Country: Lebanon Source: UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Please refer to the attached file. HIGHLIGHTS Hostilities continued with airstrikes and five new displacement orders covering 17 localities across Bekaa, the South and Nabatieh governorates triggering additional displacement. At least 3,613 deaths and 11,072 injuries due to hostilities recorded by the Ministry of Public Health since 2 March. A total of 134,800 Internally Displaced Personswere registered in 639 collective shelters on 8 June. Over 12.6 million hot and cold meals distributed by Food Security and Agriculture Sector partners since 2 March. 249,505 IDPs and other affected people have benefitted from protection activities, of whom 62 per cent women and girls, as of 8 June. WASH assistance reached over 1 million internally displaced persons across collective shelters, host communities, and out-of-shelter settings. Government report on the first three months of response highlights critical shortfalls in response capacity, noting reduced funding and in-kind contributions compared to 2024. SITUATION OVERVIEW Hostilities continued between 5 and 8 June, with new large-scale population movements attributable to displacement orders and/or airstrikes, including the airstrike on Beirut’s southern suburbs on 7 June. At least five displacement orders were issued during the reporting period affecting 17 localities across 5 districts of the South, Nabatieh and Bekaa Governorates. According to the national Disaster Risk Management (DRM) unit, approximately 4,000 families were displaced in Nabatieh governorate and 30,000 in South governorate (representing around 85 per cent of those remaining) on 7 June. Preliminary estimates also indicated approximately 50,000 families, or around 200,000 people, were displaced from Beirut’s southern suburbs on the same day. The majority of displaced families stayed in open spaces or in temporary tents while a small number moved to collective shelters in North governorate. The renewed population movements continued to put increased pressure on already overstretched collective shelters and host communities. As 8 June, 134,800 people (35,600 families) were registered in 639 collective shelters. Local authorities and humanitarian partners reported that two collective shelters in two localities were temporarilyevacuated during the reporting period ue to displacement orders. Collective shelters in Beirut, Tyre, and Saida are at full capacity, while shelters in North governorate have open capacity. Authorities in Beirut and the North are exploring erecting additional tented accommodation to absorb continuing arrivals. According to the Ministry of Public Health (MoPH), at least 3,613 people have been killed (including 344 women and 245 children) and 11,072 injured (including 1,360 women and 967 children) due to hostilities since 2 March. Threats and attacks impacting healthcare continue to be reported, with 201 attacks, resulting in 134 deaths among on-duty healthcare workers and 391 injuries recorded between 2 March and 8 June 2026. The Presidency of the Council of Ministers has published a Comprehensive Response Report (March-May 2026) detailing the Lebanese Government’s national emergency response to the escalation of hostilities that began on 2 March 2026 and which led to the internal displacement of approximately one million people. The report outlines immediate actions taken by the Government, including activating National Emergency Operations Room and deploying a tiered coordination architecture spanning national, sub-national, and local levels, drawing on a pre-existing National Preparedness Plan to rapidly open collective shelters within the first 72 hours. The report also features the multisectoral response encompassing food security, health, WASH, shelter, education, protection, and social stability, supported by real-time digital dashboards tracking displacement, aid distribution, and in-kind donation flows to ensure transparency and accountability. The report highlights the critical funding shortfall compared to the 2024 response, with the initial 2026 Flash Appeal (March-May) achieving only 60.3 per cent coverage (USD 185.9 million of USD 308.3 million requested) against a 94.9 per cent coverage rate in 2024, and in-kind donations received at only 18 per cent of the volume recorded during the previous conflict period — underscoring the growing risk that donor fatigue and shifting global priorities pose to the continuity and scale of humanitarian assistance as needs remain acute and displacement unresolved.