Emergency appeal
Donate to Gaza and Lebanon
Last updated: 19 January 2025
Israel’s war on Gaza has taken a devastating toll on civilians and has fuelled further escalations in violence in Lebanon and across the wider region.
A temporary ceasefire in Gaza has been agreed.
After 15 months of bombing, death and destruction, people in Gaza have a reprieve from violence. Hostages from Israel and Palestinian detainees will now begin to be released.
Please donate today to support people who have lost everything to this war.
Your donation will help provide emergency food, clean water and hygiene kits, and repair water and wastewater networks in Gaza. And your support will help people forced to flee their homes due to the violence in Lebanon.
“It is an enormous relief that even an interim ceasefire has been agreed. This pause in hostilities is beyond overdue.””
Halima Begum , Oxfam GB Chief Executive
Image: Oxfam
What's happening in Gaza?
- A temporary ceasefire in Gaza has been agreed to take effect from Sunday 19th January.
- At least 46,000 people have been killed, a third of them children.
- Famine is imminent in northern Gaza, the situation is beyond catastrophic.
- Food is being deliberately restricted. Starvation is being used as a weapon of war.
- People are being starved. Malnutrition is rife. All of Gaza is at high risk of famine.
- A fifth of the population are experiencing catastrophic levels of hunger.
- Food, water, fuel and medicine are all running out.
- Gaza's water and sanitation systems are shattered. Homes, hospitals, bakeries and water facilities have been destroyed.
- There is not enough clean, safe water in Gaza. The situation is desperate.
The most urgent needs in Gaza right now are water, food, medical supplies, and shelter. The infrastructure is destroyed—there's no access to safe water, sanitation is non-existent, and there’s widespread malnutrition.
What's happening in Lebanon?
- Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon forced more than one million people to flee their homes.
- A 60-day ceasefire agreement in Lebanon came into effect from 27 November.
- People are in need of humanitarian aid. Many homes and villages have been destroyed.
- Lebanon can’t afford to bear the weight of this added disaster on its own.
What is Oxfam doing in Gaza?
- The continuing bombardment has made a full-scale humanitarian response impossible.
- Only a small amount of aid has been allowed in by the Israeli authorities.
- More than 2 million people are still in desperate need of aid.
Despite huge obstacles, Oxfam teams have been working along with partners to reach more than 1.2 million people with food, water, soap and sanitation kits since October 2023, including:
- Emergency food assistance: fresh vegetables, food parcels, cash and vouchers to over 200,000 people.
- Clean water and sanitation for over 133,000 people, by trucking in water and repairing badly damaged water and wastewater pipelines.
- First aid kits and services to support around 20,000 people in refugee camps, as well as 600 urgent family health packages, 400 hygiene kits and 3,000 protection kits.
- Thousands of blankets, pillows mattresses and sleeping mats to families forced to live in tents.
Oxfam has worked in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel since the 1950s to help build and protect rights to water, sanitation and hygiene, cash assistance and more.
Our partners include: the Palestinian Medical Relief Society, Juzoor, The Cultural & Free Thoughts Association, Palestinian Environmental Friends, Palestine Agricultural Relief Committee, Atfaluna, The Association for Woman and Child Protection, the Economic and Social Development Centre of Palestine, and Al Bayader.
Oxfam's early recovery work will focus on immediate needs. We will continue working with local partners in the coming weeks and months, helping people get life-saving support such as clean water, food and sanitation.
"Life before the war was truly beautiful." - Duaa Image: Alef Multimedia Company/ Oxfam
the sound of the drones constantly buzzing never leaves us.”
– Duaa in her kitchen in Gaza.
What is Oxfam doing in Lebanon?
Oxfam is responding to the escalating crisis in Lebanon, providing essential support to people who have been forced to flee as Israeli airstrikes bombard their homes and communities.
With our partners we are providing:
- clean water and sanitation
- emergency cash
- food
- hygiene kits
- menstrual kits
The influx of internally displaced people, primarily from southern Lebanon, will quickly create disastrous conditions for local communities, beyond the ability of an overloaded international humanitarian system to properly meet.
Oxfam and our partners are supporting internally displaced people in shelters in Beirut, Mount Lebanon and North Lebanon with clean water and sanitation, emergency cash, food, and hygiene and menstrual hygiene kits.
What else you can do to help
We need to scale up our humanitarian response. And we need your help to do it. Donate today to help people get essentials like food, water and sanitation.
More on the Gaza crisis
- Read the latest press release
- Read Oxfam’s reaction to the violence in Lebanon
- Read frequently asked questions
How we spend your money
For every £1 you donate to this emergency appeal, we will allocate 9p of your donation to cover general support and running costs. There is a small chance that we will raise more money than is needed for this appeal. If this happens, we'll spend any additional funds on other Oxfam projects — wherever the need is greatest.