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You are here: Home / cat / UNICEF Warns Children at Severe Risk as Conflict Disrupts Aid and Health Services

UNICEF Warns Children at Severe Risk as Conflict Disrupts Aid and Health Services

Dated: February 4, 2026

UNICEF has raised serious concerns over the impact of ongoing violent clashes on women and children, warning that access constraints are worsening an already dire humanitarian situation. Aid delivery remains severely limited due to restrictions on river, road, and air travel, while health services continue to deteriorate. Several counties are close to exhausting therapeutic food supplies, multiple health facilities have shut down due to conflict, and incidents of looting of health and nutrition materials have been reported. UNICEF emphasized that malnourished children without treatment face dramatically higher mortality risks, underscoring the urgency of unhindered humanitarian access.

Despite these challenges, UNICEF continues to provide life-saving assistance, including the delivery of water purification equipment amid cholera risks, malaria treatments, emergency health kits, and therapeutic food. These efforts aim to reach more than 10,000 vulnerable people, reflecting ongoing attempts to mitigate the humanitarian impact even as insecurity persists.

Separately, UNICEF has strongly condemned a wave of violent attacks in Pakistan’s Balochistan province that reportedly killed and injured children. The organization stressed that children must never be targets or collateral damage and expressed condolences to affected families and communities. UNICEF warned that escalating violence is spreading fear and placing an immense burden on children and families, calling for stronger protection of civilians.

The attacks, which occurred at the end of January, were also condemned by the UN Security Council, which described them as acts of terrorism and expressed deep sympathy to the victims, their families, and the people of Pakistan. Civilian casualties included women and children, highlighting the severe humanitarian toll of the violence. The Council reaffirmed the need for accountability and protection of civilians under international law.

In a separate development, governments and industry leaders from over 70 countries reaffirmed their commitment to protecting submarine cables, which carry most of the world’s digital traffic. Meeting at an international summit in Portugal, participants adopted a declaration and recommendations to strengthen cooperation, improve resilience, and safeguard the global network of undersea cables critical to the digital economy.

The summit emphasized the importance of reliable connectivity, particularly for remote and underserved regions that are highly vulnerable to cable disruptions. Participants highlighted the need for faster repair times, improved preparedness, and sustained investment, noting that coordinated global action is essential to protect digital infrastructure that underpins modern communication, economic activity, and development worldwide.

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