Families in Lebanon are trapped in appalling conditions after being forced to leave their homes under bombardment and Israeli military evacuation orders, Islamic Relief says.
Hundreds of thousands of people – including elderly and sick people and young children – have been ordered to leave the south of the capital city, Beirut, and large parts of southern Lebanon and head north. Public shelters in communal buildings such as schools are becoming desperately overcrowded. Waves of intense airstrikes have hit homes and shops and turned parts of southern Beirut into rubble.
Mohammed Taleb, an Islamic Relief aid worker in Beirut, said:
“People are terrified and fleeing in panic, but the conditions in the shelters are appalling. Up to 25 people are sleeping in a classroom, there’s only one hour of electricity a day, rubbish is piling up, and there isn’t enough water. There are no locks on doors, which puts people at risk, especially women and girls. There is no heating and the nights are cold. We went to one shelter that can officially host 75 families, but 120 have already arrived. But these families are the lucky ones – many more people spent the night on the side of a road.”
Families forced to flee urgently require food, drinking water, hygiene kits, mattresses, blankets, and fuel for generators. Islamic Relief teams are delivering aid to displaced families but supplies are likely to run out in the coming week if the attacks and forced displacement orders continue.
Islamic Relief is calling for urgent de-escalation across the Middle East. Civilians and civilian infrastructure must be protected, in accordance with international law. People must not be forced to leave their homes, and must be assured safe access to humanitarian assistance.
The displacement orders issued by Israel yesterday mirror those previously seen in Gaza, where civilians were forced to immediately leave their homes without knowing whether they would ever be able to return. Many who did return found their neighbourhoods completely flattened.