BEIRUT — When Hezbollah reignited the conflict with Israel in early March, Hussein Shuman fled the heavy Israeli strikes on the southern suburbs of Beirut, but he didn’t bother trying to rent an apartment elsewhere.

In areas deemed “safe” because Hezbollah 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, seven-year-old son and five-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 had 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 haircut. “We will not stay in a place where we are going to be humiliated.”

Get The Times of Israel’s Daily Edition
by email and never miss our top stories

By signing up, you agree to the terms

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.


Sara Kassem, who fled her village of Khiyam in southern Lebanon due to Israeli bombardment, feeds her 8-month-old son Amir inside a tent used as a shelter in Beirut, Lebanon, on April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)

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, where a 15-year civil war ending in 1990 largely broke down along sectarian lines.

Strikes in non-Shiite areas raise frictions in Lebanon

Social frictions have worsened since Israel’s targeted airstrikes killed 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 1,300 people dead and over 4,000 wounded, according to figures from Lebanese authorities that don’t distinguish between civilians and combatants.


Mourners carry the coffin of a militant from the Hezbollah-allied Amal movement killed in southern Lebanon during his funeral in the Shayyah neighborhood of Beirut’s southern suburbs on April 2, 2026. (Ibrahim AMRO / AFP) /

The current fighting started when Hezbollah attacked Israel with rockets and drones on March 2, two days after the US and Israel attacked the Iranian regime.

Amid the subsequent fighting, Lebanon has fired hundreds of rockets per day, the vast majority aimed at Israeli forces in southern Lebanon, but others at Israel itself. Ten Israel Defense Forces soldiers have been killed in Lebanon, as well as three civilians in Israel, including one mistakenly killed by Israeli shelling.

The IDF says it’s killed some 1,000 Hezbollah operatives, including hundreds of members of the terror group’s elite Radwan Force. Israeli officials have said the IDF is establishing a demilitarized “security zone” in southern Lebanon until the threat of Hezbollah is removed.

The last Israel-Hezbollah war, which the terror group started in support of its ally Hamas, ended with a November 2024 ceasefire deal. That agreement allowed Israel to respond to imminent threats; however, the subsequent year saw near-daily strikes on Hezbollah targets.


People walk past a damaged vehicle following an Israeli strike in Beirut, Lebanon, on April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

The renewed war has caused widespread destruction and paralyzed the economy at a time when Lebanon is still in the throes of a historic economic crisis that broke out in late 2019.

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.


A residential apartment damaged in an Israeli airstrike is seen in Bchamoun, about 10 kilometers (6 miles) southeast of Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, March 24, 2026. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

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.

No one 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.”


Displaced families stand next to their tents at an unofficial camp erected along Beirut’s seafront area during a sandstorm on April 3, 2026. (Dimitar DILKOFF / AFP)

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.

Lebanon urges stability, ramps up police presence

“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 could slip out of control, the army has beefed up its presence on the streets.

Last week, 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, were 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.


A special forces police officer deployed amid tensions between people displaced by Israeli strikes and local residents in Beirut neighborhoods, Lebanon, on April 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

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 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, US ambassador to Lebanon Michel Issa, a Lebanese-American, was criticized for stoking sectarianism. He told reporters in late March that the US had asked Israel for a commitment that Christian villages in southern Lebanon would 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.


US Ambassador to Lebanon Michel Issa arrives at the Lebanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ headquarters to meet Lebanese Foreign Minister Youssef Rajji, in Beirut on November 17, 2025. (Anwar AMRO / AFP)

However, he added, “[The 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 Shiite brothers are part of this country and our humanitarian duty is to help them.”