-
Pernod says Brown-Forman talks 'ongoing' after reported rival offer
-
Joshua gets 'unbelievable lift' training with old rival Usyk - promoter
-
Bayern fans apologise after photographers injured at Real game
-
Stocks rise as optimism over Mideast war takes hold
-
S.African left-wing leader sentenced to jail term on gun charges
-
Commodities exports through Strait of Hormuz collapse, except for Iran
-
Silva to leave Man City at end of the season
-
Russian strikes kill at least 19 across Ukraine
-
World Athletics deliver nationality switch hammer blow to Turkey
-
S.African left-wing leader Malema jailed for five years on gun charges
-
Silva to leave Man City at end of season
-
Pope condemns 'endless cycle' of death in 'bloodstained' Cameroon region
-
WADA targets India's performance-enhancing drugs production
-
Tokyo stocks hit record high as Iran peace hopes grow
-
O'Sullivan to face Chinese debutant He Guoqiang in World Championship opener
-
England's Botterman and Campbell out of Women's Six Nations
-
Leading economists call for windfall profit taxes on energy firms
-
Meghan Markle claims to be 'most trolled person' in world
-
Liverpool confirm Ekitike out for season, will miss World Cup
-
Teachers protest as Turkey buries school shooting victims
-
UK PM tells social media bosses to step up child online safety
-
Luxury group Kering seeks to make flagging Gucci 'unmissable' again
-
Snooker great O'Sullivan to face Chinese debutant Guoqiang in World Championship opener
-
Real Madrid season in tatters, Arbeloa looking shaky after Euro exit
-
S.African left-wing leader Malema sentenced to five years jail on gun charges
-
In Lebanon shelters, women care for tiny babies, face pregnancy
-
Pope heads to Cameroon conflict zone with message of peace
-
French billionaire Bollore sparks turmoil at top publisher Grasset
-
'Disgrace': fans outraged by World Cup transit fare hikes
-
Repsol taking back control of Venezuelan oil assets
-
PSG fix sights on another Ligue 1 and Champions League double
-
Trump says Israel, Lebanon leaders to hold talks Thursday
-
TotalEnergies says was able to maintain production despite war
-
Russian strikes kill at least 16 across Ukraine
-
Turkey launches internet crackdown ahead of funerals for shooting victims
-
UK supermarket Tesco says Mideast war hits profit outlook
-
EasyJet says first-half loss to deepen on Mideast war
-
Kering seeks to 'reignite desirability' with Gucci reset
-
Thai farmers pin hopes on microbes to end annual burning crisis
-
Australian court overturns protest limits after Bondi Beach attack
-
Tokyo record leads stocks higher as Iran peace hopes grow
-
Turkey to hold funerals for school shooting victims
-
AI demand drives chipmaker TSMC's net profit to fresh record
-
Turkey to hold funerals for victims of school shooting
-
'Transnational repression' worsened last year: report
-
Curacao, tiny island with big dreams of World Cup glory
-
Chatbots at the ballot box: AI skirts Brazil election rules
-
Warriors rally to eliminate Clippers, 76ers reach NBA playoffs
-
Fresh Russian barrage kills 14 in Ukraine
-
Threat of grounded planes nears as jet fuel supplies dwindle
In Lebanon shelters, women care for tiny babies, face pregnancy
Mariam Zein cradled her 11-week-old son on a mattress on the floor where she and her family have sheltered near Beirut since the Israel-Hezbollah war upended her young family's life.
"I was really excited when I was in my ninth month of pregnancy... I never thought he'd be born and there'd be war," said Zein, 26, clutching baby Hussein.
"I haven't been able to enjoy my son -- my first child... to see him getting bigger in his own bed, in his own home."
"I was very sad, and I'm still sad," she told AFP, nappies and baby formula wedged near a photocopier, clothes hanging on an improvised line.
Zein fled with her husband, their baby and other relatives when war erupted between Israel and Hezbollah on March 2, drawing Lebanon into the Middle East conflict.
She does not know if her home in south Lebanon is still standing.
Israel has kept up strikes despite a fragile US-Iran ceasefire, a landmark meeting this week between Israeli and Lebanese officials in Washington, and reports that leaders from both countries would talk for the first time in decades.
Lebanese authorities say the war has killed more than 2,100 people and displaced more than one million others.
Some 140,000 people are in overcrowded shelters like the centre in Beirut's suburbs housing Zein's family and around 500 other people, among them five pregnant women and others with young babies.
Zein said she stopped breastfeeding because there was no privacy, and now struggles to buy baby formula, while Hussein is outgrowing his clothes.
"Whatever happens I just want my son near me," she said.
- Pregnancy -
According to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), an estimated 620,000 women and girls are displaced, including some 13,500 pregnant women, of whom "1,500 are expected to give birth within the next 30 days".
The agency and other organisations have sought to support women as the authorities struggled to cope.
In a small tent containing a portable ultrasound, obstetrician and gynaecologist Theresia Nassar has checked on women including Zein as part of a mobile health clinic run by charity Caritas Lebanon with support from UNFPA.
Displaced pregnant women risk missing important tests and scans, she said, and they are trying to fill the gaps.
"We're not just worried about physical health but also their mental health," she said.
"They don't know if they can go home, they don't have their medication, they're not being properly followed."
Elsewhere, at a school-turned-shelter in central Beirut, heavily pregnant Ghada Issa, 36, is due to deliver a baby girl in a few weeks.
But "this place, this environment, is not for pregnant women", said Issa, who was displaced from south Lebanon with her husband, their daughter Siham, five, and son Ali, four.
They live in a cramped tent, and she said even the basics are a problem, like having to make frequent trips to crowded, far-away communal toilets.
- Twins -
Her husband set up an improvised bed so she doesn't have to sleep on the floor.
Underneath are precious donated items like tiny socks and little blankets. A worker from charity Amel Association International brought then a "baby kit" including nappies and baby powder.
Without donations and other support, "there wouldn't be anything" for the baby, Issa said, as people playing football yelled, children squealed and washing hung on improvised lines.
The shelter's administration said some 20 pregnant women and two who had recently given birth were among more than 2,600 people staying there.
"I haven't got my head around the idea of having a baby here," Issa said.
"I'm still hoping that one day they'll tell me, let's go to the village, and I'll have the baby at home."
In a university classroom in south Lebanon's city of Sidon, Ghada Fadel, 36, cares for her tiny twin sons. Mohammed and Mehdi are just over one month old, and in blue jumpsuits and matching beanies.
The family has been there since she was eight months' pregnant, after fleeing their border village.
"After we left the house, they (Israel) bombed it. The house is gone" along with everything they had prepared for the twins, Fadel said.
"I was hoping to give birth and come home," she said sadly.
"Every mum hopes to take her kids home... no matter the circumstances."
L.Janezki--BTB