Lebanon's displaced Shiites face rising hostility as airstrikes fuel fear and evictions

BEIRUT (AP) — When the Israel-Hezbollahwar broke out in early March, Hussein Shuman fled the heavy bombardment of the southern suburbs of Beirut, but he didn't bother trying to rent an apartment elsewhere.

Associated Press File — Smoke rises from Israeli airstrikes in Dahiyeh, a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, March 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla, File) Special forces police officers deployed amid tensions between people displaced by Israeli strikes and local residents in Beirut neighborhoods, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) FILE — A child walks past tents sheltering people displaced by Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon and Dahiyeh, Beirut's southern suburbs, along the Beirut waterfront in Beirut, Lebanon, Saturday, March 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, File) Special forces police officers deployed amid tensions between people displaced by Israeli strikes and local residents in Beirut neighborhoods, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) FILE — A displaced woman who fled Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon, carries her belonging as she moves to a better spot to shelter from the rain, past an Arabic anti-war poster that reads,

Lebanon Sectarian Tensions

In areas deemed "safe" because the Lebanese militant group has no presence, he feels that Shiite Muslims like him are not welcome. Residents regard them with suspicion as potential Hezbollah members, and landlords charge exorbitant prices to rent to displaced families.

Instead, the 35-year-old, who works at a perfume company, headed to central Beirut where he set up a small tent where he has been staying, along with his wife, 7-year-old son and 5-year-old daughter.

Shuman even rejected an offer from a friend who invited him to bring his family to the Christian mountain town of Zgharta. He preferred to remain in his tent, even though it has flooded twice in the past two weeks.

"By staying here I have my dignity and respect," Shuman said, sitting on a chair near his tent as a barber gave him an open-air hair cut. "We will not stay in a place where we are going to be humiliated."

In a country full of suspicion, the more than 1 million people — most of them Shiite — displaced as a result of Israel's evacuation orders and airstrikes have limited options.

Some landlords in Christian areas refuse to rent to Shiites. Others demand inflated rents and deposits that few can afford. Fatima Zahra, 42, from Beirut's southern suburbs, said she and her sister sold their finest jewelry to pay the $5,000 the landlord charged up front for two months' rent.

In some Beirut neighborhoods, displaced people who can afford to pay high rents are only allowed to take the apartment after landlords inform the security agencies to check on whether the family has any links to Hezbollah.

Sectarian tensions are a sensitive issue in Lebanon because the country fought a 15-year civil war ending in 1990 that largely broke down along sectarian lines.

Rising tensions

Social frictions have worsened since Israel'stargeted airstrikeskilled Hezbollah officials or members of Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard in predominantly Christian, Sunni and Druze areas, raising fears among the hosts that Hezbollah members are mingling within the civilian population.

The Lebanese are deeply divided over Hezbollah's wars with Israel, with many in the small nation blaming the Iran-backed group for dragging the country into a deadly conflict that has so far left more than 1,200 people dead and over 3,000 wounded. Hezbollah fired missiles into Israel two days after theU.S. and Israel attacked Iranon Feb. 28, triggering the ongoing Middle East war.

The renewed war has caused widespread destruction and paralyzed the economy at a time when Lebanon is still in the throes of a historiceconomic crisisthat broke out in late 2019. The country has not yet recovered from the lastIsrael-Hezbollah war in 2024.

In mid-March, an Israeli airstrike on an apartment in the town of Aramoun killed three people, prompting some local residents to call for the displaced to leave the area.

Days later, an airstrike on the nearby town of Bchamoun also killed three people, including a four-year-old girl, who were displaced from Beirut's southern suburbs, where Hezbollah has a strong presence.

In neither case did Israel announce the intended target of the strikes, but neighbors assumed that someone in the targeted apartments was a Hezbollah member.

"Had we known that they were linked to Hezbollah, we would have kicked them out," an angry man who owns an apartment in the building in Bchamoun said at the scene.

