1 million displaced in Lebanon, caretaker prime minister says
Lebanon's caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati told reporters Sunday that some 1 million people may have been displaced amid Israel's strikes on Hezbollah.
"There are a million Lebanese people who have moved from one place to another, and this may be the largest displacement operation that has occurred," Mikati said.
Lebanon's total population as of 2022 was 5.5 million people, per World Health Organization data.
Israel's intense airstrike campaign has been especially punishing for Lebanese people living in Hezbollah heartlands, notably the south and east of the country as well the densely populated southern Beirut suburb of Dahiya.
Lebanese officials said Israeli strikes have killed at least 1,030 people in Lebanon since Sept. 16, when Israel detonated thousands of pager devices used by Hezbollah members. Israel detonated Hezbollah walkie-talkies the following day and then intensified its nationwide airstrike campaign.
Among those confirmed dead since Sept. 16 are 56 women and 87 children. Some 6,352 people have been wounded.
"The security forces will intensify their measures to protect shelters and the displaced and ensure peace and security in the regions and on the roads," Mikati said Sunday.
"We are following up on the issue of public health in shelters to avoid the spread of any diseases," the caretaker prime minister added.
"We are following up on the affairs of the displaced in full through the relevant ministries, and the state is doing everything necessary within its capabilities to secure the displaced."
"Thanks to all those who have embraced the displaced."
Lebanon's government, Mikati added, is "committed to a diplomatic solution to reach a ceasefire."
-ABC News' Ghazi Balkiz and Victoria Beaule