LONDON: Leading UK charities launched an urgent appeal for funds to meet what they called “huge levels of need” in Gaza, Lebanon and the occupied West Bank, AFP reports.
“Over the past year, conflict in the Middle East has devastated lives across the region, and millions have fled their homes in search of safety,” the Disaster Emergency Committee (DEC) said in a statement.
“Millions of people, including many thousands of children, are dealing with almost unimaginable trauma,” said DEC chief executive Saleh Saeed.
“Our member charities urgently need more funds to meet the huge levels of need. We are asking people to please donate now to save lives,” Saeed added.
The UK government will match donations to the Middle East Humanitarian appeal up to $13 million.
“The suffering of civilians impacted by the conflict across the Middle East is intolerable,” said UK development minister Anneliese Dodds.
According to the DEC, the scale of the need in Gaza was “overwhelming”, while shelters and hospitals were “struggling” in Lebanon, where the conflict has spread in the last month. It also noted the impact on the occupied West Bank.
The coalition said that while Israelis have also been displaced and are dealing with “the trauma of the conflict”, the appeal did not include Israel at the moment.
“The DEC is monitoring the evolving situation and a number of DEC charities are ready to expand their response to include Israel if significant unmet humanitarian needs are identified,” it added.
The UN humanitarian coordinator for Lebanon Imran Riza said the “devastating attack” on municipality buildings in the southern city of Nabatiyeh “claimed the lives of yet more civilians” and the local authorities were “working to provide relief, with the strike occurring just as a crisis meeting was convening at the municipality”.
In an emailed statement, Riza mourned the deaths of three “members of a relief team with whom the UN and humanitarian partners have been working for more than a year”.
“This is a crucial moment to demand respect for the rules of war,” he said.
The Lebanese Civil Defence said the strikes killed one of its staff members who was at the municipality building with colleagues.
Rescuers said the strikes destroyed a medical facility, with two doctors among the dead.
Lebanon’s official National News Agency said the main government headquarters in Nabatiyeh was damaged, forcing military personnel to evacuate the facility.