In late March, a missile exploded over the predominantly Christian Keserwan region north of Beirut, with debris falling on different areas. Although the Lebanese army later said that it was an Iranian missile passing over Lebanon that fell, many initially assumed that it was an Israeli airstrike targeting displaced people.

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No one was was hurt by the missile debris, but a group of young men attacked displaced Shiites in the district of Haret Sakher near the coastal city of Jounieh, calling for their eviction, before local officials intervened.

"We don't want them here," shouted a Haret Sakher resident shortly after the strike. He said that some of the displaced refer to their hosts as "Zionists," accusing them of being aligned with Israel because they criticize Hezbollah for dragging the country into the conflict. He added: "We don't want national coexistence."

George Saadeh, a member of Jounieh's municipal council, told The Associated Press that he had called on Haret Sakher residents to avoid any reaction "so that we can preserve civil peace."

In a predominantly Christian area just north of Beirut, plans to house displaced people in an abandoned warehouse near the port were suspended last week after drawing backlash from lawmakers and residents.

Fears of civil conflict

"The Israeli targeting campaign has created a lot of paranoia," said Maha Yahya, director of the Beirut-based Carnegie Middle East Center. "If you see a displaced person, maybe you wonder, 'What if this person is a target?'"

Fearing the tension couldslip out of control, the army has beefed up its presence on the streets.

On Friday, army commander Gen. Rudolphe Haikal toured Beirut and the southern city of Sidon and told troops that they should be "firm in the face of any attempt to undermine internal stability," the army said in a statement.

Police forces, including a SWAT unit, was deployed at major intersections in the capital to preserve peace and prevent any friction between the displaced and locals. Police patrols pass through the tent city by Beirut's coast where Shuman and his family are staying.

An official at the municipality of the predominantly Sunni town of Naameh, just south of Beirut, said that they have received thousands of people displaced from southern Lebanon.

The official said that in order to avoid tensions, they opened a school in one district for displaced Shiites and another in a different neighborhood for people displaced from Sunni border villages.

"There are concerns among people," that conflict could break out said the official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

With the Israeli airstrikes and ground invasion mainly targeting Shiite areas, U.S. ambassador to Lebanon Michel Issa, a Lebanese-American, was criticized for stoking sectarianism. He told reporters in late March that the U.S. had asked Israel for a commitment that Christian villages in southern Lebanon will not be attacked.

"We have asked the Israelis to leave Christian villages in the south alone and they told us that they will not touch Christian villages," Issa said. However, he added, "They (Israelis) said that they cannot guarantee" that the villages would be left alone "if there is infiltration into these villages" by Hezbollah members.

Several Christian villages in southern Lebanon have asked displaced Shiites who were sheltering there to leave, fearing that their presence might trigger Israeli attacks.

Legislator Taymour Joumblatt who is the leader of the Progressive Socialist Party, the largest Druze-led political group in the country, said that the biggest concern in the country now is "strife."

"The most important thing is to reduce sectarian pressures on the ground," Joumblatt said. "Our Shiites brothers are part of this country and our humanitarian duty is to help them."

Associated Press writer Isabel DeBre contributed to this report from Beirut.

Lebanon’s displaced Shiites face rising hostility as airstrikes fuel fear and evictions

BEIRUT (AP) — When the Israel-Hezbollahwar broke out in early March, Hussein Shuman fled the heavy bombardment of the sou...
Myanmar's parliament elects ruling general as president, keeping the army in charge

BANGKOK (AP) — Myanmar's parliament on Friday electedMin Aung Hlaing,a general who ousted Aung San Suu Kyi's civilian government in 2021 and kept an iron grip on power for the past five years, as the country's new president.

