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Up to 3.2 million people displaced across Iran amid US-Israeli attacks: UN
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United Nations refugee agency says forced displacement likely to increase as US and Israel continue deadly strikes across Iran. Share Save More than three million people have been displaced in Iran since the United States and Israel launched a war against the country late last month, the United Nations says, as concerns mount over a worsening humanitarian crisis. The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said on Thursday that as many as 3.2 million people – representing between 600,000 and one million Iranian households – have been forcibly displaced since the war began on February 28. “Most of them are reportedly fleeing from Tehran and other major urban areas towards the north of the country and rural areas to seek safety,” UNHCR official Ayaki Ito said in a statement. “This figure is likely to continue rising as hostilities persist, marking a worrying escalation in humanitarian needs.” The US and Israeli militaries have continued to bombard Iran despite mounting international condemnation and calls for de-escalation. More than 1,300 people have been killed in US-Israeli attacks across the country to date, according to the latest figures from Iranian officials. While the US and Israel have said they are targeting Iranian leaders as well as military and nuclear infrastructure, Iran says thousands of civilian sites, such as schools and hospitals, have been attacked. Iran’s Deputy Health Minister Ali Jafarian told Al Jazeera on Thursday that medical teams have been responding to a growing number of casualties as strikes on urban areas have intensified in recent days. “Most of these people are civilians,” Jafarian said, adding that more than 30 hospitals and health facilities have been damaged due to the attacks. On Thursday, explosions were heard in several parts of the capital, Tehran, and other Iranian cities as the strikes continued. Al Jazeera’s Tohid Asadi said rescuers were digging through mounds of rubble as several multistorey apartment buildings were heavily damaged in recent attacks on a hard-hit eastern neighbourhood of Tehran. “We saw bodies taken out [of the rubble] … and the situation was far beyond what I can call disastrous,” Asadi said. Iran has responded to the US-Israeli assault by launching a barrage of missiles and drones at US bases and other sites in countries across the wider Middle East region. It has also shut down the Strait of Hormuz, a critical Gulf waterway through which about one-fifth of the world’s oil transits, raising serious concerns of disruptions to global energy supplies.