Children missing meals in more than half of families in Lebanon, UNICEF says

Children missing meals in more than half of families in Lebanon, UNICEF says
At least one child in more than half of the families in Lebanon has missed a meal due to the country's devastating economic crisis plunging many into poverty, according to a report by UNICEF.
2 min read
23 November, 2021
Nearly half of households in Lebanon had insufficient drinking water by October 2021, the report said [source: Getty]

More than half of families in Lebanon had at least one child who skipped a meal by October 2021 amid a "dramatic deterioration of living conditions", the UN's children's fund said in a report released Tuesday.

Children have been hit hard by the country's deep economic crisis exacerbated by the global coronavirus pandemic which has left about eight in 10 people poor and threatens the education of some 700,000 children including 260,000 Lebanese, the report said.

The multifaceted crisis, rooted in decades of corruption and mismanagement, has led to a breakdown in the provision of basic services such as electricity and water.

Nearly half of households had insufficient drinking water by October 2021, the report said, with a third of them citing cost as the main factor.

Health
Live Story

"The staggering magnitude of the crisis must be a wake-up call," said Yukie Mokuo, UNICEF representative in Lebanon.

The report noted that less than three in 10 families had received social assistance, leading them to take "desperate measures".

The proportion of Lebanese families sending children to work increased sevenfold to seven percent between April and October, the report said.

The government of Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati has been slow to implement social safety programmes including a $246 million World bank-funded one adopted by parliament in March and a $556 million ration card scheme backed by the legislature in June.

"Urgent action is needed to ensure no child goes hungry, becomes sick or has to work instead of receiving an education," Mokuo said.