Lebanon's health ministry reported 634 killed as of Wednesday — 439 men, 45 women, 86 children, and 14 healthcare workers — with 1,586 wounded and 759,300 displaced since Israeli strikes began on 2 March. Two days earlier the toll stood at 486 dead and 700,000 displaced . 148 additional deaths in roughly 48 hours is an acceleration, not a plateau, coinciding with the expansion of Israeli strikes from southern Lebanon into central Beirut's Aisha Bakkar neighbourhood and the Bekaa Valley.
759,300 displaced amounts to roughly 14% of Lebanon's citizen population, driven from their homes in thirteen days. On Saturday, Lebanon's social affairs minister Haneen Sayed reported 454,000 displaced with 399 shelters open and 357 already full . The additional 305,000 people displaced since have nowhere documented to go. The 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war displaced approximately one million Lebanese over 34 days and ended through UN Security Council Resolution 1701. This war has reached three-quarters of that displacement figure in under half the time, with no comparable diplomatic mechanism in motion.
The child death toll tells its own story — and then the numbers shift. The health ministry's first consolidated count on 7 March recorded 394 dead, including 83 children . Since then, 240 more people have been killed, but only three were children — dropping the child proportion from 21% to under 14%. The change is consistent with the Nabi Chit commando operation that killed 41 and the concentrated Dahiyeh strikes on military facilities, which would produce predominantly adult male casualties. The overall child death rate — approximately 14 per day — still exceeds the rate UNICEF documented during the 2006 war, when roughly 400 children were killed over 34 days at approximately 12 per day.
The 14 healthcare workers among the dead compound the crisis. The August 2020 Beirut port explosion damaged or disrupted more than half the capital's healthcare facilities according to the World Health Organisation. The economic collapse that followed drove much of Lebanon's medical workforce abroad. What remains of that depleted system is now absorbing 1,586 wounded alongside the routine medical needs of a displaced population approaching 760,000 — many with chronic conditions, many pregnant, many children requiring paediatric care that fewer and fewer Lebanese hospitals can provide.
