The World Health Organisation (WHO) is releasing $2 million from its emergency fund to support the victims of floods in eastern Libya, its director general said on Thursday.
"Even while the death toll is increasing, the health needs of the survivors are becoming more urgent," Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.
Tedros, who described the floods as a "calamity of epic proportions", said WHO was deploying contingency supplies which were already in Libya, as well as sending trauma, surgical and emergency supplies from its logistics hub in Dubai.
Rescue work has been hindered by the political fractures in the country of 7 million people, which has been war on-and-off and lacked a government with nationwide reach since a NATO-backed uprising toppled Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.
An internationally recognised Government of National Unity (GNU) is based in Tripoli, in the west. A parallel administration operates in the east, under control of the Libyan National Army of Khalifa Haftar.
An Israeli air strike has killed at least three people in the Gaza Strip on Monday, local health officials said, in the latest round of violence since a US-brokered ceasefire took effect more than five months ago.
ഇറാനിയൻ ആക്രമണത്തിൽ ഒരു തൊഴിലാളി കൊല്ലപ്പെടുകയും വൈദ്യുതി, ജലശുദ്ധീകരണ പ്ലാന്റിലെ ഒരു സർവീസ് കെട്ടിടത്തിന് കേടുപാടുകൾ സംഭവിക്കുകയും ചെയ്തതായി കുവൈറ്റിലെ വൈദ്യുതി, ജല, പുനരുപയോഗ ഊർജ്ജ മന്ത്രാലയം ഞായറാഴ്ച അറിയിച്ചു.
Spain has closed its airspace to US planes involved in attacks on Iran, a step beyond its previous denial of use of jointly-operated military bases, Spanish newspaper El Pais reported on Monday, citing military sources.
A United Nations peacekeeper has been killed in southern Lebanon overnight, prompting condemnations on Monday after a weekend in which Lebanese journalists and medics were killed in Israeli strikes.