Associated Press FILE - Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, head of Myanmar's military council, inspects officers during a parade to commemorate Myanmar's 78th Armed Forces Day in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, March 27, 2023. (AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo, File) Myanmar's military representatives arrive for a session at Union parliament in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo) Myanmar's military representatives arrive for a session at Union parliament in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Thursday, April 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo) Myanmar's military representatives and lawmakers arrive to attend a session at Union parliament in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Friday, April 3, 2026.(AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo) Parliament chairman Aung Lin Dwe, center, arrives for a session of Union Parliament in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo)

Myanmar President

The move marks a nominal return to an elected government but is widely considered to be an effort to keep the army in power after anelection organized by the militarythat opponents and independent observers deemed neither free nor fair.

Min Aung Hlaing was one of three nominees for the president's post, but was virtually guaranteed the job as lawmakers from military-backed parties and appointed members from the army hold a commanding majority in parliament.

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Aung Lin Dwe, speaker of parliament's combined upper and lower house, announced that Min Aung Hlaing won 429 out of the 584 votes. The two runners-up became vice presidents.

Min Aung Hlaing, who holds the rank of senior general, had earlier relinquished his post of the commander-in-chief because the constitution prohibits the president from simultaneously holding the top military position. A close aide, Gen. Ye Win Oo, took over the powerful job.

The 69-year-old Min Aung Hlaing had been the military chief since 2011. Under a military-imposed constitution, he held major power even before overthrowing Suu Kyi's government.

Parliament members were elected in three phases in December and January. Major opposition parties, including Suu Kyi's former ruling National League for Democracy, were either blocked from running or refused to compete under conditions they deemed unfair. Suu Kyi has been held in prison.

Myanmar’s parliament elects ruling general as president, keeping the army in charge

BANGKOK (AP) — Myanmar's parliament on Friday electedMin Aung Hlaing,a general who ousted Aung San Suu Kyi's civi...
Australians cancel Easter travel as worries mount over fuel crisis

(Corrects age to 66 from 67 in paragraph 3)

Reuters

By Christine Chen and Cordelia Hsu

SYDNEY, April 3 (Reuters) - Every Easter, Sydney retiree Elsa Ucak is one of the millions of Australians that hit the road ‌to travel during the four-day-long weekend.

But this year, she has cancelled her trip with her husband because she ‌could not justify how much petrol her getaway would use.

"We usually go to the countryside, but because of the petrol situation, we decided to ​stay at home this year," said Ucak, 66.

A long trip would be costly and also consume fuel that could be used by people who needed it more, she said.

"(It's) six or seven hours drive to the countryside ... it's expensive. Also we've got to think about it - working people need their petrol, (but) we're retired, we can stay at home."

"We usually go with a group ‌of friends, everyone cancelled."

The Easter long weekend ⁠is typically one of the busiest travel times of the year in Australia. In 2025, more than 4.5 million people had been expected to travel over the period, spending A$11.1 billion ($7.67 ⁠billion) on their trips, according to research firm Roy Morgan.

But many plans this year have been disrupted by the outbreak of the Iran war on February 28 and the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, which has choked global energy supplies.

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Australia, which imports ​about 90% ​of its fuel, has experienced localised shortages and seen prices ​soar, with diesel costing more than A$3 per ‌litre and petrol more than A$2.50 last week before the government cut fuel taxes to help bring prices down.

Rachel Abbott, a 27-year-old art director, has also shelved her travel plans this Easter.

While she would typically go home to north-east Victoria, both the cost of driving and flights made her decide to stay in Sydney.

"Work's just been quite busy and flights are very expensive, and then if I were to drive, obviously it would be a lot more expensive," she said.

Aid ‌worker Stav Zotalis, 59, said her holiday plans were unaffected since she ​prefers to stay at home for Easter, but this year "does feel very ​different" due to the conflict in the Middle ​East.

"I don't know that we can celebrate. It feels like the world is shaky, it's unpredictable. ‌And I feel that we don't know where ​things are going."

While she has ​felt the strain of higher costs at the petrol station and supermarket, she said she was more concerned about those in the conflict zones.

