
Final autumn Hania Zataari, a mechanical engineer who works for Lebanon’s Ministry of Trade put her abilities to make use of as conflict within the nation raged on. Hailing from Sidon, South Lebanon, she created a chatbot on WhatsApp that simplified entry to much-needed assist.
“They misplaced their homes, their financial savings, their work, the whole lot that they had constructed,” Hania says, referring to these pressured from their properties by conflict.
On 23 September, Israel dramatically escalated its offensive towards the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah, with which it had been preventing a spiralling battle since Hezbollah attacked Israel in October 2023.
In line with the Lebanese authorities, at the least 492 individuals had been killed in one among Lebanon’s deadliest days of battle in virtually 20 years.
Hundreds of households fled to Sidon after the Israel Protection Forces (IDF) hit what it stated was 1,600 Hezbollah strongholds inside Lebanon.
Hania says many displaced individuals sought shelter in faculties and different public buildings, however many others who fled their properties had been pressured to lease elsewhere or stick with members of their household.
It’s these individuals who weren’t straight receiving help from the federal government that she wished to assist. Drawing on her programming abilities, Hania created the “aidbot” to slim the hole between the demand and provide of assist.

The aidbot is a chatbot – a sort of AI system designed to speak with its customers on-line – that hyperlinks to WhatsApp. It’s programmed to ask easy questions concerning the varieties of assist individuals require together with their names and areas.
This info is then recorded onto a Google spreadsheet which Hania and her staff of unpaid volunteers, made up of family and friends, entry to distribute assist comparable to meals, blankets, mattresses, medication and garments.
Hania used her spare time to construct the bot utilizing the web site Callbell.eu, which is often utilized by companies to have interaction with prospects on Meta’s platforms comparable to WhatsApp, Instagram and Fb messenger.
She explains that the bot, which continues to be getting used as we speak, makes distributing assist extra environment friendly because it cuts down the period of time she spends responding to requests for assist over WhatsApp.
“I am not likely occupied with realizing their names. I simply must know the place they’re so I can handle the supply,” she says.
Take, for instance, a request for child method. Hania says the bot will ask for the age of the infant and the amount wanted in order that she and her staff can present it.
The challenge, she says, is funded by donations coming from Lebanese individuals dwelling overseas. She’s created a publicly out there dashboard to file what the challenge has spent cash on and the way a lot assist she and her staff have distributed.
On the time of writing they’ve delivered 78 meals parcels to households of 5 or 10 individuals, 900 mattresses, and 323 blankets throughout Sidon and different elements of Lebanon.

Final October, 47 year-old Khaldoun Abbas and his household fled their properties in Najjarieh after they acquired calls from the IDF urging them to depart for their very own security.
Seventeen individuals, ranging in age from 9 to 78, slept beneath one roof in a rented three mattress house in Sidon.
Khaldoun says he, his spouse and their kids, in addition to his brother’s household slept on mattresses they requested utilizing the aidbot within the hallway of the flat. In addition they requested blankets, meals and cleansing detergents.
In contrast to his neighbours, he is not been in a position to return to his dwelling. It was destroyed in a confirmed Israeli strike 11 days later. The IDF instructed the BBC it “struck a terror infrastructure”.
Once we put this allegation to Khaldoun, he denied having any connection to Hezbollah or every other celebration.
“This is not the primary time Sidon has opened its doorways to displaced individuals,” Hania explains, referring to the wave of people that have arrived within the metropolis.
Sidon has a long-standing fame for taking in internally displaced individuals pushed from their properties alongside the Lebanon-Israel border.
The latest battle started in October 2023 after the conflict between Israel and Hamas spilled over into Lebanon when Hezbollah, Hamas’ ally, fired rockets into Israel in help of Gaza.
The Lebanese wholesome ministry says almost 4,000 individuals have been killed and over one million have been displaced. The ministry doesn’t say what number of of those are civilians or combatants.
In Israel round 60,000 individuals have been evacuated from Northern Israel and authorities say greater than 80 troopers and 47 civilians have been killed.

Final November a ceasefire was agreed between Israel and Lebanon. Regardless of some skirmishes it has largely been upheld. However individuals on the bottom say the availability of assist has not improved.
Worldwide NGO Islamic Reduction instructed the BBC that the “battle, destruction, and evacuation orders have fuelled ongoing displacement in Lebanon which has made it troublesome to evaluate and deal with the wants of the inhabitants amid the altering scenario.”
However it’s not simply the conflict that’s hindering assist distribution.
Bilal Merie, a volunteer working with Hania says most of the issues they face are as a result of “excessive demand however brief provide” of assist.
He places it right down to the deep financial turmoil that has gripped the nation since 2019, that means the Lebanese authorities has needed to rely closely on funding from collectors and assist organisations for items.
However even NGOs are feeling the crunch. Unicef Lebanon says that with solely 20% of the funding they want, it “continues to face an infinite funding hole,” that means the charity is unable to help households once they want it most.
In a rustic overrun with monetary woes and by conflict, might this aidbot make a tangible distinction?
It’s the first time researcher John Bryant from the suppose tank Abroad Growth Institute has heard of a chatbot being utilized in such a approach within the humanitarian sector.
He says the cultural context during which it’s getting used is commendable. That’s, with data of “the channels individuals are utilizing to speak to one another and assembly them in their very own language”.
Nevertheless he’s not sure of its scalability, as what works in Lebanon can’t simply be replicated in different elements of the world.
“What tech provides a variety of the time is a normal cookie cutter strategy.
“It is the native designers, the native translators, the trusted human interlocutors and components inside that system that elevate digital instruments into one thing helpful,” he says.
The aidbot may not be capable to provide the answer to all Lebanon’s issues, however to the households utilizing it, it has made life a bit simpler.
Extra reporting by Ahmed Abdallah