Middle East war impacts - OHCHR, WHO, UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP
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Edited News | OHCHR , WHO , UNHCR , UNICEF , WFP

Middle East war impacts - OHCHR, WHO, UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP

Middle East war: UN warns of ‘toxic rain’ danger from oil depot strikes as mass displacement, aid supply shocks spread

Toxic “black rain” linked to strikes on oil depots, mass displacement and continuing disruption to humanitarian supply chains are upending lives across the Middle East and beyond after 10 days of war in the region, UN humanitarians said on Tuesday.

Speaking to reporters in Geneva, UN Human Rights office spokesperson Ravina Shamdasani raised concerns about the health and environmental impacts of Israeli and U.S. strikes attacks on oil depots in Tehran as toxic pollutants spread in the air.

She said that these impacts raise “serious questions as to whether the proportionality and precaution obligations under international humanitarian law were met” in the attacks, stressing that the sites hit “do not appear to be of military exclusive usage.”

UN World Health Organization (WHO) spokesperson Christian Lindmeier warned that the “black rain” and “acidic rain” that’s been falling in Tehran after the strikes “is indeed a danger” for Iranians.

“We are in touch with the hospitals and with the authorities, and the Iranian authorities have issued an alert advising people to stay indoors, in light of the attacks on oil warehouses especially,” he said.

The UN agency is also monitoring the health risks of the “massive release” of toxic hydrocarbons, sulphur oxides and nitrogen compounds into the air.

Mr. Lindmeier said that additional reported Iranian strikes on oil infrastructures in Bahrain and in Saudi Arabia also raised concerns of “wider regional pollution exposure”, highlighting the long-term effects of pollutants, which affect respiratory health and contaminate water.

Turning to Lebanon, more than 100,00 people have been displaced by Israeli strikes and evacuation orders in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of people uprooted by the conflict to almost 700,000.

The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) representative in the country, Karolina Lindholm Billing, spoke of a faster pace of displacement compared to the conflict with Israel in 2024.

“We see cars lined along the street with people sleeping in them,” she told reporters. “Most fled in a rush with almost nothing. They’re seeking safety in in Beirut, [the] Mount Lebanon region, in northern Lebanon and parts of the Bekaa.”

The UNHCR official described her visit on Monday to a shelter in Beirut, where she met a woman in her nineties who said that she had lost 11 members of her family back in 2024.

“She's now displaced again, staying in the same school that was turned into a shelter in 2024 and now again in 2026…Stories like hers really illustrate the fear, uncertainty and repeated trauma that these hundreds of thousands of people are facing right now.”

In other impacts across the region, UNHCR said that significant numbers of people have been crossing back into Afghanistan from Iran.

According to the UN refugee agency some 110,000 have returned since the beginning of the year and around 1,700 have been coming back each day since the start of the Middle East war.

While insecurity and dwindling economic prospects are pushing Afghans out of Iran, they face more precarity and uncertainty upon returning to their home country.

Speaking from the Islam Qala in Afghanistan’s Herat province on the border with Iran, the UN Children Fund (UNICEF)’s representative for Afghanistan, Tajudeen Oyewale, reported an increase in returns and warned that the total number of children who have been screened and treated for malnutrition has doubled in the last week.

Supply chain disruptions due to the war are already delaying essential aid, too.

“The geopolitical tension is already disrupting procurement routes,” Mr. Oyewale said. “What this means is that supplies that we need to care for children and their mothers in the midst of this emergency will arrive late… A malnourished child will get the nutritional supplement required not immediately, but with some level of delay and at a higher cost.”

Jean-Martin Bauer, director of the UN World Food Programme (WFP)’s Food and Nutrition Analysis Service, warned of the impacts of the conflict in the Strait of Hormuz and in the Bab El-Mandeb strait off the coast of the Horn of Africa.

“Two key points of the global supply chain set-up are affected by restrictions and by risk, and shipping lines are diverting their services,” he said.

