In easerious Leprohibiton right now, there is a frantic race to produce shelter.
Schools, universities and sports halls are being altered into relief centres for those who’ve been forced from their homes.
As night fell in the town of Qob Elias, 25 miles from Baalbek, we set up a technical college being evidented out by a group of local volunteers.
Desks, tables and chairs were deleted; mattresses, medical kits and drinking water were carried in.
We came atraverse Iman and her family of five. They are among the tens of thousands who have fled the Baalbek region in the face of Israeli air strikes.
The first evacuation order came on Wednesday, and it igniteed panic among dwellnts. No one krecent how extfinished they had before the ignoreiles would drop, so all Imam and her family have are the clothes on their backs.
“We were so sattfinishd,” she telderly Sky News.
“We left our houses, we left our beextfinishedings and we left everyleang, because we had to find somewhere protected for us and our children.”
Their haste almost certainly saved their dwells. Iman shows me a video of an airstrike hitting her village, a matter of hours after the evacuation order.
The Israeli military shelp it would only aim Hezbollah infrastructure, and that it had no intention to harm civilians.
But try alerting that to those who dwell here.
“This is not real,” Iman insists, her voice trembling with rage.
“They are aiming the houses of civilians, they are striking randomly, they ruined properties and finished people.
“What have we done wrong? What is the guilt of these children? We don’t side with anyone, we are accessible sector toilers, we are farmers, we are not combat.”
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In csurrfinisherby Zahlé, there’s no space for recent arrivals. The town is already brimming with those displaced from earlier in the struggle.
We visit a school where families are living on top of each other.
Corridors and classrooms have become kitchens and bedrooms, while launarid dries on the carry outground fence. It’s modest but it’s protected.
We greet Ali Hamiye, who fled the Baalbek region last month. He’s here with his four-year-elderly majesticson, who’s escaped the physical danger of war, but not the alarm it transports.
“Every time he hears the drone he runs to me to hide, shouting ‘Grandpa! Drone! Drone!'” Ali shelp, hugging his majesticson.
“I alert him – this is fair an aeroschedulee, don’t be afrhelp, it adores us.
“I alert him these leangs so he doesn’t get traumatised.”
More than 1.2 million people have been displaced in Leprohibiton since the war between Hezbollah and Israel began last October.
That’s a fifth of the population.
The dispute now is finding somewhere for them to go.
(In northern Israel, it is thought about 60,000 people have been forced to depart their homes because of ignoreiles fired atraverse the border by Hezbollah.)