Israel’s swelling offensive in Lebanon has killed more than 10 children every day so far, according to the UN’s children’s agency (UNICEF), as rights advocates drew parallels with the brutal campaign in Gaza.
At least 83 children have been killed since Israel launched strikes on Lebanon after the Iran-backed group Hezbollah fired projectiles into Israel following US-Israeli bombing on Iran, UNICEF reported on Monday. In total, 570 people have been killed since March 2, the country’s Disaster Risk Management Unit said Tuesday.
Israel issued evacuation calls for swathes of the population in Lebanon, including all communities south of the Litani River. Those orders have displaced 760,000 people, the Disaster Risk Management Unit added – comprising nearly 13% of Lebanon’s 5.9 million population. Elderly people and pregnant women may be less able to make long, arduous journeys to improvised shelters – many of which lack privacy, exacerbating the risk of gender-based violence for women and girls, relief groups say.
One human rights official warned that elements of the Israeli military campaign in Lebanon mirror tactics used to “terrorise civilians” and “disrupt humanitarian operations” in Gaza – where Israel’s offensive following the October 7 attacks rendered the Palestinian enclave largely uninhabitable and killed at least 72,095 people, according to the health ministry there.
“What we are witnessing in Lebanon is the unmistakable extension of the Israeli military playbook used in Gaza – collective punishment, forced displacement, and the deliberate terrorising of civilian populations, including already traumatised Palestinian communities,” Steve Cutts, the CEO of the UK-based NGO Medical Aid for Palestinians said in a statement Friday.