
A Year of Saving and Changing Lives
A look at what 2018 meant for the World Food Programme (WFP) and the millions of people it serves.

A look at what 2018 meant for the World Food Programme (WFP) and the millions of people it serves.
After four years of conflict and destruction, Yemen is teetering on the brink of famine. It’s the largest humanitarian crisis on the planet.

Recently, WFP broke through barriers to reach Rukban, an isolated Syrian settlement, with lifesaving food and supplies.

As peace talks stall to end the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, a ship of hope—supported by U.S. wheat—tells an inspiring story about why American support for the people of Yemen right now matters so much. Ann Nallo reports.

Yemen has become the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. The situation is dire, and if things don’t change soon, it will get worse.

Conflict in Syria forced Hussein’s family to flee to Lebanon, where they are rebuilding a life at a refugee camp.

The United Nations is warning of a potential “humanitarian catastrophe” in the last major rebel stronghold in the Syrian civil war involving tens of thousands of civilians.

The United Nations is warning of a potential “humanitarian catastrophe” in the last major rebel stronghold in the Syrian civil war involving tens of thousands of civilians.

In March 2018, a school meals program was restarted inside Yemen to give children new hope within the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

Since 2014, school meals inside Syria have restored a sense of normalcy for hundreds of thousands of children trapped by war.