There were many casualties in the 2006 Lebanon War, leading to condemnation of both sides, however the exact distribution of casualties has been disputed. The Lebanese Higher Relief Council (HRC),[1]UNICEF,[1] and various press agencies and news organizations have stated that most of those killed were Lebanese civilians,[2][3][4][5][6] however the Lebanese government does not differentiate between civilians and combatants in death toll figures. The Israeli government identified 43 Israeli civilians killed by Hezbollah rocket attacks, including four who died of heart attacks during rocket attacks. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) death toll ranges from 118 to 121, depending on the source and whether or not casualties that occurred after the ceasefire are included. The figures for the Hezbollah fighters killed are the most varying, with Hezbollah claiming 250 of its fighters killed, while Israel claimed to have identified 530 dead Hezbollah fighters. The IDF estimates 600–700 dead Hezbollah fighters. Sources can be conflicting.
Deaths: ≈250 fighters KIA reported by Hezbollah,[8] ≤500 estimated by Lebanese Government, Military, and Intelligence officials,[9] ≈500 estimated by UN[10] ≈600 estimated by IDF,[11] 450 bodies identified by Israel and up to 700 estimated by Amidror[12]
According to various media, between 1,000 and 1,200 people are reported dead. Additionally, there were between 480 and 1,100 people wounded, and over 1,000,000 were temporarily made refugees, with an unknown number of missing civilians in the south.[38][39][40][41][42]
On 28 July, Lebanese Health Minister Mohammad Khalifeh announced that hospitals in Lebanon had received 401 dead Lebanese people since 12 July. He also reportedly said: "On top of those victims, there are 150 to 200 bodies still under the rubble. We have not been able to pull them out because the areas they died in are still under fire".[43]
As of 5 August, The American University of Beirut Medical Center, the largest and most important hospital in Lebanon, had only enough power to continue operations for a week. [1]
According to the Lebanese government's "Council for Development and Reconstruction" the Lebanese damage incurred amounted to US $3.5 billion: US $2 billion for buildings and US $1.5 billion for infrastructure.[44]
Hezbollah acknowledges 49 killed.[45][46] IDF Chief of Staff Lt. General Dan Halutz has claimed that close to 100 Hezbollah fighters have been killed at 22 July, in land fighting in South Lebanon.[47] IDF claimed the killing of more than 300 Hezbollah fighters (which Hezbollah denied) as of August 1.[48]
The Kuwait Times reported that Hezbollah has buried over 700 fighters with more to follow, August 30.[49]
The Australian reports that Israel has the names of over 430 Hezbollah fighters it killed and estimates total Hezbollah dead at over 800, August 29. (Abraham Rabinovich recently reported in The Washington Times on Sept. 27 that Israel now had 532 names.)[50]
A report[51] on August 4, documenting Iran's financial help to the families of Hezbollah fighters, claimed Hezbollah had already lost 500 men, plus 1,500 wounded. The report said that the wounded were being treated in Syria to make the wounded harder to count.
According to Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 43[13][14] civilians have been killed, out of which 18 were Israeli Arabs,[52][53] while another 418 civilians were treated in hospitals, 19 of whom were seriously injured, and another 875 treated for shock.[54]
$1.6 billion cost to the Israeli economy
The war cost Israel $5.3 billion
Northern Israeli businesses lost $1.4 billion
Estimated compensation to be given to the population of northern Israel is $335.4 million
Israel plans to given $460 million to local governments and emergency services in northern Israel
UN personnel were subjected to dozens of attacks and near misses from both sides during the present conflict, most prominently the 25 July Israeli bombing of a UNTSO position,[56] which killed four UNTSO unarmed observers (Austrian, Canadian, Chinese and Finnish).[57] Diplomats familiar with the probe say that the strike was carried out with a precision-guided missile.[56]
Secretary-GeneralKofi Annan said in a statement from Rome that he was "shocked and deeply distressed by the apparently deliberate targeting by Israeli Defence Forces."[58] On 26 July 2006, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert phoned Kofi Annan and expressed his deep regret over the death of the four UN observers. He promised that Israel would thoroughly investigate the incident and would share the findings with Annan, but says he was taken aback by secretary general's statement saying that the Israeli attack on the UN post was "apparently deliberate".[59]
After the attack, Dan Gillerman, Israel's UN representative, said Israel would not allow the UN itself to participate in an investigation of the airstrike that killed the four UN observers.[60]
Just before the end of bombing, on 14 August, the IDF targeted what it said was a Palestinian faction in the Ein el-Hilweh refugee camp in Saida. Two missiles were fired into a civilian residential area and killed UNRWA/UN staff member Abdel Saghir.[61] Few days before two civilians were killed.
^ ab"Lebanon Under Siege". Presidency of the Council of Ministers - Higher Relief Council (Lebanon). November 9, 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-09-27. Retrieved 2008-08-30.
^Herbert Docena (August 17, 2006). "Amid the bombs, unity is forged". Asia Times Online. Archived from the original on August 31, 2006. The LCP...has itself been very close to Hezbollah and fought alongside it in the frontlines in the south. According to Hadadeh, at least 12 LCP members and supporters died in the fighting.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
^Jad Mouawad & Steven Erlanger (July 17, 2006). "Israel Strikes Lebanon After Hezbollah Missile Attack". The New York Times. Among the dead were eight Canadians, with another six critically injured, largely from an air attack on the border town of Aitaroun, where they were vacationing, the Canadian government reported