Lebanon: Nearly a third of children facing crisis levels of hunger as country reels from year of colony wrath

Nearly one third of children in Lebanon – 29 per cent – began the new year facing crisis levels of hunger, with some pushed into child labour to support their families, said Save the Children after new data showed an almost 5 per cent increase in child hunger in the past three months.

New figures from the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) – the leading international authority on the severity of hunger crises – come as Lebanon attempts to rebuild after 15 months of escalated conflict with Israel that has seriously damaged agricultural production, disrupted supply chains and caused prices to skyrocket. 
Save the Chldren analysis of the report showed that 526,000 children in Lebanon are projected by March to be in “crisis”, “emergency” or “catastrophe” levels of hunger IPC Phase 3 and above – compared to about 504,000 children in October [2].
For the first time, IPC Phase 4, or “emergency” hunger conditions have been recorded in Lebanon, in the historic city of Baalbek, meaning households are facing high rates of malnutrition and resorting to extreme coping strategies, including child labour, illegal activities, or taking on crippling debt. 
Palestinian and Syrian refugee communities in Lebanon are particularly hard hit, with 40% of them facing crisis and emergency levels of hunger – IPC Phase 3 and above.
The full Save the Children report

Amal Tefayeli, from Baalbek, and her children wait for transport at the Masnaa border crossing after fleeing Lebanon to Syria on foot, October 14, 2024 [Louisa Gouliamaki/Reuters]