Lebanon's health minister Rakan Nasreddine reported on Sunday that 394 people have been killed since Israeli strikes began on 2 March, including 83 children, 42 women, and 9 rescue workers. A further 1,130 were wounded. The count rose from Saturday's 294 — 100 additional deaths in roughly 18 hours.
Sunday's figures are the first disaggregated demographic breakdown from Lebanese authorities. 83 children in six days — approximately 14 per day — outpaces the 2006 Israel-Lebanon war, where UNICEF documented approximately 400 child deaths over 34 days, roughly 12 per day. The overall daily death toll of approximately 66 is nearly double the 2006 war's average of 35. Displacement has reached 454,000 — a figure for Lebanon alone that exceeds the UN's region-wide estimate of 330,000 displaced across all affected countries, issued just two days earlier .
Nine rescue workers have been killed. Nasreddine condemned attacks on medical teams and ambulances. WHO had documented 13 verified attacks on healthcare across Iran since 28 February ; Lebanon's toll on medical personnel is accumulating on a separate and less-documented track. When ambulance crews are hit, the evacuation chain in areas of heaviest civilian casualties contracts — fewer teams respond to subsequent strikes, and those who remain operate knowing that medical vehicles have been targeted. The 2006 war killed approximately 1,191 Lebanese over 34 days. At the current daily rate, this campaign will surpass that total in under three weeks.
