Israel’s unending attacks in Lebanon push country’s population to the brink | Israel attacks Lebanon News | Al Jazeera
Summary
Listen Listen (7 mins) Save Click here to share on social media share2 Share facebook twitter whatsapp copylink google Add Al Jazeera on Google info A displaced man sits beside his tent in a temporary encampment, amid escalating hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, as the US-Israeli conflict with Iran continues, in Beirut, Lebanon, on March 26, 2026 [Raghed Waked/Reuters] By Justin Salhani Published On 28 Mar 2026 28 Mar 2026 Beirut, Lebanon – It is four weeks into the United States-Israeli war on Iran, and millions of civilians are suffering in Lebanon, now facing a second large-scale Israeli attack on their country in less than two years. About a quarter of Lebanon’s population has been displaced after Israel’s mass forced evacuation orders from the country’s south and Beirut’s southern suburbs, known as Dahiyeh. Recommended Stories list of 3 items list 1 of 3 Teen volunteer paramedic killed in Israeli strike in Lebanon list 2 of 3 Iranian naval chief killed in attack, Israel says list 3 of 3 Russian officials meet US counterparts as Moscow denies aiding Iran end of list Many of the displaced are extremely frustrated and fatigued. Advertisement This is the office for the National Lifeline in Lebanon (1564) for Emotional Support and Suicide Prevention Hotline, a collaboration between the National Mental Health Programme and Embrace, a nonprofit focused on mental health. 1564 is the phone number that people who require psychological support can dial. “We’ve been in the worst situation for the past two years,” Jad Chamoun, operations manager at the National Lifeline 1564, told Al Jazeera from the Lifeline centre in Beirut. “Even when there was a ceasefire, people were still living under the conditions, they were still displaced.” Even before March 2, about 64,000 people in Lebanon were displaced , according to the International Organization for Migration.
Listen Listen (7 mins) Save Click here to share on social media share2 Share facebook twitter whatsapp copylink google Add Al Jazeera on Google info A displaced man sits beside his tent in a temporary encampment, amid escalating hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, as the US-Israeli conflict with Iran continues, in Beirut, Lebanon, on March 26, 2026 [Raghed Waked/Reuters] By Justin Salhani Published On 28 Mar 2026 28 Mar 2026 Beirut, Lebanon – It is four weeks into the United States-Israeli war on Iran, and millions of civilians are suffering in Lebanon, now facing a second large-scale Israeli attack on their country in less than two years. About a quarter of Lebanon’s population has been displaced after Israel’s mass forced evacuation orders from the country’s south and Beirut’s southern suburbs, known as Dahiyeh. Recommended Stories list of 3 items list 1 of 3 Teen volunteer paramedic killed in Israeli strike in Lebanon list 2 of 3 Iranian naval chief killed in attack, Israel says list 3 of 3 Russian officials meet US counterparts as Moscow denies aiding Iran end of list Many of the displaced are extremely frustrated and fatigued. Advertisement This is the office for the National Lifeline in Lebanon (1564) for Emotional Support and Suicide Prevention Hotline, a collaboration between the National Mental Health Programme and Embrace, a nonprofit focused on mental health. 1564 is the phone number that people who require psychological support can dial. “We’ve been in the worst situation for the past two years,” Jad Chamoun, operations manager at the National Lifeline 1564, told Al Jazeera from the Lifeline centre in Beirut. “Even when there was a ceasefire, people were still living under the conditions, they were still displaced.” Even before March 2, about 64,000 people in Lebanon were displaced , according to the International Organization for Migration.
## Article Content
Listen
Listen (7 mins)
Save
Click here to share on social media
share2
Share
copylink
Add Al Jazeera on Google
info
A displaced man sits beside his tent in a temporary encampment, amid escalating hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, as the US-Israeli conflict with Iran continues, in Beirut, Lebanon, on March 26, 2026 [Raghed Waked/Reuters]
By
Justin Salhani
Published On 28 Mar 2026
28 Mar 2026
Beirut, Lebanon –
It is four weeks into the United States-Israeli war on Iran, and millions of civilians are suffering in Lebanon, now facing a second large-scale Israeli attack on their country in less than two years.
About a quarter of Lebanon’s population has been displaced after Israel’s mass forced evacuation orders from the country’s south and Beirut’s southern suburbs, known as Dahiyeh.