"I've been an overseas aid worker for 25 years and I lived in Asia ​for 14 years, and I know ‌people that live closer to the conflict are having to forgo food. Not just trips interstate or ​to the coast, like some of us here in Australia," she said.

($1 = 1.4480 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Christine ​Chen and Cordelia Hsu in Sydney; Editing by Kim Coghill)

Australians cancel Easter travel as worries mount over fuel crisis

(Corrects age to 66 from 67 in paragraph 3) By Christine Chen and Cordelia Hsu SYDNEY, April 3 (Reuters) - Ev...
Christians mark Holy Week in the region and other top photos from Latin America and the Caribbean

March 27 - April 2, 2026

Associated Press FILE - Catholic children representing angels pose for photos prior to joining the Palm Sunday commemoration in Santa Cruz Chinautla, Guatemala, March 29, 2026. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo, File) FILE - People walk with decorated bird cages during an annual pilgrimage of bird vendors to the Basilica of Guadalupe in Mexico City, March 29, 2026. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo, File) FILE - A worker points to the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS Nimitz docking in the Gulf of Panama, March 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix, File) FILE - Photos of soldiers who died on a military cargo plane that crashed in Puerto Leguizamo, are arranged on the steps of an altar before the start of a memorial Mass at a military base church in Bogota, Colombia, March 27, 2026. (AP Photo/Fernando Vergara, File) FILE - A Bolivian fans wipes away tears after his country's team loss to Iraq in a World Cup qualifying playoff final soccer match, in La Paz, Bolivia, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Juan Karita, File) FILE - Inmates sleep outdoors due to lack of indoor space at the Tacumbu prison in Asuncion, Paraguay, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz, File) FILE - A FILE - A dead tree stands out amid a lush green section of the Caxiuana National Forest that is used as a control plot for an experiment on drought run by the Esecaflor project in Para state, Brazil, March 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz, File) FILE - A supporter of Popular Renewal presidential candidate Rafael López Aliaga, who has embraced the name nickname FILE - Yuneisy Riviaux helps her daughter Edianet with her homework at their home in Havana, Cuba, March 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa, File) FILE - A quinceanera rides in a vintage car marking her 15th birthday celebration in Havana, Cuba, March 28, 2026. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa, File) FILE - A raccoon is silhouetted against a rising pink moon in the night sky of Panama City, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Matias Delacroix, File)

Pictures of the Week Latin America and Caribbean Photo Gallery

People around Latin America and the Caribbean marked Holy Week with colorful processions and other traditional displays.

The 69 members of the security forces who died in a military plane crash in Colombia were honored in a solemn ceremony in Bogota.

The U.S. Navy aircraft carrier USS Nimitz docked in the Gulf of Panama.

Bolivia experienced heartbreak as the World Cup qualifying matches ended.

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This gallery was curated by photo editor Anita Baca, based in Mexico City.

AP photography:https://apnews.com/photography

Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/apnews

Christians mark Holy Week in the region and other top photos from Latin America and the Caribbean

March 27 - April 2, 2026 Pictures of the Week Latin America and Caribbean Photo Gallery People aro...
Myanmar junta chief Min Aung Hlaing elected president by pro-military parliament

April 3 (Reuters) - Myanmar junta chief Min Aung Hlaing won a parliamentary vote on Friday to become the country's president, formalising his grip on political power in the war-torn nation five years after he ousted ‌an elected government.

Reuters

The 69-year-old general orchestrated a 2021 coup against the administration of Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung ‌San Suu Kyi and placed her under arrest, sparking widespread protests that morphed into nationwide armed resistance against the junta.

The transition from top general to ​civilian president follows a lopsided election in December and January that was won in a landslide by an army-backed party and derided by critics and Western governments as a sham to perpetuate military rule behind a veneer of democracy.

