Country: Lebanon Source: UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Please refer to the attached file. HIGHLIGHT Hostilities continued with airstrikes and three renewed displacement orders covering six localities across the South and Nabatieh Governorates triggering additional displacement. At least 3,711 deaths and 11,483 injuries due to hostilities were recorded by the Ministry of Public Health since 2 March. A total of 134,800 Internally Displaced Persons were registered in 642 collective shelters on 11 June. Over 13.3 million hot and cold meals distributed by Food Security and Agriculture Sector partners since 2 March, a significant pipeline break in provision of Ready-to-eat rations is expected by mid-June. The 2026 Lebanon Flash Appeal is 32.2 per cent funded, with approximately US$206.2 million received against US$639.9 million requested. A UNDP Geo Rapid Assessment identified 146 destroyed buildings, 264 partially damaged buildings, and 54 apartments with targeted apartment-level damage. SITUATION OVERVIEW Despite the extension of the ceasefire announced last week, Lebanon continues to experience new waves of displacement driven by insecurity – airstrikes, shelling and displacement orders across broad swaths of southern Lebanon. The Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) issued three renewed displacement orders to residents of six localities during the reporting period. Notably, a displacement order on 9 June covered all neighbourhoods of Tyre as well as the Palestinian Refugee Camps for the first time. The latest population movements from the South and Nabatieh Governorates and Beirut’s southern suburbs are placing substantial pressure on shelter capacity nationwide. Existing accommodation capacity in Beirut and Mount Lebanon remains extremely limited, necessitating referrals of people seeking places in collective shelters to northern areas of the country. Collective shelters in Beirut and Mount Lebanon have reached or are at near full capacity. Two new shelters have been opened in Bekaa, with a third on standby in West Bekaa. Meanwhile, North Governorate has emerged as the primary destination for newly displaced families due to capacity constraints elsewhere. As a result, shelters there are facing renewed pressure; authorities are working to activate additional sites and install tented accommodation in suitable locations. Baalbek-El Hermel remains the only governorate with no significant new displacement reported. A total of 134,800 displaced people (35,700 families) were registered as staying in 642 collective shelters as of 11 June. Coordination on collective shelters continues among the Lebanese Red Cross, Disaster Risk Monitoring (DRM), governors, municipalities, and Ministry of Social Affairs (MoSA), in anticipation of further population movements and additional pressure on shelter infrastructure in the coming days. Attacks affecting healthcare continue to be reported, underscoring the fragile protection afforded to health services. Reportedly, an 11 June strike near Hiram Hospital in Tyre district, South Governorate, injured 10 staff members and damaged hospital infrastructure and vehicles. This is at least the fifth reported incident affecting Hiram Hospital since the escalation resumed on 2 March according to the authorities. Since 2 March 2026, the WHO Surveillance System for Attacks on Health Care has recorded 203 such attacks in Lebanon resulting in 135 deaths and 394 injuries among on-duty healthcare workers, as well as the closure of 44 primary health care centres (PHCCs) and 3 hospitals. Since the beginning of the escalation at least 3,711 deaths (including 353 females, 247 children) and 11,483 injuries (including 1395 female, 983 children) were recorded due to hostilities, according to Ministry of Public Health. The UNDP-led Geo AI-based Rapid Assessment, comparing imagery between February and 14 April 2026, identified 146 destroyed buildings, 264 partially damaged buildings, and 54 apartments with targeted apartment-level damage in Beirut and Mount Lebanon governorates. Areas within Baabda district part of Beirut’s southern suburbs bore the overwhelming share of destruction, accounting for 133 of the 146 destroyed buildings and 243 of the 264 partially damaged buildings, as well as 35 of the 54 targeted apartments. Beirut and Bshamoun recorded comparatively smaller impacts, with six and seven destroyed buildings respectively. The assessment estimated a total debris volume of 648,942 m³ (minor damage excluded), with corresponding low-density and high-density weight estimates; Baabda again accounted for the majority of this volume (601,384 m³). The report notes these figures are preliminary, derived from remote sensing supported by systematic ground inspections. Funding constraints remain a major challenge to sustaining humanitarian assistance. As of 11 June, the 2026 Lebanon Flash Appeal has received US$ 206.2 million, or 32.2 per cent of the $639.9 million requested.