Skip to main content

    Lebanon: Following widescale bombings, humanitarian needs are escalating

    Doctors Without Borders mobile unit provides primary healthcare, medication and follow-up for non-communicable diseases, as well as psychological first aid and health promotion sessions in three locations in south Lebanon. February 2024 © Maryam Srour/MSF

    FEBRUARY 2024: Doctors Without Borders mobile unit was providing primary healthcare, medication and follow-up for non-communicable diseases, as well as psychological first aid and health promotion sessions in three locations in south Lebanon. © Maryam Srour/MSF

    Our teams are distributing non-food items like mattresses and hygiene kits to collective shelters across the country, and our mobile medical units provide primary and mental healthcare to shelters for those in need. In addition, we are running mental health helplines, offering psychological support to displaced and affected individuals during this time of distress.

    We continue to coordinate closely with our partners and hospital networks, offering support where possible as the situation develops.

    Since yesterday, some of our staff in south Lebanon, Beirut and other parts of the country left their homes, with people fleeing and spending hours in traffic congestion as they seek refuge in safer locations. In south Lebanon and Baalbek-Hermel, areas that continue to experience heavy aerial strikes, Doctors Without Borders staff reported bombardments in close proximity to their homes. Many of our staff there were still sheltering in their homes, while Israeli warplanes continued to fly overhead and throughout the night.

    Categories