
File Photo: A charity kitchen providing food for the displaced at a camp in Wad Madani, the capital of Sudan's al-Jazirah state. AFP
The war, now in its third week, has killed hundreds in Iran and Lebanon, and seen Iran launch retaliatory strikes against Israel and Gulf nations, as well as an Israeli front opening in Lebanon.
"If the Middle East conflict continues through June, an additional 45 million people could be pushed into acute hunger by price rises," Carl Skau, the deputy executive director of the UN's World Food Programme, told a press conference in Geneva.
"This would take global hunger levels to a record, and it's a terrible, terrible prospect," he said, with 319 million people -- already a historic high -- currently acutely food insecure.
"Really, it is again taking this to a whole other level."
Skau said the WFP was already facing a "perfect storm" before the war erupted on February 28.
"Hunger has never been as severe as now," he said, driven by extreme weather events, conflict, and pockets of famine being declared.
"At the same time, the resources fell sharply from 2023 to 2024 levels."
Having had to cut staff and streamline operations, "we are basically stretched to the limit", said Skau.
He said the US-Israeli war on Iran was making WFP's operations "much, much more expensive".
Skau said the agency was trying to deal with supply chain disruptions, but its operating costs had shot up, notably through soaring fuel prices and longer routes.
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