Lebanon Ceasefire Fractures as Trauma Surges, CARE Warns
CARE's Lebanon country director outlines a fragile ceasefire and pervasive trauma among civilians. The ongoing strain forces people into streets, cars, or shelters, undermining confidence in any durable peace. The report underscores a humanitarian crisis with long-term security implications for the region.
The core development is blunt: a fragile ceasefire in Lebanon leaves civilians exposed and traumatized, with life reduced to a perpetual struggle. CARE's Lebanon country director describes daily hardship that stubbornly resists coping, as people sleep in cars, under bridges, or in makeshift shelters. The message is stark: the population lacks reliable protection and the psychosocial scars run deep across communities. The trauma is not just psychological; it translates into rising needs for basic services, healthcare, and safe spaces for children and families.
Background context follows: Lebanon has endured years of political volatility and periodic clashes, with humanitarian organizations repeatedly warning that civilians bear the heaviest burden. The ceasefire, described as