BEIRUT — A top United Nations official said during a visit to Beirut Saturday that he is concerned that Lebanon's ports and airport might be taken out of service, with serious implications for getting food supplies into the county, as Israel continues its offensive against the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah.
''What I have seen and heard today is devastating, but the sense is that this can get much worse still, and that needs to be avoided,'' said Carl Skau, deputy executive director of the U.N. World Food Program, in an interview with The Associated Press.
He appealed for ''all diplomatic efforts possible to try to find a political solution'' to the war and for supply lines to remain open.
''We have huge concerns and there are many, but one of them is indeed that we need the ports and we need the supply routes to continue to be able to operate,'' Skau said.
In Gaza, where Israel has been at war with Hamas since the Palestinian militant group launched a deadly incursion into southern Israel a year ago, hunger has skyrocketed as humanitarian organizations have complained of major obstacles to getting food and other supplies into the blockaded enclave.
Skau said he believes that Israeli authorities had given ''commitments'' that in Lebanon, the ports and airport would not be taken out of commission.
''But of course, this is a very changing environment. So we don't take anything for granted,'' he said.
In recent weeks, Israel has escalated its aerial bombardment and launched a ground invasion in Lebanon.