Relatives search the bowels of the huge prison as tens of thousands of people remain missing
Southern Lebanon's ancient city of Tyre, one of the oldest continuously inhabited places in the world, now bears the scars of weeks of Israeli airstrikes. Once vibrant and bustling, displaced residents are returning to a landscape of rubble and despair.
Lebanon is home to an estimated 176,000 migrants, many of them African women working menial jobs. Since the conflict began, many of them have been displaced, facing uncertain futures. Marcus Harton narrates this report from Ethel Bonet in Beirut.
One year after the war triggered by the Hamas-led attack on Israel, clashes between Hezbollah and Israel along Lebanon's border with Israel have intensified. The conflict has sparked a new humanitarian crisis that the UN says has displaced about 200,000 people.