NEW YORK: șÚÁÏÉçÇűâs aid chief has issued an impassioned plea to transform âdespair to hopeâ through humanitarian action amid mounting suffering in Gaza, Sudan and across the Middle East.
Dr. Abdullah Al-Rabeeah was speaking at the UN General Assembly in New York during a Saudi-organized meeting attended by some of the worldâs foremost humanitarian leaders.
The world is witnessing âunprecedented challenges such as conflicts, displacements, mass migration and human rights violations in many parts of the world, especially in the Middle East and Africa,â he warned.
The prominent physician and surgeon, and head of Saudi aid agency KSrelief, was joined by representatives from the EU, the World Food Programme, the International Committee of the Red Cross, the Norwegian Refugee Council and the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
âIn Sudan and Gaza alone, more than 20 million people have been displaced, 60,000 Palestinians have been killed and hundreds of thousands have been injured, as well as 300 humanitarian workers killed,â he added.
âThese tragedies and many other man-made crises raise the importance of humanitarian diplomacy as a vital tool toward achieving peace and stability.â
Though âsuch an approach may be difficult,â Al-Rabeeah said, meaningful efforts from the UN and its member states can âtransform conflicts to peace, and despair to hope.â
He highlighted the Kingdomâs work in the Syrian Arab Republic, which was ravaged by more than a decade of civil war.
âșÚÁÏÉçÇű has shown a leading example in Syria, where diplomacy supported by humanitarian aid managed to bring peace, stability and hope,â he said.
âSimilar efforts by șÚÁÏÉçÇű may bring a better outcome and hope for Sudan, Yemen and Palestine.â
Amid straining national aid budgets and questions about the US commitment to multilateralism, âitâs now more than ever that the world is at most need of a collaborative and impactful response from all stakeholders in the humanitarian, political and development sectors,â Al-Rabeeah said.
Despite the world facing âan alarming rise in conflict and crisis,â the UN and its member states can grasp a âgolden opportunityâ to reduce human suffering through âconflict prevention, crisis solution by positive dialogue, negotiation, and the removal of any barriers that will deprive civilians, women and children from their basic right of having a decent life with hope and dignity for a better future,â he added.
Al-Rabeeahâs appeal was echoed by senior humanitarian figures: Cindy McCain, executive director of the WFP; NRC chief Jan Egeland; ICRC President Mirjana Spoljaric Egger; and Hadja Lahbib, European commissioner for equality, preparedness and crisis management.
Representatives from dozens of UN member states voiced their support for Al-Rabeeahâs remarks during a later statement session.
The chairs of the event focused extensively on the humanitarian crises in the Arab world, including Palestine, Sudan, Yemen and Syria.
McCain told the meeting that national and multilateral commitments to humanitarian action, âthe engine to effective operations,â are âtoo often not being upheld.â
The result is a âlitany of sufferingâ around the world, she warned, highlighting crises in Gaza, Sudan and Yemen.
âIn Sudan, famine has been confirmed in at least five places, with further areas at very grave risk. Across the country, 25 million people â half the population â face severe hunger,â she said.
âIn Gaza, over half a million people are trapped in famine, and the entire civilian population requires urgent food aid, along with other life-saving humanitarian support.
âIn Yemen, 5.5 million people are severely hungry.â
Yet humanitarian actors mobilizing support to these conflict zones face their staff being killed or injured amid a wider erosion of respect for humanitarian law, she said.
Humanitarians are âunder attack like never beforeâ and there is âlittle accountability where lines are crossed,â McCain warned.
âThereâs no getting around this statistic: Last year was the deadliest year ever for humanitarian aid workers on record, with 379 killed. Many were from the UN family. This year is on track to be just as bad.â

 Cindy McCain clashed with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over aid deliveries to Gaza in August. (AN Photo/Caspar Webb)
She condemned Yemenâs Houthi militia for arbitrarily detaining humanitarian workers, a move that was widely criticized across the UN system and by Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.
âThese are unacceptable dangers, and are posing unprecedented challenges to how aid agencies operate, and reducing the space for effective and principled humanitarian action,â McCain said.
Organizations and agencies are working to âstrengthen the use of humanitarian diplomacy as a strategic operational tool,â she added.
But this will fail to make an impact in a âmore fractured and polarized global landscapeâ unless world leaders âreassert and uphold the right to safety and protection for all aid workers,â she said. âWhen those obligations arenât met, those priorities need to be held to account.â
McCain condemned Israelâs actions in Gaza and the strategies employed by warring factions in Sudanâs civil war.
âThe famines in Gaza and Sudan were entirely preventable; they can still be halted before yet more people die,â she said, concluding her remarks by warning: âIf we fail to meet this moment, weâll be living with the consequences of failure for many years to come.â
Egeland told the meeting that âwe canât overstate the gravity of this moment.â He warned that 2025 represents the âbiggest gap in recorded historyâ between the necessary levels of humanitarian assistance and the rollout of resources.
