The Restored Church of God|The Real Truth Magazine|WCG Background?
Donation InformationHelpContact
THE

REAL TRUTH

A MAGAZINE RESTORING PLAIN UNDERSTANDING
Subscribe
WorldAmericasMiddle EastSocietyScienceReligionFrom the EditorIssues
THE
REAL TRUTH

A Magazine Restoring Plain Understanding

Providing clear, biblical answers to life's greatest questions and making sense of today's headlines.

SECTIONS

  • Issues
  • News
  • Personal
  • All Articles
  • Subscribe
  • Search

ABOUT

  • About Us
  • Donation Information
  • Contact Us
  • Help
  • Privacy Policy
  • Press Resources
  • RSS Feed

RCG SITES

  • Main Site
  • The World to Come
  • WCG Background?
  • RCG Hub
  • MyRCG

© 2026 The Restored Church of God. All rights reserved.

RCG|The Restored Church of God
Middle East

Floods in Lebanon Leave Syrian Refugees Counting Their Losses

December 19, 2022
Floods in Lebanon Leave Syrian Refugees Counting Their Losses

BEIRUT (Reuters) – A few chickens, the children’s teddy bears and bundles of sodden clothes were all Karma Akiki and her family could save when floodwaters swept away their flimsy home in a settlement housing Syrian refugees in northern Lebanon.

Heavy rains, flooding and landslides along the Lebanese coast last month took a heavy toll on low-lying slum areas where many Syrians live, displacing hundreds of refugees and causing extensive damage to their often-precarious shelters.

“It seems that we are not only punished by an endless war, but also by nature and climate,” said Akiki, a mother-of-four who left Damascus in 2017 after her home was destroyed during fighting in the country’s civil war.

Standing beside the family’s new temporary tent in Beirut’s southern suburb of Ouzai, she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation how the family had scrambled to save themselves and a few possessions when heavy rains flooded their shack earlier in November.

Wading through floodwaters up to their chests, Akiki’s husband led the family to safety as the two oldest children dragged a raft loaded up with the belongings they were able to rescue.

In recent years, a series of storms and floods have added to the difficulties faced by the roughly 1.5 million Syrian refugees who live in neighboring Lebanon.

Last year, at least 340 refugee tents were destroyed, said Nadine Mazloum, a spokeswoman for the U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR), and this year’s flooding has intensified fears about a cholera outbreak that has mostly affected refugee camps.

“Flooding is not good for cholera (water) contaminants,” Caretaker Health Minister Firas Abiad said in a text message.

Lebanon had been cholera-free since 1993, but 5,000 cases have been reported since October, highlighting the impact of a four-year-old economic crisis on health and sanitation services in the nation of about 6.5 million people.

Charities Overwhelmed

For many refugees living in Lebanon’s flood-prone coastal areas, including the Hay Al-Tanak neighborhood of Tripoli where Akiki’s family lived, home is no more than a plastic sheet or tarpaulin held up by wooden poles or slung over trees.

Karim Kouwatli, a 45-year-old refugee who lived in Ouzai until his home flooded, has been living with his family under a plastic sheet on the side of a road in Beirut for more than two weeks.

“One morning we awoke to the sound of running water trickling into the camp,” Mr. Kouwatli said.

“It crept up on our tent until we realized we had to move,” he said, gesturing to the handful of belongings—cooking pots, clothing and blankets—that the family had been able to carry with them.

Charities are overwhelmed due to the lack of funds to provide cash assistance or temporary housing to refugees in Lebanon, said Rasha Beydoun, director of Make A Difference, an organization that provides food to low-income households.

UNHCR helps refugees and vulnerable Lebanese access safe water during storms and floods, and provides blankets, winter jackets and solar lamps, but Ms. Mazloum said limited resources would not stretch to everyone.

“Many vulnerable families...will struggle to cope with the winter season. No one should be left out in the cold this winter,” she said.

FREE SUBSCRIPTION

Learn the why behind the headlines.

Subscribe to The Real Truth for FREE news and analysis.

SHARE

Related Stories

Europe Faces a Ukrainian Drone Problem as Kyiv Targets Russian Oil Exports
Geopolitics

Europe Faces a Ukrainian Drone Problem as Kyiv Targets Russian Oil Exports

Kansas Farmers Hit Hard by Weather Extremes and Growing Costs, Wheat Crop Could Be Worst Since 1972
Weather & Environment

Kansas Farmers Hit Hard by Weather Extremes and Growing Costs, Wheat Crop Could Be Worst Since 1972

In Iran’s Capital, Weapons Demonstrations Send a Signal at Home and Abroad as Threat of War Remains
Middle East

In Iran’s Capital, Weapons Demonstrations Send a Signal at Home and Abroad as Threat of War Remains

Latest Stories

  • Europe Faces a Ukrainian Drone Problem as Kyiv Targets Russian Oil Exports
    Geopolitics

    Europe Faces a Ukrainian Drone Problem as Kyiv Targets Russian Oil Exports

  • Kansas Farmers Hit Hard by Weather Extremes and Growing Costs, Wheat Crop Could Be Worst Since 1972
    Weather & Environment

    Kansas Farmers Hit Hard by Weather Extremes and Growing Costs, Wheat Crop Could Be Worst Since 1972

  • In Iran’s Capital, Weapons Demonstrations Send a Signal at Home and Abroad as Threat of War Remains
    Middle East

    In Iran’s Capital, Weapons Demonstrations Send a Signal at Home and Abroad as Threat of War Remains

  • Kids Are in a ‘Reading Recession,’ as Test Scores Continue to Decline
    Education

    Kids Are in a ‘Reading Recession,’ as Test Scores Continue to Decline

  • Mali at Risk of Splintering After Jihadi and Separatist Attacks
    Analysis

    Mali at Risk of Splintering After Jihadi and Separatist Attacks

  • Invasive Plant Threatens Livelihoods in Colombia’s Largest Coastal Wetland
    Weather & Environment

    Invasive Plant Threatens Livelihoods in Colombia’s Largest Coastal Wetland