
A food system that works for children: The time to act is now
Recent data from UNICEF's LIMA Survey paints a troubling picture: three-quarters of children under two, and half of adolescents, are not receiving the diverse, nutritious diets they need for healthy growth and development. Half of children under five and two-thirds of adolescent girls and women aren't getting the essential vitamins and minerals their bodies need. One in three adolescent girls is overweight or obese. Meanwhile, rates of stunting among young children have doubled in recent years.
This triple burden is not simply the outcome of economic hardship or limited willpower; it is the direct consequence of long-standing systemic weaknesses across our systems, particularly the food system.
Food systems are more than farms and factories; they are the ecosystems that shape what we eat, when we eat, and how we understand food. In Lebanon, children are increasingly surrounded by food environments where ultra-processed, high-sugar, high-salt, high-fat products are cheaper, more accessible, and more aggressively marketed than healthier alternatives. These influences are structural, not personal. They are embedded in the environments children navigate daily — from their homes and schools to their phones and streets.
UNICEF believes that transforming Lebanon's food system must start where the need is greatest and the impact most lasting: with children. This means placing their health, their voices, and their rights at the heart of food system reform. We call on government, civil society and the private sector to act urgently and strategically to make this shift a reality.
How? By investing in nutrition literacy in schools and communities. By regulating the marketing of unhealthy foods to children. By implementing clear, front-of-pack labeling to help families make better choices. And crucially, by including children and youth as co-creators of the food environments they navigate every day.
This week, Lebanon is participating in the global U.N. Food Systems Summit Stocktaking conference to share progress and experiences in transforming national food systems, together with governments from around the world, donors, private sector actors and other stakeholders. As this event is expected to generate renewed global interest and investments in food systems reforms, including in Lebanon, we urge national stakeholders to embrace a child-centered vision of food systems transformation. Doing so will not only advance the U.N.'s Right to Food for all but also strengthen Lebanon's alignment with its Sustainable Development Goals and ensure greater impact on the human capital for the people of Lebanon and its national prosperity.
Children do not just need more food. They need the right food. They need a system that supports their growth, well-being, and future. If we fail to act now, we risk raising a generation burdened with preventable disease and diminished potential.
Putting children at the center of food systems is not just a policy. It is a smart investment. It is justice.
Now is the time to act because the future of Lebanon is shaped not only at the family table — but in the policies, environments and systems that surround every child.
Marcoluigi Corsi is UNICEF Representative in Lebanon.
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L'Orient-Le Jour
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WHO wants more aid in Gaza before Israeli occupation
The U.N. health agency on Tuesday said Israel should let it stock medical supplies to deal with a "catastrophic" health situation in Gaza before it seizes control of Gaza City. Israel has said its military would "take control" of Gaza City in a plan approved by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's security cabinet that sparked a wave of global criticism. "We want to stock up, and we all hear about 'more humanitarian supplies are allowed in.' Well, it's not happening yet, or it's happening at a way too low a pace," said Rik Peeperkorn, the World Health Organization's representative in the Palestinian territories. Fifty-two percent of medicines were running at zero stock, Peeperkorn said, speaking from Jerusalem. U.N. agencies warned last month that famine was unfolding in Gaza, with Israel severely restricting aid entry. Peeperkorn said the WHO was able to bring in fewer supplies than it wanted "due to the cumbersome procedures" and products "still denied" entry, a topic of constant negotiation with the Israeli authorities. "We want to quickly stock up hospitals... following the news. The whole discussion about an incursion in Gaza," he said. "We currently cannot do that... We need to be able to get all essential medicines and medical supplies in." Peeperkorn said only 50 percent of hospitals and 38 percent of primary health care centres were functioning, and that too partially. Bed occupancy has reached 240 percent capacity in the Al-Shifa hospital and 300 percent in the al-Ahli Hospital in northern Gaza. "The overall health situation remains catastrophic," he said. "Hunger and malnutrition continue to ravage Gaza." Peeperkorn said 148 people died from the effects of malnutrition this year, citing Aug. 5 as the cut-off date. Nearly 12,000 children aged under five were identified to be suffering from acute malnutrition in July, the highest monthly figure recorded to date in Gaza, Peeperkorn said. These include 2,562 children suffering from severe acute malnutrition, of whom 40 were hospitalised at stabilization centres.