In a live broadcast of the vote count in a parliament dominated by the election-winning Union Solidarity and Development Party and the military's quota of appointed armed ‌forces legislators, former commander-in-chief Min Aung Hlaing comfortably ⁠passed the threshold required to win the presidential vote.

'DREAMS BECOMING REALITY'

Min Aung Hlaing's ascent to the presidency - a position that analysts say he has long sought - followed a major reshuffle in the ⁠leadership of Myanmar's armed forces, which he had led since 2011.

On Monday, as he was nominated in parliament as a presidential candidate, Min Aung Hlaing anointed Ye Win Oo, a former intelligence chief seen as fiercely loyal to the general, as his successor to lead the ​military.

The ​military handover and Min Aung Hlaing's rise to the presidency are ​seen by analysts as a strategic pivot to consolidate ‌his power as head of a nominally civilian government and earn international legitimacy, while protecting the interests of an armed forces that has run the country directly for five of the past six decades.

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"He has long harboured the ambition to trade his title of commander-in-chief for president and it appears his dreams are now becoming a reality," said Aung Kyaw Soe, an independent Myanmar analyst.

CIVIL WAR PERSISTS

Still, the civil war that has wrecked Myanmar for much of the last five years is raging, with ‌some anti-junta groups - including those comprising remnants of Suu Kyi's party ​and longstanding ethnic minority armies - forming a new combined front this week to ​take on the military.

"Our vision and strategic objectives are ​to completely dismantle all forms of dictatorship, including the military dictatorship, and to collectively initiate a ‌new political landscape," the Steering Council for the ​Emergence of a Federal Democratic Union ​said in a statement on Monday.

Resistance groups could face intensified military pressure as well as increased scrutiny from neighbouring countries that may seek to bolster their relationship with Min Aung Hlaing's new administration, analysts say.

"Amidst global oil and ​fuel shortages and economic crises, maintaining organisational ‌stability could become difficult," analyst Sai Kyi Zin Soe said of the opposition.

"As these hardships grow, it ​may become even harder to build mutual understanding and trust between groups, reach firmer agreements, and sustain cooperation."

(Reporting ​by Reuters Staff; Editing by Devjyot Ghoshal and Martin Petty)

Myanmar junta chief Min Aung Hlaing elected president by pro-military parliament

April 3 (Reuters) - Myanmar junta chief Min Aung Hlaing won a parliamentary vote on Friday to become the country's pr...
Lebanon's displaced Shiites face rising hostility as airstrikes fuel fear and evictions

BEIRUT (AP) — When the Israel-Hezbollahwar broke out in early March, Hussein Shuman fled the heavy bombardment of the southern suburbs of Beirut, but he didn't bother trying to rent an apartment elsewhere.

Associated Press File — Smoke rises from Israeli airstrikes in Dahiyeh, a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, March 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla, File) Special forces police officers deployed amid tensions between people displaced by Israeli strikes and local residents in Beirut neighborhoods, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) FILE — A child walks past tents sheltering people displaced by Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon and Dahiyeh, Beirut's southern suburbs, along the Beirut waterfront in Beirut, Lebanon, Saturday, March 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, File) Special forces police officers deployed amid tensions between people displaced by Israeli strikes and local residents in Beirut neighborhoods, Lebanon, Wednesday, April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla) FILE — A displaced woman who fled Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon, carries her belonging as she moves to a better spot to shelter from the rain, past an Arabic anti-war poster that reads,

Lebanon Sectarian Tensions

In areas deemed "safe" because the Lebanese militant group has no presence, he feels that Shiite Muslims like him are not welcome. Residents regard them with suspicion as potential Hezbollah members, and landlords charge exorbitant prices to rent to displaced families.

Instead, the 35-year-old, who works at a perfume company, headed to central Beirut where he set up a small tent where he has been staying, along with his wife, 7-year-old son and 5-year-old daughter.

Shuman even rejected an offer from a friend who invited him to bring his family to the Christian mountain town of Zgharta. He preferred to remain in his tent, even though it has flooded twice in the past two weeks.

