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	<title>Hezbollah Israel war &#8211; The Milli Chronicle</title>
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		<title>War shuts schools in Lebanon, leaving nearly half a million children without classes</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 29 Mar 2026 06:53:06 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Hezbollah Israel war]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Lebanon education crisis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lebanon war 2026]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[online learning challenges]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[Beirut — Nearly half a million students in Lebanon have been forced out of school as ongoing conflict involving Hezbollah]]></description>
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<p><strong>Beirut</strong> — Nearly half a million students in Lebanon have been forced out of school as ongoing conflict involving Hezbollah and Israel disrupts education, with hundreds of public schools converted into shelters for displaced families, according to UNICEF.</p>



<p>The war, which escalated on March 2, has led to the closure of more than 350 public schools, while others in areas affected by Israeli bombardment remain shut, leaving students to rely on improvised and often inadequate remote learning arrangements.</p>



<p>In Beirut, displaced families are living inside school buildings where classrooms have been partitioned into makeshift living spaces. Students like 17-year-old Ahmad Melhem are attempting to continue their education using recorded lessons on shared devices, often without reliable internet access.</p>



<p>Melhem, displaced from the capital’s southern suburbs, said he returned home briefly to retrieve schoolbooks despite the risks. “We’re trying with everything we have to continue our education,” he said, adding that he hopes to pursue engineering studies.</p>



<p>Many schools have resumed limited online teaching, but shortened schedules and reduced subject offerings have affected the quality of education. Students say they struggle to concentrate in crowded shelters or noisy shared spaces.</p>



<p>Access to education has been further constrained by limited connectivity and resources. In some shelters, internet access is only available outdoors, forcing students to study in unsuitable environments or rely on recorded lessons.</p>



<p>According to UNICEF, disparities in digital access between regions and households have created a “big digital divide,” affecting both students and teachers. Some families share a single mobile device among several children, while others lack even basic supplies.</p>



<p>UNICEF has introduced an online platform with recorded lessons and a phone-based system to help students access materials without internet, but officials warn these measures cannot fully replace in-person schooling.</p>



<p>The conflict has killed more than 1,100 people in Lebanon, including 122 children, and displaced over one million, according to authorities. Education experts warn that prolonged disruption increases the risk of permanent dropouts, particularly among girls and adolescents vulnerable to early marriage.</p>



<p>The World Bank estimated in a 2023 report that each day of public school closure costs Lebanon’s economy around $3 million, highlighting the broader impact of the crisis.</p>



<p>Children in southern Lebanon have faced repeated disruptions since hostilities between Hezbollah and Israel reignited in October 2023, compounding existing challenges in the country’s education system.</p>



<p>At temporary shelters, families continue to prioritize schooling despite the conditions. “Education is the only thing left for my children,” said one displaced parent, reflecting widespread concern over a lost generation.</p>
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		<title>Hezbollah-Israel war strains Lebanon to brink as sectarian tensions intensify</title>
		<link>https://millichronicle.com/2026/03/64146.html</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[NewsDesk MC]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Mar 2026 11:17:19 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Beirut– War between Hezbollah and Israel is pushing Lebanon toward a breaking point, with mass displacement, deepening sectarian divides and]]></description>
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<p><strong>Beirut</strong>– War between Hezbollah and Israel is pushing Lebanon toward a breaking point, with mass displacement, deepening sectarian divides and mounting political confrontation threatening internal stability, officials and analysts said.</p>



<p>The latest escalation, triggered amid a broader regional conflict involving Iran, is widely seen as potentially the most destabilising crisis since Lebanon’s 1975–90 civil war, exacerbating long-standing fractures across its multi-sectarian society.</p>



<p>Israel bombardment and evacuation orders across southern Lebanon, Beirut’s southern suburbs and eastern strongholds have displaced more than one million people, the majority from the Shi’ite community aligned with Hezbollah.</p>



<p>Many have sought refuge in Christian and Druze-majority areas, where tensions have risen sharply, with some residents blaming Hezbollah for provoking the conflict in support of Tehran. Local authorities have tightened vetting procedures for displaced families seeking accommodation, citing fears that individuals linked to Hezbollah could become targets for Israeli strikes.</p>



<p>Clashes have already been reported. In one incident, residents in a predominantly Christian area north of Beirut confronted displaced families after debris from an intercepted Iranian missile landed nearby.</p>



<p>A foreign official described the displacement crisis as “a ticking bomb,” warning that prolonged inability for displaced populations to return home could severely strain communal relations.</p>



<p>Tensions between Hezbollah and the Lebanese state are intensifying. The government led by Prime Minister Nawaf Salam and President Joseph Aoun has banned Hezbollah’s military wing, called for talks with Israel and demanded the departure of Iran’s ambassador.Hezbollah officials have responded with sharp rhetoric.</p>



<p> Senior figure Mahmoud Qmati accused the government of acting like collaborators, drawing comparisons to Vichy France during World War Two, and warned of potential escalation, though he later said his remarks were misinterpreted.</p>



<p>Druze lawmaker Wael Abu Faour said political divisions and “defiant rhetoric” were heightening fears for internal stability.</p>



<p>Military pressure and strategic stakesIsrael has threatened to inflict Gaza-like destruction and signalled plans to establish a “security zone” extending to the Litani River, effectively preventing large numbers of displaced Shi’ites from returning to southern areas until northern Israel’s security is assured.</p>



<p>An Israeli military official said evacuation orders had focused on Shi’ite villages, while Christian areas remained largely unaffected, a distinction critics say risks reinforcing sectarian perceptions of the conflict.Israeli authorities maintain their operations target only Hezbollah and reject accusations of acting against specific civilian groups.</p>



<p>Meanwhile, Hezbollah retains a military capability that surpasses Lebanon’s national army, complicating efforts by the state to assert control. The group’s rapid redeployment to southern frontlines has further undermined confidence in government authority.</p>



<p>Lebanese politicians warn that the war could reshape the country’s political order. Christian lawmaker Alain Aoun said the longstanding coexistence between state institutions and Hezbollah’s armed wing may be nearing its end.</p>



<p>“The coexistence between the state and Hezbollah arms which we witnessed for decades is nearing its end in one way or another,” he said, pointing to potentially far-reaching consequences for Lebanon’s political system.</p>



<p>Hezbollah officials, however, signal they expect the government to reverse its decisions once the conflict subsides, framing the confrontation with Israel as a priority over internal disputes.</p>



<p>With Israeli officials indicating operations could continue beyond the wider regional conflict, and proposals under discussion involving curbs on Iranian support to Hezbollah, Lebanon’s trajectory remains closely tied to developments across the Middle East.</p>
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