UN Aid Convoys Leave For Southern Lebanon As Extent Of Destruction Becomes Clear
Five more United Nations aid convoys carrying essential supplies left Beirut for southern Lebanon as UN agencies said
the full extent of the destruction in the south was becoming clear and warned of growing public health dangers faced by
survivors of the month-long conflict.
"In a matter of a few days, we have managed to determine the immediate needs of some 30 most affected villages in the
area," said Andrew Duggin, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) engineer in the southern city of Tyre. UNHCR has begun an extensive returnee monitoring process in the south.
"These villagers have suffered severe destruction – some say, worse than seen in Bosnia – and will as a first priority
be targeted for immediate assistance. The whole south is, however, severely handicapped because of a lack of electricity
and water, the destruction of infrastructure and the presence of cluster bombs."
UNHCR has set up a base in Tyre and started trucking in kitchen sets, tents, blankets, diapers and other essentials from
Beirut, so that it can provide these items quickly to people in need in the south. Flights are also bringing supplies
into Beirut from Amman, the agency said.
Five overland humanitarian convoys left the Lebanese capital today for the south, the Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said, including trucks carrying water from the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), supplies from
the World Food Programme (WFP) and essentials from other agencies as well.
The need for water is increasingly a concern throughout the area, as is public health, OCHA said, adding that the UN’s
Mine Action Coordination Centre (UNMACC) is providing maps of cluster bomb attack sites and passable roads in southern
Lebanon, because many areas are littered with unexploded ordnance that have already claimed lives.
In terms of the UN’s overall $165 million Flash Appeal for Lebanon, it said that so far the international community has
committed just under $93.5 million, or almost 60 per cent of the funds needed, while an additional $4.7 million has been
received in pledges.
Ends