L'Orient-Le Jour
29-07-2025
- L'Orient-Le Jour
A food system that works for children: The time to act is now
Lebanon is facing a silent yet escalating crisis, one that hides in lunchboxes, school canteens, supermarket aisles and TV commercials. It is a crisis of poor diets, inadequate nutrition and a struggling food system, one that is increasingly affecting the health, development and future of Lebanon's children. Recent data from UNICEF's LIMA Survey paints a troubling picture: three-quarters of children under two, and half of adolescents, are not receiving the diverse, nutritious diets they need for healthy growth and development. Half of children under five and two-thirds of adolescent girls and women aren't getting the essential vitamins and minerals their bodies need. One in three adolescent girls is overweight or obese. Meanwhile, rates of stunting among young children have doubled in recent years. This triple burden is not simply the outcome of economic hardship or limited willpower; it is the direct consequence of long-standing systemic weaknesses across our systems, particularly the food system. Food systems are more than farms and factories; they are the ecosystems that shape what we eat, when we eat, and how we understand food. In Lebanon, children are increasingly surrounded by food environments where ultra-processed, high-sugar, high-salt, high-fat products are cheaper, more accessible, and more aggressively marketed than healthier alternatives. These influences are structural, not personal. They are embedded in the environments children navigate daily — from their homes and schools to their phones and streets. UNICEF believes that transforming Lebanon's food system must start where the need is greatest and the impact most lasting: with children. This means placing their health, their voices, and their rights at the heart of food system reform. We call on government, civil society and the private sector to act urgently and strategically to make this shift a reality. How? By investing in nutrition literacy in schools and communities. By regulating the marketing of unhealthy foods to children. By implementing clear, front-of-pack labeling to help families make better choices. And crucially, by including children and youth as co-creators of the food environments they navigate every day. This week, Lebanon is participating in the global U.N. Food Systems Summit Stocktaking conference to share progress and experiences in transforming national food systems, together with governments from around the world, donors, private sector actors and other stakeholders. As this event is expected to generate renewed global interest and investments in food systems reforms, including in Lebanon, we urge national stakeholders to embrace a child-centered vision of food systems transformation. Doing so will not only advance the U.N.'s Right to Food for all but also strengthen Lebanon's alignment with its Sustainable Development Goals and ensure greater impact on the human capital for the people of Lebanon and its national prosperity. Children do not just need more food. They need the right food. They need a system that supports their growth, well-being, and future. If we fail to act now, we risk raising a generation burdened with preventable disease and diminished potential. Putting children at the center of food systems is not just a policy. It is a smart investment. It is justice. Now is the time to act because the future of Lebanon is shaped not only at the family table — but in the policies, environments and systems that surround every child. Marcoluigi Corsi is UNICEF Representative in Lebanon.


Nahar Net
29-07-2025
- Nahar Net
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by Naharnet Newsdesk 29 July 2025, 12:18 Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says no one in Gaza is starving: "There is no policy of starvation in Gaza, and there is no starvation in Gaza. We enable humanitarian aid throughout the duration of the war to enter Gaza – otherwise, there would be no Gazans." President Donald Trump on Monday said he disagrees with Netanyahu's claim of no starvation in Gaza, noting the images emerging of emaciated people: "Those children look very hungry." After international pressure, Israel over the weekend announced humanitarian pauses, airdrops and other measures meant to allow more aid to Palestinians in Gaza. But people there say little or nothing has changed on the ground. The U.N. has described it as a one-week scale-up of aid, and Israel has not said how long these latest measures would last. "This aid, delivered in this way, is an insult to the Palestinian people," said Hasan Al-Zalaan, who was at the site of an airdrop as some fought over the supplies and crushed cans of chickpeas littered the ground. Israel asserts that Hamas is the reason aid isn't reaching Palestinians in Gaza and accuses its militants of siphoning off aid to support its rule in the territory. The U.N. denies that looting of aid is systematic and that it lessens or ends entirely when enough aid is allowed to enter Gaza. Here's what we know: Deaths are increasing The World Health Organization said Sunday there have been 63 malnutrition-related deaths in Gaza this month, including 24 children under the age of 5 — up from 11 deaths total the previous six months of the year. Gaza's Health Ministry puts the number even higher, reporting 82 deaths this month of malnutrition-related causes: 24 children and 58 adults. It said Monday that 14 deaths were reported in the past 24 hours. The ministry, which operates under the Hamas government, is headed by medical professionals and is seen by the U.N. as the most reliable source of data on casualties. U.N. agencies also often confirm numbers through other partners on the ground. The Patient's Friends Hospital, the main emergency center for malnourished kids in northern Gaza, says this month it saw for the first time malnutrition deaths in children who had no preexisting conditions. Some adults who died suffered from such illnesses as diabetes or had heart or kidney ailments made worse by starvation, according to Gaza medical officials. The WHO also says acute malnutrition in northern Gaza tripled this month, reaching nearly one in five children under 5 years old, and has doubled in central and southern Gaza. The U.N. says Gaza's only four specialized treatment centers for malnutrition are "overwhelmed." The leading international authority on food crises, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, has warned of famine for months in Gaza but has not formally declared one, citing the lack of data as Israel restricts access to the territory. Aid trucks are swarmed by hungry people The measures announced by Israel late Saturday include 10-hour daily humanitarian pauses in fighting in three heavily populated areas, so that U.N. trucks can more more easily distribute food. Still, U.N. World Food Program spokesperson Martin Penner said the agency's 55 trucks of aid that entered Gaza on Monday via the crossings of Zikim and Kerem Shalom were looted by starving people before they reached WFP warehouses. Experts say that airdrops, another measure Israel announced, are insufficient for the immense need in Gaza and dangerous to people on the ground. Israel's military says 48 food packages were dropped Sunday and Monday. Palestinians say they want a full return to the U.N.-led aid distribution system that was in place throughout the war, rather than the Israeli-backed mechanism that began in May. Witnesses and health workers say Israeli forces have killed hundreds by opening fire on Palestinians trying to reach those food distribution hubs or while crowding around entering aid trucks. Israel's military says it has fired warning shots to disperse threats. The U.N. and partners say that the best way to bring food into Gaza is by truck, and they have called repeatedly for Israel to loosen restrictions on their entry. A truck carries roughly 19 tons of supplies. Israel's military says that as of July 21, 95,435 trucks of aid have entered Gaza since the war began. That's an average of 146 trucks per day, and far below the 500 to 600 trucks per day that the U.N. says are needed. The rate has sometimes been as low as half of that for several months at a time. 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