As tensions continue to escalate between Israel, the United States, and Iran, headlines focus on airstrikes, economic consequences and geopolitics. But across the Middle East, children are bracing for something else; the loss of safety, stability and any sense of a predictable future.
War Child’s latest analysis estimates that more than 102 million children across the region could now be at risk if violence continues to escalate. That number is almost too large to comprehend. But for us, this is not an abstract figure. It represents the children our teams work with every day. In Lebanon, in the occupied Palestinian territory, and in communities across the region already exhausted by years of conflict.
I am writing this from Lebanon, where overnight Israeli airstrikes have once again forced families to flee at short notice. Latest figures tell us that over 290,000 children in Lebanon alone have been displaced. When displacement happens suddenly, children lose more than their homes. They lose their schools, their routines and their sense of safety. Parents and carers – including our own teams – struggle to reassure the children in their lives while grappling with their own fear.
Read more:
- More than 100 million children at risk in Middle East conflict, charity fears
- The world may be giving up on solving conflicts, warns Doctors Without Borders boss
- Children recruited as soldiers and facing ‘brutal’ sexual violence in Sudan war
Schools are often used as shelters in moments like this. But classrooms are not designed to protect families from active conflict. When education is interrupted, the consequences can last for years. Prolonged disruption increases the risk of permanent dropout, child labour, early marriage, as well as exploitation. For children who have already experienced war, each new crisis compounds trauma that they haven’t yet had the chance to process.
In Gaza, the devastation is already profound. More than 20,000 children have already been killed, and one million more are left deeply traumatised by their experiences. Amid the escalations between Israel, the US, and Iran, children remain without safe homes, consistent access to education or adequate mental health support. Borders have closed yet again, cutting off vital lifelines for families who have endured months of bombardment and displacement. Even during periods described as “ceasefires”, children continue to live with fear and uncertainty.