• Lebanon

Press release

© Kamila Lakkis pour Action contre la Faim

New figures on food insecurity : 1.24 million people still lack stable access to food despite the ceasefire

New waves of displacement in the last 48 hours are exacerbating a crisis in which 24% of the population is in urgent need of assistance

MADRID/BEIRUT 29 April 2026 – New data from the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) reveals that 1.24 million people in Lebanon (24% of the population) are facing acute food insecurity. Households are forced to skip meals, reduce the quantity or quality of food, sell possessions or take children out of school in order to feed themselves. Despite announcements of a cessation of hostilities, the truce has not led to an improvement in food security, as the root causes of hunger remain intact.

The ceasefire does not automatically bring back food, nor the destroyed markets, nor the lost livelihoods,” explains Sonia Ben Salem, advocacy coordinator for Action Against Hunger in Lebanon. “We are facing a multi-layered crisis: years of socio-economic collapse, political instability and a refugee crisis, compounded by the recent escalation of hostilities. The truce does not erase years of struggle.”

New displacements and the dilemma of survival

In addition to the ongoing hostilities in border areas, the situation has become tense again over the last 48 hours. Despite the ceasefire, new attacks in the districts of Nabatieh and the Bekaa Valley have led to further evacuation orders, forcing families to flee north once more.

For these people, hunger is not just a lack of food; it is a matter of vital priorities. “When a family is displaced several times, safety becomes the priority. They spend what little they have on transport to reach a safe place, putting food on the back burner,” says Ben Salem. In this context, eating becomes a secondary need compared to the urgency of finding shelter.

This situation has particularly serious consequences for the most vulnerable groups. Between 12% and 15% of children aged 6 to 23 months in some affected areas are fed exclusively on milk, which compromises their growth and development. At the same time, pregnant and breastfeeding women face a higher risk of malnutrition due to limited access to healthcare and inadequate diets, affecting both their own health and that of their children.

Putting the figures into perspective: what it means to go hungry in Lebanon today

Action Against Hunger adapts and expands its response

Our teams on the ground have adapted their response to this changing situation. Whilst support continues in collective shelters, the organisation has begun to extend its interventions to hard-to-reach areas and destroyed homes where aid was unthinkable just a few weeks ago.

We are reaching places like Hasbaya to carry out distributions outside the shelters, delivering dry food and ready-to-eat rations in areas where markets have collapsed,” says Ben Salem. Furthermore, the organisation has resumed comprehensive nutritional support and infant feeding packages, now expanding its operations to other areas in the south, beyond the displacement zones.

Without guaranteed humanitarian access to all areas — including those affected by active conflict or suffering the most severe damage — and without a recovery of available resources, the number of people suffering from hunger in Lebanon will remain an open wound that no partial truce can heal on its own.