HIGHLIGHTS OF THE NOON BRIEFING BY FARHAN HAQ,
DEPUTY SPOKESMAN FOR SECRETARY-GENERAL ANTÓNIO GUTERRES
MONDAY, 13 OCTOBER 2025
SECRETARY-GENERAL/GAZA
The Secretary-General welcomes the continued implementation of the ceasefire in Gaza, based on the proposal by US President Donald J. Trump, including the release of Israeli hostages and Palestinian detainees.
He commends the Governments of Qatar, Egypt, the United States and Türkiye for their persistent mediation efforts and acknowledges the indispensable role of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in ensuring that all releases take place safely and humanely.
With the ceasefire in effect, the people of Gaza and Israel are beginning to glimpse the fragile hope of calm after months of devastation.
The United Nations and its partners are rapidly scaling up operations across Gaza.
UN agencies are reaching communities in areas that were cut off for months, delivering life-saving assistance.
These efforts mark an essential first step in stabilizing conditions and restoring basic human dignity, but the needs remain vast, and sustained access and funding are critical.
The Secretary-General calls on all parties to consolidate the ceasefire and transform it into lasting peace.
He appeals to regional and international actors to seize this moment of respite to restart a credible political process that can deliver the outcome of two independent, sovereign, democratic States, Israel and Palestine, living side by side in peace and security within their secure and recognized borders on the basis of pre-1967 lines, with Jerusalem as the capital of both states – in line with international law, UN resolutions and other relevant agreements.
Mr. Guterres made a phone call this morning from Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, where he is attending the summit under way today, in which he told Israeli President Isaac Herzog that he welcomed the release of the remaining live Israeli hostages from Gaza. The Secretary-General recalled the many meetings he had with hostage families and survivors, during which he heard of their unbearable pain.
OCCUPIED PALESTINIAN TERRITORY
The Emergency Relief Coordinator, Tom Fletcher, today allocated an additional $11 million from the Central Emergency Response Fund to support the immediate scale-up of humanitarian operations in Gaza ahead of winter. This follows last week’s $9 million allocation to ensure sufficient fuel supplies to keep life-saving services running across the Strip, bringing total recent CERF funding for Gaza to $20 million.
Mr. Fletcher warned that without fresh contributions to CERF, critical aid cannot keep flowing to people who rely on it.
Speaking from Sharm el-Sheikh ahead of the summit in Egypt today, Mr. Fletcher stressed that this is a moment of precarious hope for so many Israelis and Palestinians, and he added that the humanitarian scale-up planned by the UN and its partners in Gaza is underway.
Meanwhile, the Office of the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) says that, under the humanitarian plan for the initial 60 days of the ceasefire, the UN and its partners will deliver life-saving assistance and services to people across the Strip, wherever they need our support, including food, water, health services, shelter supplies, hygiene items, protection support and other critical help.
Our colleagues from the UN 2720 Mechanism report that they have secured Israeli approval for more aid, bringing our cleared pipeline to 190,000 metric tonnes, as of yesterday. These supplies are across the region, in Jordan, Egypt, Israel, Cyprus and the West Bank, and are ready to move. Some is already on the way.
Yesterday, OCHA reported that for the first time since March, cooking gas entered the Strip. More tents for displaced families, frozen meat, fresh fruit, flour and medicines also crossed into Gaza throughout the day.
Inside Gaza, humanitarians are now able to move more easily in many areas, and so our teams are reaching people in places that had been cut off for up to several months. With the easing of movement and access restrictions in multiple places, we were able to pre-position medical and emergency supplies where they are needed most and assess key roads for explosive hazards.
UN partners are working to increase production of meals in community kitchens in the north, as thousands of people have already returned to that part of Gaza. The UN and our partners are helping kitchens and bakeries serve hundreds of thousands of meals and bread bundles every day. And we are trucking drinking water to places where people are staying.
From Friday until yesterday, our colleagues monitoring displacement recorded nearly 310,000 movements of people from southern to northern Gaza and about 23,000 movements in other directions.
This is just the beginning. As part of our plan for the first 60 days of the ceasefire, the UN and our partners will expand the scale and scope of our operations to deliver life-saving aid and services to virtually everyone across Gaza.
LEBANON
In a statement issued over the weekend, the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) said that on Saturday, an Israeli drone dropped a grenade that exploded near a UNIFIL position in Kafer Kela. One peacekeeper was lightly injured and received medical assistance. UNIFIL is investigating the circumstances of the incident.
UNIFIL says that this is the second IDF grenade attack on peacekeepers this month. It represents another serious violation of resolution 1701 and concerning disregard for the safety of peacekeepers implementing their mandate from the Security Council.
The UN again calls on the IDF to cease attacks on or near peacekeepers, who are working to rebuild the stability that both Israel and Lebanon have committed to restore.
MADAGASCAR
The Secretary-General is closely following developments in the last forty-eight hours in Madagascar.
The Secretary-General joins the call of the Chairperson of the African Union Commission to all Malagasy stakeholders to prioritize peaceful and consensual solutions to the current situation.
SECURITY COUNCIL
This morning, the Security Council held a briefing on the Great Lakes region. Huang Xia, the Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for the Great Lakes Region, noted that since his last briefing in April, there have been significant diplomatic developments, and there is now real hope for a ceasefire, which would pave the way for a lasting and definitive resolution in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo.