"By staying here I have my dignity and respect," Shuman said, sitting on a chair near his tent as a barber gave him an open-air hair cut. "We will not stay in a place where we are going to be humiliated."

In a country full of suspicion, the more than 1 million people — most of them Shiite — displaced as a result of Israel's evacuation orders and airstrikes have limited options.

Some landlords in Christian areas refuse to rent to Shiites. Others demand inflated rents and deposits that few can afford. Fatima Zahra, 42, from Beirut's southern suburbs, said she and her sister sold their finest jewelry to pay the $5,000 the landlord charged up front for two months' rent.

In some Beirut neighborhoods, displaced people who can afford to pay high rents are only allowed to take the apartment after landlords inform the security agencies to check on whether the family has any links to Hezbollah.

Sectarian tensions are a sensitive issue in Lebanon because the country fought a 15-year civil war ending in 1990 that largely broke down along sectarian lines.

Rising tensions

Social frictions have worsened since Israel'stargeted airstrikeskilled Hezbollah officials or members of Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard in predominantly Christian, Sunni and Druze areas, raising fears among the hosts that Hezbollah members are mingling within the civilian population.

The Lebanese are deeply divided over Hezbollah's wars with Israel, with many in the small nation blaming the Iran-backed group for dragging the country into a deadly conflict that has so far left more than 1,200 people dead and over 3,000 wounded. Hezbollah fired missiles into Israel two days after theU.S. and Israel attacked Iranon Feb. 28, triggering the ongoing Middle East war.

The renewed war has caused widespread destruction and paralyzed the economy at a time when Lebanon is still in the throes of a historiceconomic crisisthat broke out in late 2019. The country has not yet recovered from the lastIsrael-Hezbollah war in 2024.

In mid-March, an Israeli airstrike on an apartment in the town of Aramoun killed three people, prompting some local residents to call for the displaced to leave the area.

Days later, an airstrike on the nearby town of Bchamoun also killed three people, including a four-year-old girl, who were displaced from Beirut's southern suburbs, where Hezbollah has a strong presence.

In neither case did Israel announce the intended target of the strikes, but neighbors assumed that someone in the targeted apartments was a Hezbollah member.

"Had we known that they were linked to Hezbollah, we would have kicked them out," an angry man who owns an apartment in the building in Bchamoun said at the scene.

In late March, a missile exploded over the predominantly Christian Keserwan region north of Beirut, with debris falling on different areas. Although the Lebanese army later said that it was an Iranian missile passing over Lebanon that fell, many initially assumed that it was an Israeli airstrike targeting displaced people.

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No one was was hurt by the missile debris, but a group of young men attacked displaced Shiites in the district of Haret Sakher near the coastal city of Jounieh, calling for their eviction, before local officials intervened.

"We don't want them here," shouted a Haret Sakher resident shortly after the strike. He said that some of the displaced refer to their hosts as "Zionists," accusing them of being aligned with Israel because they criticize Hezbollah for dragging the country into the conflict. He added: "We don't want national coexistence."

George Saadeh, a member of Jounieh's municipal council, told The Associated Press that he had called on Haret Sakher residents to avoid any reaction "so that we can preserve civil peace."

In a predominantly Christian area just north of Beirut, plans to house displaced people in an abandoned warehouse near the port were suspended last week after drawing backlash from lawmakers and residents.

Fears of civil conflict

"The Israeli targeting campaign has created a lot of paranoia," said Maha Yahya, director of the Beirut-based Carnegie Middle East Center. "If you see a displaced person, maybe you wonder, 'What if this person is a target?'"

Fearing the tension couldslip out of control, the army has beefed up its presence on the streets.

On Friday, army commander Gen. Rudolphe Haikal toured Beirut and the southern city of Sidon and told troops that they should be "firm in the face of any attempt to undermine internal stability," the army said in a statement.

