Tensions continued to ratchet up in the Middle East on Monday with reports of hundreds of retaliatory Israeli strikes on Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon and strikes in Gaza including on a refugee camp, UN humanitarians said.
The development comes as the UN's top official in Lebanon Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert began an official visit to Israel to meet senior government officials, after insisting that "there is no military solution that will make either side safer".
In Lebanon, it has been reported that people in the south received phone and social media messages on Monday from the Israeli military telling them to keep away from any building or village linked to the militant group Hezbollah.
The armed group reportedly launched some 150 projectiles into northern Israel over the weekend, the latest in a series of Hezbollah attacks that began shortly after war erupted in Gaza, and which have uprooted around 60,000 Israelis to date. In southern Lebanon, some 30,000 people have been displaced from their homes.
Amid repeated calls from the international community for regional de-escalation, the Security Council met in emergency session last Friday, following deadly Israeli strikes on the Lebanese capital Beirut and in the south.
The meeting came at the end of a week of increased cross-border fire between Hezbollah and Israeli forces after two days of deadly wireless device explosions targeting the militant group.
Rain adds to humanitarian crisis
In central Gaza, meanwhile, shelters were destroyed in the strike on the camp around Nuseirat,, according to the UN agency for Palestine refugees, UNRWA, while media reports also indicated an uptick in Israeli military activity.
The UN agency also reported that heavy rain and higher tides have overwhelmed makeshift shelters along the shoreline, where the Israeli military has instructed the enclave's residents to make for, via numerous evacuation orders. Since Hamas-led terror attacks on multiple targets in Israeli on 7 October, 1.9 million Gazans have been displaced, or 90 per cent of the population.
Local authorities have urged people staying in low-lying areas to leave and seek higher ground, while UN aid teams and partners reported that they have not had access or safety guarantees to allow them to bring in sufficient shelter materials to help all those affected by the rains.
In addition to the ongoing deadly threat of war, UNRWA warned that people sheltering in open spaces in Gaza face dire health risks because there is no sewage network or rainwater drainage in place.
The UN agency noted that that reptiles, rodents and insect presented a growing threat of disease and that its teams had already begun spraying pesticides and removing waste to protect families from falling sick.
Power cut
In northern Gaza, meanwhile, UN humanitarians said that the lack of clean water remains a critical concern.
Water, sanitation and hygiene facilities which run on generators powered by fuel transported into the enclave have had to "drastically reduce" their operating hours to prevent total shutdowns, the UN aid coordination office, OCHA, said.
"Humanitarian partners working on the response say it continues to be extremely difficult to get fuel to the north, with deliveries often delayed or rejected at checkpoints by Israeli authorities," it noted.
In addition to chronic aid access problems, the current water crisis in Gaza has been made worse by damage to water infrastructure, the lack of safety preventing repairs and a lack of spare parts and chlorine.
To help address the emergency, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) said that it is providing 15 litres of water per person each day for nearly 900,000 people, ensuring that part of their water needs are met for three months.
Since October, UNICEF has provided water for more than 1.7 million people in Khan Younis, Rafah and central Gaza, distributing 4.75 million litres of bottled water.
The UN agency has also supported local authorities with more than 3.4 million litres of fuel and more than 40 cubic metres of water treatment chemicals that partially restored water production and distribution from seawater desalination plants.
Four mobile water treatment plants in Khan Younis and Rafah have also been with UNICEF's support, each capable of producing five cubic metres of water per hour. Tankers then distribute the clean water to displaced Palestinians near their shelters, as fuel for vehicles is difficult to obtain and children are often tasked with walking long distances to collect water for their families.