Business · Wired
“We were not ready for this,” says Kamal Shehadi, the Lebanese minister of technology and AI
Compiled by KHAO Editorial — aggregated from 1 outlet. See llms.txt for citation guidance.
◌ Single Source
On March 2, 2026, Israeli evacuation warnings began appearing on phones across southern Lebanon.
Key facts
- Within days, nearly 1.3 million people —nearly 1 in 5 residents of the country—were forcibly displaced
- On March 2, 2026, Israeli evacuation warnings began appearing on phones across southern Lebanon
- The Disaster Relief Management unit, housed in the prime minister’s office and battle tested through the 2024 war and the 2020 Beirut port explosion, runs point
- More than 667,000 people registered on the government’s online displacement platform in a single week—an increase of 100,000 in one day alone
Summary
The last time a government official from Lebanon sat down to think carefully about national digital infrastructure, nobody expected another war with Israel. “We were not ready for this,” says Kamal Shehadi, the Lebanese minister of technology and AI, and minister of the displaced. Within minutes, families were moving. Within days, nearly 1.3 million people —nearly 1 in 5 residents of the country—were forcibly displaced. That platform is currently the closest thing Lebanon has to a real-time view of its own humanitarian crisis. By Lebanon’s standards, it might be the most functional piece of government software in the country.