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World Wide
Apr 29, 2026
Analyzed by GPT OSS 120B

UN Report Warns Over 1.2 Million Lebanese Face Acute Hunger Amid Conflict

AI Summary
A UN‑backed assessment released on 29 April 2026 warns that more than 1.2 million people in Lebanon will experience acute hunger between April and August, driven by the Israel‑Hezbollah war, displacement and soaring food costs. The report highlights a sharp rise from pre‑war figures and calls for urgent humanitarian and agricultural assistance.

More than 1.2 million Lebanese are projected to face acute hunger this year, according to a joint statement from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the World Food Programme (WFP) and Lebanon’s Ministry of Agriculture. The warning follows the escalation of fighting that began on March 2 and a cease‑fire that took effect on April 17, which has already displaced over a million people.

UN‑backed Report Flags 1.2 Million Lebanese Facing Acute Hunger

The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC)—the UN‑backed body that monitors hunger—released its latest outlook, stating that 1.24 million individuals will experience food insecurity at crisis levels or worse between April and August. The assessment describes this as a “significant deterioration” compared with the pre‑war outlook.

Scale of Food Insecurity: Numbers Before and After the Conflict

  • Pre‑war (before March 2): 874,000 people (≈17 % of the population) were in acute food insecurity.
  • Current projection (April‑August 2026): 1.24 million people (≈20‑22 % of the population) at crisis or worse levels.
  • Casualties from the fighting exceed 2,500 deaths and more than 1 million displaced, further straining food supplies.

Humanitarian and Economic Ripple Effects Across Lebanon

WFP country director Allison Oman Lawi warned that families “just managing to cope are now being pushed back into crisis as conflict, displacement and rising costs collide.” Meanwhile, FAO representative Nora Ourabah Haddad emphasized that “compounded shocks are undermining agricultural livelihoods,” urging emergency assistance for farmers to prevent a deeper collapse of the food system.

The cease‑fire has reduced fighting intensity but does not guarantee safe access to agricultural lands or markets. Residents in southern border areas remain under warning not to return, limiting harvests and market activity.

Outlook: Risks of Deepening Crisis Without Immediate Aid

The statement concludes that “acute food insecurity is likely to deepen without sustained and timely humanitarian and livelihood support.” Analysts suggest that without a rapid infusion of emergency food aid and agricultural inputs, Lebanon could see a further surge in malnutrition rates, especially among children and displaced families.

International donors are being urged to mobilize resources quickly, as the window for preventing a large‑scale humanitarian disaster narrows each week.