaign against the Lebanon-based Hezbollah
militant group, including launching a ground invasion, after a year of
exchanges of fire during its war with Hamas in Gaza.
The fighting in Lebanon has driven 1.2 million people from their homes,
most of them fleeing to Beirut and elsewhere in the north over the past
three weeks since the escalation.
Ted Chaiban, UNICEF's deputy executive director for humanitarian
actions, has visited schools that have been turned into shelters to host
displaced families.
“What struck me is that this war is three weeks old and so many children
have been affected,” Chaiban told The Associated Press in Beirut.
“As we sit here today, 1.2 million children are deprived of education.
Their public schools have either been rendered inaccessible, have been
damaged by the war or are being used as shelters. The last thing this
country needs, in addition to everything else it has gone through, is
the risk of a lost generation.”
While some Lebanese private schools are still operating, the public
school system has been badly affected by the war, along with the
country's most vulnerable people such as Palestinian and Syrian
refugees.
″What I’m worried about is that we have hundreds of thousands of
Lebanese, Syrian, Palestinian children that are at risk of losing their
learning," Chaiban said.
More than 2,300 people in Lebanon have been killed in Israeli strikes,
nearly 75% of them over the last month, according to the Health
Ministry. In the last three weeks, more than 100 children were killed
and over 800 were wounded, Chaiban said.
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A displaced family fleeing the Israeli airstrikes in the south, sits
next to their tent on Beirut's corniche, Lebanon, Monday, Oct. 14,
2024. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)
He said displaced children are crammed into overcrowded shelters
where three or four families can live in a classroom separated by a
plastic sheet, and where 1,000 people can share 12 toilets. Not all
of them work.
Many displaced families found have set up tents along roads or on
public beaches.
Most displaced children have experienced so much violence, including
the sounds of shelling or gunshots, that they cower at any loud
noise, Chaiban said.
Then there is “evacuation orders upon evacuation orders. We’re at
the beginning, and already there’s been a profound impact," he said.
The escalation has also put over 100 primary health care facilities
out of service, while 12 hospitals are either no longer working or
partially functional.
Water infrastructure has also come under attack. In the last three
weeks, 26 water stations providing water to almost 350,000 people
have been damaged, Chaiban said. UNICEF is working with local
authorities to repair them.
He called for civilian infrastructure to be protected. And he
appealed for a cease-fire in Lebanon and in Gaza, saying there needs
to be political will and a realization that the conflict cannot be
resolved through military means.
“What we must do is make sure that this stops, that this madness
stops, that there’s a cease-fire before we get to the kind of
destruction and pain and suffering and death that we’ve seen in
Gaza,” Chaiban said.
With so many needs, he said, the emergency response appeal for $108
million in Lebanon has only been 8% funded three weeks into the
escalation.
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