Recommended Stories
list of 3 items
list 1 of 3
Teen volunteer paramedic killed in Israeli strike in Lebanon
list 2 of 3
Iranian naval chief killed in attack, Israel says
list 3 of 3
Russian officials meet US counterparts as Moscow denies aiding Iran
end of list
Many of the displaced are extremely frustrated and fatigued. And even those who are not displaced are feeling the pressure, with deadly Israeli attacks continuing, petrol prices increasing, business in general slowing down, and little sign that the conflict will end any time soon.
Samiha, a Palestinian teacher who had been living near Tyre, in southern Lebanon, but recently relocated to Beirut, said the experience was “not good at all”. However, with the previous Israeli campaign in Lebanon not long ago, her family came into this round more prepared.
“It’s not the first time for us. Now we know more about where to go.” Still, she maintained, “we don’t know how long this will last and if there is a solution”.
Foreigners most vulnerable
Israel intensified its war on Lebanon again on March 2, after Hezbollah responded to Israeli attacks for the first time in more than a year.
Hezbollah – a close ally of Iran – claimed the attack was retaliation for Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s assassination two days earlier. A ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah had ostensibly been in effect since November 27, 2024, despite the United Nations counting more than 10,000 Israeli ceasefire violations in that period, and hundreds of Lebanese deaths.
Advertisement
After Hezbollah’s reply, Israel intensified its attacks on the south and declared its intention to occupy southern Lebanon. Israel also issued forced evacuation orders for areas of southern Lebanon, Beirut’s southern suburbs, and a few villages in the eastern Bekaa Valley, leading to a massive displacement crisis of at least 1.2 million people, according to the Lebanese government. Now, Israel has also stated its intent to occupy southern Lebanon and set up a so-called security zone, while destroying more villages along the southern border.
The crisis has hit people who live in Lebanon severely, particularly the country’s most vulnerable people.
“The most vulnerable cases that we’re coming upon are happening, either migrant workers, either Syrians, foreign bodies, basically,” Rena Ayoubi, a volunteer who has organised aid near Beirut’s waterfront, Biel, told Al Jazeera.
She said other people who have suffered deeply in this period include: people with chronic diseases, cancer patients on dialysis, people who cannot access insulin, and displaced people who don’t have access to a fridge to store their medicine.
‘Different in scale and speed’
A series of catastrophes is unfolding, with women, children and those suffering with psychological issues suffering the most, according to a variety of sources, including aid workers, volunteers and UN workers. The humanitarian crisis in 2024 was severe, they said, but 2026 is on a whole different level.
“Now is significantly different in the scale and speed and number of people impacted,” Anandita Philipose, the UN sexual and reproductive health agency (UNFPA)’s representative in Lebanon, told Al Jazeera. “The mass evacuation orders are new. The scale of displacement is new. The fact that civilian infrastructure was targeted is new.”
Many women, in particular, have been displaced not only from their homes but from their healthcare networks, including offices or support systems that will help them through pregnancies.
“Pregnant women do not stop giving birth in the middle of conflict, and women don’t stop having periods in the middle of conflicts,” Philipose said.
Israel’s latest war on Lebanon has so far killed 1,094 people and wounded another 3,119 in Lebanon, according to the country’s Ministry of Public Health. Among the dead are 81 women and 121 children, in just over three weeks.
“Children have yet again been caught up in this escalation, Heidi Diedrich, national director of World Vision in Lebanon, told Al Jazeera. “Children are deeply affected by the violence regardless of their protected status as civilians under international humani
---
## Expert Analysis
### Merits
N/A
### Areas for Consideration
N/A
### Implications
- And even those who are not displaced are feeling the pressure, with deadly Israeli attacks continuing, petrol prices increasing, business in general slowing down, and little sign that the conflict will end any time soon.
- Now we know more about where to go.” Still, she maintained, “we don’t know how long this will last and if there is a solution”.
- The fact that civilian infrastructure was targeted is new.” Many women, in particular, have been displaced not only from their homes but from their healthcare networks, including offices or support systems that will help them through pregnancies. “Pregnant women do not stop giving birth in the middle of conflict, and women don’t stop having periods in the middle of conflicts,” Philipose said.
- We are deeply concerned that this escalation will continue to impact children in Lebanon for weeks or even months to come.” Never-ending trauma At an office building in Beirut, two volunteers sit behind desks waiting for phones to ring.
### Expert Commentary
This article covers lebanon, israeli, israel topics. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 1208.
Related Articles
See the messages Brian Hooker sent his friend after wife's disappearance in...
3 days, 10 hours ago
Breaking down Artemis II's reentry process, heat shield's importance
3 days, 10 hours ago
Tracking traffic through the Strait of Hormuz
3 days, 10 hours ago
Israel issues new evacuation orders for Beirut suburbs
3 days, 10 hours ago