Abstract: The Middle East has been mired in prolonged armed conflicts and geopolitical confrontation in recent years, resulting in catastrophic damage to regional public health systems and severe violations of the fundamental right to health. This study analyzes the multi‑dimensional public health crisis triggered by the ongoing Middle East conflict, including the collapse of medical infrastructure, widespread mental health trauma, and environmental health risks. It systematically introduces the origin, core principles, and contemporary value of the Bandung Spirit, which emerged from the 1955 Asian‑African Conference. The paper further explores how the Bandung Spirit with its emphasis on sovereignty, non‑interference, peaceful coexistence, unity, and South‑South cooperation can provide a constructive framework to resolve the Middle East deadlock and protect public health. The analysis demonstrates that peaceful negotiation, sovereign equality, and collective humanitarian cooperation are essential to rebuilding health systems and safeguarding the lives and well‑being of local populations.
Wang et al. (Sat,) studied this question.