Police forces, including a SWAT unit, was deployed at major intersections in the capital to preserve peace and prevent any friction between the displaced and locals. Police patrols pass through the tent city by Beirut's coast where Shuman and his family are staying.

An official at the municipality of the predominantly Sunni town of Naameh, just south of Beirut, said that they have received thousands of people displaced from southern Lebanon.

The official said that in order to avoid tensions, they opened a school in one district for displaced Shiites and another in a different neighborhood for people displaced from Sunni border villages.

"There are concerns among people," that conflict could break out said the official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

With the Israeli airstrikes and ground invasion mainly targeting Shiite areas, U.S. ambassador to Lebanon Michel Issa, a Lebanese-American, was criticized for stoking sectarianism. He told reporters in late March that the U.S. had asked Israel for a commitment that Christian villages in southern Lebanon will not be attacked.

"We have asked the Israelis to leave Christian villages in the south alone and they told us that they will not touch Christian villages," Issa said. However, he added, "They (Israelis) said that they cannot guarantee" that the villages would be left alone "if there is infiltration into these villages" by Hezbollah members.

Several Christian villages in southern Lebanon have asked displaced Shiites who were sheltering there to leave, fearing that their presence might trigger Israeli attacks.

Legislator Taymour Joumblatt who is the leader of the Progressive Socialist Party, the largest Druze-led political group in the country, said that the biggest concern in the country now is "strife."

"The most important thing is to reduce sectarian pressures on the ground," Joumblatt said. "Our Shiites brothers are part of this country and our humanitarian duty is to help them."

Associated Press writer Isabel DeBre contributed to this report from Beirut.

Lebanon’s displaced Shiites face rising hostility as airstrikes fuel fear and evictions

BEIRUT (AP) — When the Israel-Hezbollahwar broke out in early March, Hussein Shuman fled the heavy bombardment of the sou...
The Latest: Iran launches missiles at Israel and Gulf states as explosions heard around Tehran

Iran fired missiles at Israel and some Gulf nations, setting alight a refinery in Kuwait, while explosions could be heard around Tehran and the central Iranian city of Isfahan on Friday, as the United States prepared to further reinforce its already significant military forces in the Middle East.

Associated Press President Donald Trump arrives from the Blue Room to speak about the Iran war from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool) A boy who fled with his family following Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon sits inside the van they are using as shelter in Sidon, Lebanon, Thursday, April 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) A man with burn wounds from an Israeli airstrike on southern Lebanon sits on a bed at the Sidon Government Hospital in Sidon, Lebanon, Thursday, April 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Members from the Popular Mobilization Forces attend a funeral of fighters who were killed in a U.S. airstrike, in Tal Afar, Nineveh province, north of Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, April 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban) Israeli security forces and rescue teams inspect a site struck by an Iranian missile in Petah Tikva, Israel,Thursday, April 2, 2026. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg)

APTOPIX Trump Iran US

As the war that began Feb. 28 was to enter its sixth week, Israel, Bahrain, Kuwait warned about incoming missile fire, although it was unclear if anything was struck. Activists reported strikes around Tehran and the central city of Isfahan but it wasn't immediately clear what was hit.

Iranian drones struck Kuwait's Mina al-Ahmadi oil refinery Friday, sparking fires at the facility. The state-run Kuwait Petroleum Corp. issued a statement on the attack, the third so far since the war began, and said firefighters were working to control the blazes. There were no injuries reported, the company said.

Iran's attacks on Gulf region energy infrastructure and its tight grip on the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world's oil and natural gas transits in peacetime, has sent oil prices skyrocketing.

Oil prices surged while Asian financial markets rose moderately during cautious trading. Benchmark U.S. crude rose 11.4% to $111.54 a barrel. The price of Brent crude, the international standard, jumped 7.8% to $109.03 per barrel.

U.S. PresidentDonald Trumpsaid U.S. forceswill keep hitting Iran "very hard"in the next two or three weeks.

