Israel Strikes Beirut after Netanyahu Tells Military to Fight with 'Full force' in Lebanon

More than 90,000 people in Lebanon have been displaced since Monday. Many have fled the south of the country, headed to the capital of Beirut.

One Beirut resident, Lina Fansa, tells me she feels "really depressed and really hopeless" as she watches the conflict escalate around her.

"You'll see many mattresses on the floor in public spaces, crowds gathered trying to enter abandoned apartment buildings," the 31-year-old says.

Fansa, who lives in the western suburb Ras Beirut, says the sounds of sirens are constant as more and more injured civilians arrive in the city.

She is glued to the news on her phone, waiting for "one glimpse of hope, of good news," but she tells me "it hasn't come yet".

"We don't know where we're going or how we're going to get there or what's going to happen.”