59 Filipinos in Lebanon seek repatriation due to Israel-Hezbollah clashes—PH embassy
By Raymund Antonio and Raymund Antonio
At least 59 Filipinos have signified their intention to be repatriated from Lebanon amid the escalating tensions between Israel and Islamist group Hezbollah, Philippine Ambassador to Lebanon Raymond Balatbat said on Monday, Oct. 23.
Israeli soldiers patrol in armored personnel carriers near the border with Lebanon on Sunday, Oct. 22, 2023. (Aris Messinis/AFP via Getty Images)
“On Sunday morning when we held our meeting with the FiIipino community leaders, we already received 59 applications,” he said during an interview with CNN Philippines.
Balatbat said he expects the number of repatriates from the 17,500 Filipinos in Lebanon to “grow a lot larger” following the Israel-Hezbollah clashes.
“I know there’s a lot more,” the ambassador also told CNN Philippines’ The Source.
The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) placed the Middle East country under Alert Level 3, or voluntary repatriation, last weekend due to the ongoing tension in the region.
“Due to the heightened tension in the southern border of Lebanon, the Philippine Embassy calls for the voluntary repatriation of Filipino nationals,” the Philippine Embassy in Beirut said in an advisory.
Balatbat noted the Filipino who want to return home were mostly from Beirut and Mt. Lebanon area. Mt. Lebanon is near the capital where most Filipinos live.
According to the ambassador, three of the 59 repatriates were from southern Lebanon where most of the clashes between the Israeli forces and Lebanon-based militants are happening. There were a total of 122 Filipinos in the area, he said.
“We heard that a number of Lebanese families living near the southern border with Israel have already left the area and have come here to Beirut, so there is a lot of uncertainty and that’s causing really this panic among people here,” Balatbat said.
Other embassies have also asked their citizens to leave since airlines are already cutting down their flights to Beirut.
The envoy said water and food supply in Lebanon are still enough in the meantime, but it could not last long if the conflict persists in the region.