Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options

In a Middle East torn apart by conflict, fighters are increasingly using food as a weapon. Millions of people across countries like Syria, Yemen and Iraq are gripped by hunger, struggling to survive with little help from the outside world. Children suffer from malnutrition; their parents often have to beg or sell possessions to get basic commodities including water, medicine and fuel.

Aid agencies have struggled with funding shortages and growing impediments to the delivery of humanitarian assistance despite U.N. Security Council resolutions insisting on the unconditional delivery of aid across front lines. In Yemen, the Arab world’s most impoverished nation, nearly half of the country’s 22 provinces are ranked as one step away from famine conditions.

The biggest humanitarian catastrophe by far is in Syria, where a ruinous five-year civil war has killed a quarter of a million people and displaced half the population. The United Nations estimates that more than 400,000 people are besieged in 15 communities across Syria, roughly half of them in areas controlled by the Islamic State group. All sides in the conflict have used punishing blockades to force submission by the other side—a tactic that has proved effective particularly for government forces seeking to pacify opposition-held areas around Damascus.

Since October, Russian airstrikes and the start of winter have exacerbated the crisis. Humanitarian teams who recently entered a besieged Syrian town witnessed scenes that “haunt the soul,” said Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. He accused both the government of President Bashar Assad and the rebels fighting to oust him of using starvation as a weapon, calling it a war crime.

One of the hardest-hit blockaded areas in Syria is Madaya, a town northeast of Damascus with a population of 40,000. The town has been besieged by government and allied militiamen for months. Two convoys of humanitarian aid were delivered to the town in January. Aid workers who entered described seeing skeletal figures, children who could barely talk or walk and parents who gave their children sleeping pills to calm their hunger.

Fouaa and Kfarya, two Shiite villages in the northern province of Idlib, have been blockaded by rebels for more than a year. Pro-government fighters recently evacuated from the villages describe desperate conditions there with scarce food and medicine, saying some residents are eating grass to survive and undergoing surgery without anesthesia.

In Yemen the situation has dramatically deteriorated, nearly 300 days after the Saudi-led coalition began its air campaign to drive Yemen’s Shiite rebels from cities under their control. Coalition naval ships are blockading traffic in Yemen’s ports, and rebels are besieging several areas, particularly the southern city of Taiz. The United Nations reported in late December that 7.8 million of Yemen’s 24 million people are in even more dire condition, “facing life-threatening rates of acute malnutrition.”

Massive population shifts in Iraq because of violence have made it more difficult for millions of people to access food, medicine and safe drinking water. More than three million Iraqis are displaced within the country by violence and instability. “They’ve lost their livelihoods, their jobs, and hunger and the inability to purchase food is a reality in their everyday life,” said Marwa Awad, with the World Food Program. In total, 8.2 million Iraqis are in need of humanitarian assistance: food, water, shelter or medicine, she said.

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

Pope Leo XIV waves to the crowd in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican as they join him for the recitation of the Angelus prayer and an appeal for peace hours after the U.S. bombed nuclear enrichment facilities in Iran on June 22. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)
“Let diplomacy silence the guns!” Pope Leo XIV told the crowd in St. Peter’s Square a few hours after the United States entered the Iran-Israel war by bombing three of Iran’s nuclear sites.
Gerard O’ConnellJune 22, 2025
Paola Ugaz, a Peruvian journalist who helped expose the abuse committed by leaders of the Sodalitium Christianae Vitae, gives Pope Leo XIV a stole made of alpaca wool during the pope's meeting with members of the media on May 12 in the Paul VI Audience Hall at the Vatican. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)
Pope Leo XIV’s statement was read at the premiere of a play about the Peruvian investigative journalist Paola Ugaz, who was subject to death threats because of her reporting on sexual abuse.
Gerard O’ConnellJune 21, 2025
Bishop Micheal Pham, center, leads an inter-faith group as they enter a federal building to be present during immigration hearings on June 20 in San Diego. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)
About a dozen religious leaders from the San Diego area, including Bishop Michael Pham, visited federal immigration court on Friday “to provide some sense of presence.”
In a time of increasing disaffiliation from and disillusionment with the institutional church, a new theological perspective on the church is needed—one that places Jesus’ own teaching at the center.
Roger Haight, S.J.June 20, 2025