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UN needs more funds to help people displaced by Mideast war, refugee chief says

By Amina Ismail and Andrew Gray
By Amina Ismail and Andrew Gray
Mar 25, 2026
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Barham Salih speaks during an interview with Reuters in Brussels, Belgium March 25, 2026.  REUTERS/Yves Herman
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Barham Salih speaks during an interview with Reuters in Brussels, Belgium March 25, 2026. REUTERS/Yves Herman — Yves Herman

By Amina Ismail and Andrew Gray

BRUSSELS, March 25 (Reuters) - The United Nations' refugee chief urged donors on Wednesday to provide more funds to manage the humanitarian fallout from the widening war in the Middle East, saying his agency had so far received less than 10% of the money it needs.

Thousands have been killed across the region and millions displaced in Iran and Lebanon since the United States and Israel launched strikes on Iran on February  28, prompting Tehran to retaliate with attacks on Israel, U.S. bases and Gulf states.

Lebanon was pulled deeper into the conflict this month after Iran‑backed Hezbollah fired rockets and drones into Israel, triggering heavy Israeli bombardment across the country.

“We appealed for the region for $69 million. We’ve only received less than 10% of that so far,” Barham Salih, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, told Reuters in an interview in Brussels.

“This is a huge, huge crisis, and people need help.”

Inside Iran, around 3.2 million people have been displaced, while more than one million people have been forced to leave their homes inside Lebanon — roughly 17% of its population — in recent weeks as the humanitarian crisis deepens.

“The number of displaced around the world is unprecedented in history, at a time when the resources have really shrunk,” he said.

Aid agencies have been rocked by funding cuts from major donors, led by the U.S. and other Western powers which have prioritised defence spending prompted by growing concerns about Russia.

The expanding U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has also shaken global supply chains, with airspace closures and the halt of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz affecting humanitarian supplies bound for crises elsewhere.

“We rely heavily on the support we get from our logistics hub situated in the UAE. This is where we fly our material and resources from to Africa and to Asia,” he said.

“Because of these attacks on the UAE, much of these operations have been hampered and delayed. So this has a huge impact on the reality of what we do and on helping vulnerable populations across the world.”

(Additional reporting by Emma Farge in Geneva, Editing by William Maclean)