While all African and international peace efforts are commendable and promising, Mr. Xia noted that they have not yet delivered on their promises. He added that the humanitarian situation remains catastrophic, humanitarian access remains problematic and serious human rights violations continue to be reported.
Mr. Xia called on those most directly concerned to resume direct and frank dialogue and to take all necessary steps to end this war once and for all.
SUDAN
Turning to the horrendous situation in Sudan and mainly in North Darfur State’s capital, El Fasher. We echo the statement issued by the Humanitarian and Resident Coordinator in Sudan, Denise Brown, in which she condemned in the strongest possible terms the repeated and deliberate targeting of civilians in the besieged city of El-Fasher.
On Friday and Saturday, at least 57 civilians were killed by drone attacks, reportedly carried out by the Rapid Support Forces. The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) says that at least 17 children were reportedly killed during the weekend, including an infant who was just seven days old.
The attacks struck a location where displaced people were sheltering in the Daraja Oula neighbourhood of El Fasher.
This incident follows a series of reported attacks by the RSF last week that left scores of civilians killed and injured. This included an attack on the Saudi Hospital, the last functioning major medical facility in the city.
In recent days, we have also seen reports from local community leaders of further civilian casualties in an alleged drone strike on Al Koma, east of El Fasher, in an area held by the RSF. Back in June, five humanitarian workers were killed in the same area in an attack on an aid convoy en route towards El Fasher.
Ms. Brown reiterated her appeal for an immediate end to attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure, stressing that hospitals, shelters, and places of refuge must never be targeted. She called for thorough, impartial investigations and accountability for those responsible for the attacks in El Fasher.
The UN and its humanitarian partners remain committed to supporting the people of El Fasher and all those affected by the conflict across Sudan, but the humanitarian community requires safe and unhindered access. Civilians must be protected and above all, the people of Sudan need the violence to stop.
SOUTH SUDAN
The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reports that flooding continues across the country due to heavy rains and rising water levels along the Nile River.
When we last spoke to you from here on the floods in South Sudan three weeks ago, some 380,000 people had been impacted. As of yesterday, UN humanitarian partners say that the number has more than doubled, with nearly 890,000 people now affected. The vast majority of these people are in the states of Jonglei and Unity. Nearly a third of the people affected have been displaced and are seeking shelter on higher ground.
The floods have caused extensive damage to homes, crops, schools, health facilities, road and other critical infrastructure, further complicating humanitarian access. Some flooded areas in the south of the country are now accessible only by canoe.
Despite these challenges, the UN and its humanitarian partners continue to deliver life-saving assistance, including shelter, food and nutrition support, cash assistance, health and water and sanitation services. They have also distributed sandbags and other flood control materials.
Above-average rainfall is expected across most of South Sudan, heightening flood risks.
As of October 13th, the 2025 Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan, which seeks $1.7 billion to assist 5.4 million people, is only 30 per cent funded at $504 million. This is down from 43 per cent at the same time last year. This underfunding hampers the ability to scale up emergency interventions, pre-position supplies and sustain operations.
CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC
The Assistant Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, Joyce Msuya, is in the Central African Republic this week. Today, in the capital Bangui, she met with Prime Minister Félix Moloua to discuss the Government’s work to bridge humanitarian, development and peace efforts.
Ms. Msuya also met with Josiane Lina Bemaka-Souï, the Minister for Humanitarian Action, to explore ways to deepen collaboration on humanitarian work, durable solutions and access. Later this week, she will also meet with communities and our partners working on humanitarian issues.
The humanitarian crisis in the Central African Republic remains dire, with two out of every five people in the country in need of humanitarian assistance, while one in five are displaced, either within the country or across borders.
HAITI
The World Food Programme (WFP) today warned that women, children and displaced families are hardest hit by Haiti’s prolonged crisis, which is driving rising hunger and malnutrition. The alert follows the release of the latest Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) analysis. WFP notes that a record of 5.7 million people, equivalent to 51 per cent of the total population, are currently experiencing acute levels of hunger, a three per cent increase from last year, according to the IPC. Malnutrition rates have also doubled in two years from 7 per cent to 14 per cent of children under five, with some areas recording even higher rates.
WFP pointed out that armed violence, economic decline, persistent inflation and poor agricultural output continue to drive Haiti’s worsening crisis. The crisis in Haiti is acutely underfunded. WFP requires $139 million for the next 12 months to reach the country’s most vulnerable families.
Tomorrow, the noon briefing guest will be Roberto Benes, UNICEF’s Regional Director for Latin America and the Caribbean. He will join the briefing from Haiti.
ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE
A new report released today by the World Health Organization (WHO), states between the years 2018 and 2023, antibiotic resistance rose in over 40 per cent of the pathogen-antibiotic combinations monitored, with an average annual increase of 5–15 per cent. The report warns that increasing resistance to essential antibiotics poses a growing threat to global health.
WHO calls on countries to scale up coordinated interventions across all levels of healthcare and ensure that treatment guidelines and essential medicines’ lists align with local resistance patterns.
DISASTER RISK REDUCTION  
Today is the International Day for Disaster Risk Reduction. In his message, the Secretary-General says as the climate crisis accelerates, disasters are multiplying and amplifying. The cost to the global economy is staggering, he added, yet funding to reduce repercussions remains dangerously low.
He called on governments and donors to scale-up investments in disaster risk reduction.