The largest American aircraft carrier in service sailed out of Split, in Croatia and "remains poised for full mission tasking in support of national objectives in any area of operation," the Navy's 6th Fleet announced.

It was unclear where it was going. The USS Abraham Lincoln remains in the Arabian Sea and the USS George H. W. Bush aircraft carrier departed Norfolk on Wednesday to head to the Mideast.

Here is the latest:

Kuwait says Mina al-Ahmadi oil refinery hit by Iranian drones

Iranian drones struck Kuwait's Mina al-Ahmadi oil refinery Friday, sparking fires at the facility.

The state-run Kuwait Petroleum Corp. issued a statement on the attack and said firefighters were working to control the blazes .

There were no injuries reported, the company said.

Kuwait has blamed Iran, as well as Iranian-backed Shiite militias in Iraq, for drone attacks targeting the small, oil-rich nation on the northern edge of the Persian Gulf.

Kuwait operates three oil refineries. Mina al-Ahmadi has come under attack at least three times in the war so far.

Refineries are key to Kuwait's oil production because without them, oil wells would have to be shut down for lack of a destination for the oil.

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Restarting refineries is extremely time consuming for safety reasons and those wells would remain largely inactive until refineries are back on line.

Oil prices surge while Asian share prices rise moderately

Oil prices continued to surge on worries of a prolongedIran warbut the Asian markets that were open Friday rose moderately in cautious trading, while others were closed for the Good Friday holidays.

Benchmark U.S. crude rose 11.4% to $111.54 a barrel. The price of Brent crude, the international standard, jumped 7.8% to $109.03 per barrel.

The U.S. only relies on the Persian Gulf for a fraction of the oil it imports, but oil is a commodity and prices are set in a global market.

The situation is very different in Asia. Japan, for example, relies on access to theStrait of Hormuzfor much of the nation's oil import needs and would need to rely on alternative routes. But some analysts say Japan and oher nations are counting on an agreement with Iran to allow transports.

Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 gained 0.9% in Friday morning trading to 52,938.62. South Korea's Kospi jumped 2.1% to 5,344.41. The Shanghai Composite sank 0.5% to 3,899.57. Trading was closed in Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Indonesia and India.

Wall Street, where trading is closed Friday, finished its first winning week since the start of the Iran war, although trading started out with a decline driven by a surge in oil prices.

Bangladesh implements austerity measures

Bangladesh is curtailing office hours and enforcing early closure of malls and shops beginning Friday to handle its energy crisis related to the war.

The country's cabinet ordered 30% spending cuts for fuel and power at government offices, suspended some staff training and stopped purchases of new vehicles, ships and aircraft. Decorative lighting will not be allowed for celebrations.

Bangladesh, a nation of more than 170 million people, is seeking alternative fuel sources and $2.5 billion in external financing for imports, which account for 95% of its fuel.

Australia urges weekend motorists to refuel in cities

Australian Energy Minister Chris Bowen on Friday urged motorists getting away for a long weekend during the Easter holiday to fill up in cities because most of the nation's fuel shortages are in rural areas.

Among 2,400 gas stations in New South Wales, Australia's most populous state, 182 had run out of diesel by Friday.

In Australia's second-most populous state, Victoria, 76 gas stations were out of diesel. In the remaining states ranked by the most populous first, Queensland had 75 stations without diesel, Western Australia had 37, South Australia had 28 and in Tasmania there were seven.

"For those Australians planning a road trip this weekend, given our shortages are predominantly in rural and regional Australia, it makes sense to fill up in the city to help the country if you can," Bowen said in Sydney.

The government, which blamed regional shortages on panic buying and distribution problems, is concentrating on delivering fuel to farmers for planting crops.

The Latest: Iran launches missiles at Israel and Gulf states as explosions heard around Tehran

Iran fired missiles at Israel and some Gulf nations, setting alight a refinery in Kuwait, while explosions could be heard...

 

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