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Jun 08, 2026
Analyzed by Llama- 4 Scout 17B 16E Instruct

Lebanon's Children Face Trauma Amid Israel's War

AI Summary
The ongoing conflict between Israel and Lebanon has resulted in significant physical and psychological trauma for the country's children, with nearly 1,000 wounded and over 245 killed since March 2.

The Plight of Lebanon's Children

Four-year-old Malaika was in her home in southern Lebanon's Mayfadoun when Israel's bombs began to hit on March 2. Her mother made an immediate attempt to flee, grabbing Malaika and her younger sister Sara, putting the latter in the back seat of her car, and Malaika in the front passenger seat.

The mother sat in the driver's seat. Then a strike hit near the car. Malaika woke up in a hospital hours later, with burns on her forehead and damage to her left eye that hospital staff say will require surgery. Sara was also wounded, but not as badly as Malaika. However, their mother – who the family did not wish to name for privacy reasons – was killed in the strike.

Almost 1,000 Children Wounded

Israel intensified its war on Lebanon on March 2, launching attacks that came after Hezbollah had responded just hours earlier to the February 28 killing of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, ending more than a year of restraint despite daily Israeli attacks on southern Lebanon.

Israel has since killed at least 3,613 people in Lebanon, including at least 245 children, according to the Lebanese Ministry of Health. "Children continue to bear a disproportionate burden of the conflict," Elissar Gemayel, response director for World Vision Lebanon, told Al Jazeera.

Violations of International Law

War disrupts children's routines, pulling them from the perceived safe spaces of their homes, their rooms, their gardens, and their schools. And even those who have not been physically injured have their routines disrupted and their sense of safety shattered, potentially leading to serious psychological effects.

Marianne Abboud is the mental health and psychosocial support adviser for War Child, an international humanitarian organisation focused on the rights of children living with violence or armed conflict.

Societal Impacts and Government Response

Humanitarian workers who spoke to Al Jazeera praised the Lebanese government for taking the lead on the response to the humanitarian crisis, in contrast to previous crises. Still, with so many people and children displaced, they maintained that there were inevitably gaps.

Part of that is the result of funding cuts. The United Nations appealed in March for $308.3m for humanitarian assistance, but has only been able to reach half of its target so far.

Slow Healing

It has now been three months since the attack that killed her mother and left her badly wounded, and Malaika sits in a playroom at the office of the Ghassan Abu Sittah Children's Fund (GASCF) in Beirut, where her surviving family has relocated.

Wounds still mark Malaika's forehead and left cheek. Her father and uncle sit on a couch nearby as she uses a yellow crayon to colour an image of a duck.