• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Trending:
  • Kashmir
  • Elections
Sunday, June 7, 2026

Daily Times

Your right to know

  • HOME
  • Latest
  • Iran-Israel war
  • Gilgit Baltistan Election
  • Pakistan
    • Balochistan
    • Gilgit Baltistan
    • Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
    • Punjab
    • Sindh
  • World
  • Editorials & Opinions
    • Editorials
    • Op-Eds
    • Commentary / Insight
    • Perspectives
    • Cartoons
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Featured
    • Blogs
      • Pakistan
      • World
      • Lifestyle
      • Culture
      • Sports
  • Business
  • Sports
  • E-PAPER
    • Lahore
    • Islamabad
    • Karachi

War in Lebanon

Published on: March 28, 2026 2:52 AM

Lebanon is being broken in plain sight. Not only by bombs, though the bombs are doing enough. More than 370,000 children have been displaced in three weeks, 121 killed, 399 injured, over 150,000 students driven out of school as classrooms turned into shelters, and roughly 150,000 people cut off by the destruction of key bridges in the south. That comes to about 19,000 children uprooted each day. Anyone daring to call it anything other than the organised erosion of civilian life is whistling past the graveyard and calling it a wartime strategy.

Israel claims that it is only acting in self-defence through “precise and targeted strikes,” and that too, in response to rockets fired from Hezbollah after the attack on Iran. However, high-ranking officials have also spoken of a defensive buffer up to 30 kilometres north of the border, with far-right ministers openly advocating annexation. There’s something far murkier, far blood-chilling at play. No qualms about that. Evacuation orders now cover around 15 per cent of Lebanese territory including the entire south, shelter areas have been struck, hospitals and water stations damaged, and more than 85 per cent of displaced women and girls are outside formal shelters where the risks of exploitation and gender-based violence rise sharply; all of which scream how Israel is deliberately hitting at targets that would make ordinary life steadily harder to sustain. Perhaps, if this continues long enough, people will be forced to leave a society being made unlivable.

A buffer zone carved out through force will not stabilise Lebanon. It will do what such projects have done before: deepen reliance on armed groups among communities that feel abandoned and targeted.

The damage will not stop at ruined roads and broken buildings. More than one million people have already been displaced across Lebanon, over a fifth of the country, many of them Shiite families. In some areas, people looking for rented rooms are being screened because residents fear drawing fire. That is how war seeps into social life.

Lebanon is not only another Middle Eastern tragedy for condemnations and grief. The wider world should stop pretending not to see the pattern. Gaza established a template in which military necessity is invoked while civilian infrastructure is steadily dismantled, and mass displacement follows. What is now unfolding in Lebanon carries the same logic. That is why the issue is larger than one front or one militia. It is about whether the destruction of civilian life has become an acceptable instrument of war. *

Filed Under: Editorial Tagged With: Lebanon, war

Submit a Comment




Primary Sidebar




Latest News

PFF president hails national men’s team for ending 64-year wait

Maryam Nawaz unveils major Lahore urban renewal project

UoR earns NTC thumbs-up, sets new benchmarks in technology education

US weighs Iranian assets plan as Gulf tensions rise

Punjab shifts to digital land ownership system from July

Pakistan

Maryam Nawaz unveils major Lahore urban renewal project

UoR earns NTC thumbs-up, sets new benchmarks in technology education

Punjab shifts to digital land ownership system from July

Bilawal calls urgent PPP meeting over AJK tensions

Punjab launches QR panic button system for transport safety upgrade

More Posts from this Category

Business

Pakistan savings rate hits 30-year low raising economic concerns

PSX new IPOs deliver 47% average return, boosting investor confidence

Pakistan signs MoU with Saudi, local firms to develop Karachi maritime business district

Gold prices witness sharp decline

Gul Ahmed venture QGDC announces $230m investment to set up Pakistan’s largest data centre

More Posts from this Category

World

US weighs Iranian assets plan as Gulf tensions rise

King Charles signals unity as royals gather at wedding

Pakistan tells un Kashmir dispute remains unresolved integral issue

More Posts from this Category




Footer

Home
Lead Stories
Latest News
Editor’s Picks

Culture
Life & Style
Featured
Videos

Editorials
OP-EDS
Commentary
Advertise

Cartoons
Letters
Blogs
Privacy Policy

Contact
Company’s Financials
Investor Information
Terms & Conditions

Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
Youtube

© 2026 Daily Times. All rights reserved.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.