Lebanon's Health Ministry reported cumulative casualties since 2 March: 687 killed — up from 634 two days earlier — including 98 children, 62 women, and 18 paramedics. 1,774 wounded. More than 800,000 displaced. The 53 additional deaths in roughly 48 hours include more than two dozen killed on Friday alone as Israeli forces struck targets across Beirut, southern Lebanon, and the Bekaa Valley.
The 800,000 displaced now equals the total from the entire 33-day 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah — reached in under fourteen days. The 2006 conflict displaced approximately 800,000 Lebanese between 12 July and 14 August of that year; the current operation matched that figure in less than half the time. Displacement accelerated sharply mid-week, jumping by roughly 100,000 in 48 hours , driven in part by the IDF's expansion of evacuation orders north of the Litani River to within nine miles of Sidon — beyond the boundary established by UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which ended the 2006 war and was meant to define the limits of the buffer zone permanently.
The 18 paramedics killed is a figure that does not typically lead casualty reports but measures something distinct: the collapse of protected status for medical responders. Lebanese Health Minister Rakan Nasreddine condemned attacks on medical teams and ambulances earlier in the conflict . Under the Geneva Conventions, medical personnel and their vehicles carry explicit protection; paramedic deaths at this rate indicate either systematic failure to distinguish protected persons or deliberate targeting. Lebanese President Aoun's call for direct talks with Israel has produced no visible diplomatic result. The fracture he identified between Beirut's formal government and Hezbollah's parallel command structure leaves Lebanon without a unified interlocutor — no single authority that can negotiate on behalf of the state and deliver compliance from the armed groups operating within it. The population absorbing the consequences of that gap has no say in resolving it.