The dire situation is compounded by a âcold warâ between the worldâs great powers, he said, adding that this is âcreating a paralysis in international relations that we havenât seen since 1989 and the fall of the Berlin Wall.â
Echoing McCainâs condemnation of widespread targeting of humanitarian workers in Gaza and elsewhere, Egeland warned: âWe have attacks on principled humanitarian work ⊠on a scale and in more places than I can remember in my 40 years as a humanitarian worker.â
A united push for humanitarian diplomacy by multilateral organizations and NGOs can only succeed if leverage is exerted on âthe actors that deny our access,â he said.
âIn my view, humanitarian diplomacy isnât another resolution from New York or Geneva expressing concern over the abuse against civilians, or the sieges, or the lack of access, or the starvation. We have that.
âItâs that we get those who have leverage on the parties, the governments, the actors that deny our access, that they meet and provide the carrots and the sticks â the leverage thatâs needed for us to be able to help people in their hour of greatest need.â
This leverage has been exerted in âsome places and in some conflicts of late,â but humanitarian workers in most cases lack the help they need from UN member states, Egeland said.
âToo many countries attack those they see as their enemies for all of what theyâre doing, and then they donât put pressure on their allies, which may be doing equally grave things,â he said.
âIn Gaza, the West Bank, Sudan, Afghanistan, Myanmar etc., itâs not tsunamis, itâs man-made from A to Z,â Egeland added. âThe parties get arms from somewhere âŠThey get economic support from somewhere.â
Addressing the suffering generated by great power rivalry requires those who have leverage to âsit together on humanitarian task forcesâ and âreach out to armed groupsâ so that humanitarians can âdo their work and the civilians can get help,â he said.
Egeland cited the example of the Syrian civil war, during which the humanitarian crisis arising from the âAssad besiegement of towns and citiesâ was addressed by a multi-nation task force in Geneva.
âI co-chaired that on behalf of the UN with Russia and the US ⊠At the table were all of those who had influence on the parties to the conflict, including the Gulf countries ⊠Iran sat at the table etc.,â he said.
âWe were able to negotiate access with up to eight armies and armed groups to the people in great need.
âThey were dying from starvation when we started in 2016, and we were able to allow hundreds of convoys from the WFP and others into the place. It was humanitarian diplomacy at its finest.â
The NRC has consistently tried to move aid supplies into Gaza, but has accused Israel of paralyzing its work in the Palestinian enclave.
Egeland said national aid programs, such as those organized by șÚÁÏÉçÇű and Jordan, can make up for the shortfall in NGO-supply runs being blocked by Israel.
âI think if the US and Europe provided convoys that would reach our warehouses inside of Gaza, weâd distribute,â he added.
âWeâre unable to bring in principal aid trucks and supplies to Gaza. We have to find another way, and itâs easy to do that.â
Egeland called for âless seminars and resolutions, and more field action by those who can fight for us and create results.â
Lahbib also accused Israel of employing starvation as a weapon of war, and described the situation in the Middle East as a âtest of our individual conscience and a test for our multilateral system.â
She added: âThe EU has engaged openly with Israel. We reached an understanding, but it must now be put into action. Israel must lift the blockade on Gaza.
âLet us get food and other supplies in to save lives. The European Commission has proposed to suspend trade concessions with Israel and other measures. We want urgent actions.â
Lahbib highlighted the EUâs aid programs for war-ravaged Middle Eastern countries: âŹ170 million ($198 million) for humanitarian assistance to Gaza and the West Bank this year; âŹ80 million for Yemen, with an additional âŹ40 million in the pipeline in 2025; and almost âŹ700 million to Sudan since 2023.
She said: âToday, the Middle East is a call to conscience, our individual conscience and our collective conscience.
âIt asks each of us the simple question: Do you believe that every human life has equal value no matter where on this planet?
âLetâs send a clear collective message: Weâll act together, guided by one simple yet powerful belief that every life ⊠on this planet has equal value. This is how weâll honor the people of the Middle East.â
Egger said the ICRC is âone of the few remaining organizations that still has international staff on the ground in Gaza.â
Its 350 staff there include surgeons who âoperate in the field hospital around the clockâ and âsee mass casualties coming in every day,â she added.

ICRC President Mirjana Spoljaric Egger described the situation in Gaza as âhell on earthâ in April. (AN Photo/Caspar Webb)
Egger delivered an overview of the state of suffering in Palestine, Sudan, Yemen and Syria. In the latter, âtens of thousands of people are living still under the unresolved trauma of not knowing what happened to their loved ones,â she said, referring to the forced disappearance of Syrians by the countryâs former regime.
âThe ICC (International Criminal Court) alone has registered over 36,000 cases of missing people in Syria. Itâs an enormous task to manage for the authorities and everyone involved because we must assume that the real number is undoubtedly far higher,â she added.
âFor many families, answers remain out of reach and will probably remain out of reach forever. It should teach us a lesson, and it should be a wake-up call for what it means to give the ICC systematic access to detention, especially when thereâs a legal obligation for states to do so.â
In the West Bank, ârelentless violence and expanding settlementsâ by Israel are âforcing Palestinians from their homes,â Egger said.
Palestinian lives in Gaza are being âsacrificed on the altar of might and military victory on both sides,â she added.
âNothing will become better in the Middle East if we donât show greater respect for the rules of war.
âHuman dignity and humanity must be preserved because if we lose that, weâll never be able to return on a path to peace.â