Mr. Bauer explained that the need for war risk insurance for shipments means an additional cost of “$2,000 to $4,000 for each container in areas that are at risk”.

“We're also seeing that we're needing to go the long way around the Cape of Good Hope to reach some of our key geographies,” he said.

Mr. Bauer gave the example of WFP’s biggest operation in Sudan, supplied with food purchased in India, brought via Salalah in Oman and Jeddah in Saudi Arabia into Port Sudan.

Today, shipments need to take a much longer route transiting through Tangiers, adding approximately 25 days to shipping times.

“That's an additional sail of 9,000 kilometres (5,592 miles)... It's like going coast to coast in the U.S. and then going back,” Mr. Bauer said.

-ends-

STORY Middle East war impacts - OHCHR, WHO, UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP

TRT: 3:03”

SOURCE: UNTV CH

RESTRICTIONS: NONE

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH/NATS

ASPECT RATIO: 16:9

DATELINE: 10 MARCH 2026 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

1. Exterior wide shot: Palais des Nations, Flag Alley.

2. Medium reverse shot: Speakers at the podium of the press conference; speaker on screens; journalists in the Press room.

3. SOUNDBITE (English) – Ravina Shamdasani, spokesperson, UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR): “We are concerned about the impact of these attacks on civilians right to health as well as on the environment. We're also concerned that the foreseeable impact on civilians and the environment of these strikes raises serious questions as to whether the proportionality and precaution obligations under international humanitarian law were met in these attacks. These attack sites do not appear to be of military exclusive usage.”

4. Wide reverse shot: Speakers at the podium of the press conference; speaker on screens; journalists in the Press room.

5. SOUNDBITE (English) – Christian Lindmeier, spokesperson, World Health Organization (WHO): “The black rain and the acidic rain coming with it is indeed a danger for the population, respiratory mainly, and it could be acidic depending of course what context you have. We are in touch with the hospitals and with the authorities, and the Iranian authorities have issued an alert advising people to stay indoors, even in light of the attacks on oil warehouses especially.”

6. Wide reverse shot: Speakers at the podium of the press conference; speaker on screens; journalists in the Press room.

7. SOUNDBITE (English) – Christian Lindmeier, spokesperson, World Health Organization (WHO): “The additional reported strikes on oil infrastructures also in Bahrain and in Saudi Arabia certainly raised concerns of wider regional pollution exposure and the toxic pollutions and pollutants that affect respiratory health and contaminate water can have long-term effects.”

8. Medium shot: Journalist in the Press room.

9. SOUNDBITE (English) – Karolina Lindholm Billing, Representative in Lebanon, UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR): “During a visit yesterday that I did to a shelter in Beirut, I met with a woman in her nineties who had said she had lost eleven members of her family back in 2024 during the intensification then, and she's now displaced again, staying in the same school that was turned into a shelter in 2024 and now again in 2026. And stories like hers really illustrate the fear, uncertainty and repeated trauma that these hundreds of thousands of people are facing right now.”

10. Medium shot: Journalist in the Press room.

11. SOUNDBITE (English) – Tajudeen Oyewale, Representative for Afghanistan, UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF): “The geopolitical tension is already disrupting procurement routes. What this means is that supplies that we need to care for children and their mothers in the midst of this emergency will arrive late. A clear example is that a malnourished child will only get the nutritional supplement required not immediately, but with some level of delay and at a higher cost.”

12. Medium shot: Journalists in the Press room.

13. SOUNDBITE (English) – Jean-Martin Bauer, Director Food and Nutrition Analysis Service, World Food Programme (WFP): “We're seeing war risk insurance that's increasing and at a cost of between $2,000 and $4,000 for each container in areas that are at risk. We're also seeing that we're needing to go the long way around the Cape of Good Hope to reach some of our key geographies.”

14. Various shots of journalists in the Press room.


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