Current:Home > InvestNearly 4 million people in Lebanon need humanitarian help but less than half receive aid, UN says-DB Wealth Institute B2 Expert Reviews
Nearly 4 million people in Lebanon need humanitarian help but less than half receive aid, UN says
View Date:2025-01-11 15:20:50
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Lebanon faces one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, with nearly 4 million people in need of food and other assistance, but less than half getting aid because of a lack of funding, a U.N. official said Thursday.
Imran Riza, the U.N. humanitarian chief for Lebanon, adds that the amount of assistance the world body is giving out is “much less than the minimum survival level” that it normally distributes.
Over the past four years, he said, Lebanon has faced a “compounding set of multiple crises ” that the World Bank describes as one of the 10 worst financial and economic crises since the mid-19th century. This has led to the humanitarian needs of people across all population sectors increasing dramatically, he said.
Since the financial meltdown began in October 2019, the country’s political class — blamed for decades of corruption and mismanagement — has been resisting economic and financial reforms requested by the international community.
Lebanon started talks with the International Monetary Fund in 2020 to try to secure a bailout, but since reaching a preliminary agreement last year, the country’s leaders have been reluctant to implement needed changes.
Riza noted Lebanon has been without a president for almost a year and a lot of its institutions aren’t working, and there is still no political solution in Syria.
The U.N. estimates about 3.9 million people need humanitarian help in Lebanon, including 2.1 million Lebanese, 1.5 million Syrians, 180,000 Palestinian refugees, over 31,000 Palestinians from Syria, and 81,500 migrants.
Last year, Riza said, the U.N. provided aid to about a million Syrians and slightly less than 950,000 Lebanese.
“So everything is on a negative track,” Riza said. In 2022, the U.N. received more or less 40% of funding it needed and the trend so far this year is similar, “but overall the resources are really going down and the needs are increasing.”
“In a situation like Lebanon, it doesn’t have the attention that some other situations have, and so we are extremely concerned about it,” he said.
According to the U.N. humanitarian office, more than 12 years since the start of the conflict in Syria, Lebanon hosts “the highest number of displaced persons per capita and per square kilometer in the world.”
“And instead what we’re seeing is a more tense situation within Lebanon,” Riza said. There is a lot of “very negative rhetoric” and disinformation in Lebanon about Syrian refugees that “raises tensions, and, of course, it raises worries among the Syrian refugees,” he said.
With some Lebanese politicians calling Syrian refugees “an existential threat,” Riza said he has been talking to journalists to get the facts out on the overall needs in Lebanon and what the U.N. is trying to do to help all those on the basis of need — “not of status or a population.”
veryGood! (821)
Related
- Wildfires burn on both coasts. Is climate change to blame?
- Applications for US unemployment benefits dip to 210,000 in strong job market
- What is Good Friday? What the holy day means for Christians around the world
- Kenya begins handing over 429 bodies of doomsday cult victims to families: They are only skeletons
- MLS Star Marco Angulo Dead at 22 One Month After Car Crash
- Green Day will headline United Nations-backed global climate concert in San Francisco
- North Carolina's Armando Bacot says he gets messages from angry sports bettors: 'It's terrible'
- California law enforcement agencies have hindered transparency efforts in use-of-force cases
- NFL Week 10 winners, losers: Cowboys' season can no longer be saved
- This social media network set the stage for Jan. 6, then was taken offline. Now it's back
Ranking
- ‘Maybe Happy Ending’ review: Darren Criss shines in one of the best musicals in years
- Watch as Florida deputies remove snake from car's engine compartment
- Non-shooting deaths involving Las Vegas police often receive less official scrutiny than shootings
- Black pastors see popular Easter services as an opportunity to rebuild in-person worship attendance
- Kendall Jenner Is Back to Being a Brunette After Ditching Blonde Hair
- 'We will never forget': South Carolina Mother, 3-year-old twin girls killed in collision
- Biden New York City fundraiser with Obama and Clinton on hand is expected to bring in over $25 million
- In 'Godzilla x Kong,' monsters team up while the giant ape gets a sidekick
Recommendation
-
'Treacherous conditions' in NYC: Firefighters battling record number of brush fires
-
Draymond Green ejected less than four minutes into Golden State Warriors' game Wednesday
-
Biden administration restores threatened species protections dropped by Trump
-
An Oil Company Executive Said the Energy Transition Has Failed. What’s Really Happening?
-
Lost luggage? This new Apple feature will let you tell the airline exactly where it is.
-
Joe Lieberman, longtime senator and 2000 vice presidential nominee, dies at 82
-
Two bodies recovered from vehicle underwater at Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse site
-
The Bankman-Fried verdict, explained