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LEBANON

Lebanon is facing a fast‑deteriorating humanitarian situation, with heavy airstrikes causing rising casualties and tens of thousands of people newly displaced in just 24 hours. Shelters are overwhelmed, schools are closed nationwide, and nearly 3 million people were already in need of assistance even before this escalation.

EAA charities are responding across the region, wherever the needs are greatest. But they urgently need more funds.

Act for Peace, Oxfam, Baptist World Aid, Caritas Australia, Australia for UNHCR, ADRA, ActionAid, Care Australia, Plan International Australia, Save the Children Australia

All Emergency Action Alliance members are members of the Australian Council for International Development (ACFID). Members commit to full adherence to the principles and requirements outlined in the ACFID Code of Conduct.

ACFID members are required to have policies and procedures in place to ensure that funds and resources are properly controlled and managed. This includes having standards around who they will receive donations from and how they ensure that funds are being used for the purpose for which they are intended.

Find our more about ACFID Code of Conduct for Emergency Appeals here.

Photo by Jo Kassis

GAZA

The ceasefire in Gaza has brought some relief, but the humanitarian crisis remains overwhelming. Large parts of the population are still displaced, essential services are barely functioning, and health facilities are operating at limited capacity, with only 42% of health service points even partially functional .

Winter conditions, damaged infrastructure and restricted access continue to put lives at risk, with children facing extreme health threats including hypothermia and rising infectious diseases .

Emergency Action Alliance members and their local partners are working under immense constraints to deliver food, clean water, medical care and other essentials, but needs far exceed available resources.

Your support for EAA member appeals will help reach people in Gaza and neighbouring areas who are still facing life‑threatening shortages and urgent humanitarian needs.

Act for Peace, ActionAid, ALWS, Anglican Overseas Aid, Baptist World Aid, CARE Australia, Caritas Australia, Oxfam Australia, PLAN International Australia, Save the Children

Photo of a man in a green soccer tshirt shifting bags from the World Food Programme

SYRIA

After 14 years of conflict, Syrian families have lost loved ones, homes and livelihoods. Many have been displaced multiple times with nothing to their name.

Now, as more than a million refugees and two million displaced people return following the fall of the Assad regime, they face unimaginable challenges. Their communities are in ruins, jobs are scarce, and millions are confronting extreme hunger and poverty.

EAA charities are responding in Syria, wherever the needs are greatest. But they urgently need more funds.

Australia for UNHCR, Care Australia, Save the Children Australia

Syria is feeling the shockwaves of the wider regional war, with foreign military activity, airspace closures and economic disruption compounding an already severe humanitarian crisis. Ongoing external strikes and instability threaten fragile recovery efforts and deepen the hardship facing millions of Syrians.

Photo by Ahmed akacha

Scale of the Crisis

Gaza
Nearly the entire population of Gaza remains in extreme humanitarian distress. Although a ceasefire has been in place since October 2025, airstrikes, shelling and gunfire continue, causing new casualties and displacement. Between 30 January and 5 February alone, 82 Palestinians were killed and 162 injured, bringing the total since the ceasefire to 574 killed and 1,518 injured .

Access to food, clean water and medical care remains critically limited. Gaza City continues to face severe shortages of drinking water, and humanitarian supplies entering from Egypt remain critically low due to high rejection rates .

Shelters are overcrowded and unsafe, with families exposed to harsh winter storms that have destroyed belongings and caused child deaths from cold. UN agencies report rising waterborne diseases, skin infections, and other illnesses due to inadequate WASH facilities and extreme overcrowding .

Most of Gaza remains in ruins, and humanitarian gains are described as “fragile and easily reversed” as ongoing strikes continue to damage civilian infrastructure .

Lebanon
Tens of thousands have been forced to flee under relentless airstrikes and evacuation orders. Some walk for hours to reach emergency shelters; others are sleeping in their cars or on the roadside. Families are arriving with barely any belongings and no sense of what the future will bring.

Lebanon’s pre‑existing economic collapse has left over 1.2 million people food insecure, and the renewed instability is deepening humanitarian needs. The situation remains highly unpredictable, with the risk of further escalation linked to wider regional tensions.

How Donations Make a Difference

EAA member organisations are operating on the frontlines in Gaza and Lebanon, delivering urgent humanitarian relief—food parcels, hygiene kits, emergency shelter, clean water, medical supplies, and psychosocial support—to communities in desperate need. This is not simply a crisis—it is a humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in real time.


While EAA is not running a centralised appeal for this emergency, we’re directing Australians to our trusted members who are responding. Donations made via the links on our site go directly to those organisations.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the humanitarian situation in Gaza?

The humanitarian crisis in Gaza is one of the most urgent in the world today. Ongoing conflict has caused widespread destruction and left millions of people – almost the entire population – displaced or negatively impacted in some way. Thousands of civilians have been injured or killed, and access to essentials like clean water, food, and healthcare has become severely limited. Electricity is scarce, and most hospitals are operating well beyond their capacity or have been damaged. Sanitation systems are failing, which also raises the risk of disease outbreaks.

EAA member organisations are delivering emergency aid in the region. With the help of generous donations from the Australian public, They are providing life-saving assistance such as food parcels, clean water, safe shelter, hygiene kits and medical support. Learn more about how Australians can make a difference.

How is aid reaching people in Gaza and Lebanon?

Delivering humanitarian aid in conflict-affected regions like Gaza and Lebanon is not only incredibly challenging but extremely dangerous. While access remains a major challenge, EAA’s 15 member organisations are working through trusted local partners and global humanitarian networks to deliver aid to affected communities wherever possible.

Aid delivery is carefully coordinated, usually with the support of the United Nations and other established agencies. Despite damaged roads and poor communications infrastructure, aid convoys and local teams continue to support affected communities.
While there is no centralised EAA appeal for this emergency, our members responding on the ground are accepting donations directly. In formal appeals, EAA only allocates funds to members actively responding and capable of delivering aid. Depending on the situation, aid can be distributed via trucks, medical teams or community hubs. It’s an approach that is both safe and highly effective. To understand how we stay accountable, read our Transparency Policy and Donor Promise

What is the humanitarian situation in Lebanon

Lebanon is facing a complex and rapidly deteriorating humanitarian situation, exacerbated by the effects of regional conflict. In southern Lebanon, cross-border hostilities have led to the evacuation of villages and towns. Tens of thousands of people have been displaced from their homes, many of whom now face uncertain futures. Homes and infrastructure have been damaged or destroyed, and access to food, clean water and medical care is limited in many areas.

Families returning to their communities might find their houses uninhabitable, with little or no government support available to rebuild. Thankfully, our member organisations are responding to the crisis through distributing emergency supplies and providing temporary shelter for children and families who have been affected by displacement. See our current appeals for more information or to contribute.

How is the Emergency Action Alliance helping people in Gaza?

Emergency Action Alliance makes it easier for Australians to support international humanitarian responses by connecting them with our 15 trusted member organisations. While we are not running a centralised appeal for this crisis, many of our members are actively responding on the ground in Gaza.

These organisations are providing life-saving support such as food parcels, emergency medical care, clean drinking water, temporary shelter, and psychosocial support for children and families. EAA does not deliver aid directly but helps build awareness of the efforts of our members, making it easier for the Australian public to contribute.

Your support helps ensure aid reaches those who need it most, even in the most challenging conditions. Donate now to support this critical work helping families affected by the Gaza humanitarian crisis.