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Brett Wilkins: UN to Warn Half a Million Gazans Facing ‘Catastrophic’ Food Insecurity

“The international community must apply relentless pressure to achieve a cease-fire and ensure sustained humanitarian access now,” said one advocate. 

Children receive malnourishment treatment at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on May 30, 2024, amid Israel’s ongoing assault on the besieged enclave. (Photo: Bashar Taleb/AFP via Getty Images) 

More than 1 in 5 people in the Gaza Strip are “facing catastrophic levels of food insecurity” amid Israel’s relentless assault and siege against the Palestinian territory, according to a draft report set to be published Tuesday by the United Nations’ hunger monitoring system.

The latest Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) Acute Food Insecurity Special Snapshot—which was previewed by various news agencies—says that more than 495,000 Gazans—who already face “an extreme lack of food, starvation, and exhaustion”—are expected to suffer the highest level of starvation over the coming months. 

The draft report states that while a sharp increase in food aid in northern Gaza in March and April can be credited with “likely averting a famine,” the situation is “deteriorating again following renewed hostilities.”

“A high risk of famine persists across the whole of the Gaza Strip as long as conflict continues and humanitarian access is restricted,” IPC noted. 

The IPC draft report also says more than half of all Gaza households had to sell or swap clothing in order to obtain food, and that the majority of Gazan families often “do not have any food to eat in the house, and over 20% go entire days and nights without eating.”

“The population cannot endure these hardships any longer.”

Kate Phillips-Barrasso, vice president of global policy and advocacy at Mercy Corps, an Oregon-based humanitarian NGO, toldThe Guardianthat “people are enduring subhuman conditions resorting to desperate measures like boiling weeds, eating animal feed, and exchanging clothes for money to stave off hunger and keep their children alive.”

“The humanitarian situation is deteriorating rapidly, and the specter of famine continues to hang over Gaza,” she added. “The international community must apply relentless pressure to achieve a cease-fire and ensure sustained humanitarian access now. The population cannot endure these hardships any longer.”

Although the IPC stopped short of the rare step of declaring a famine in Gaza, it warned that “the recent trajectory is negative and highly unstable.”

“Should this continue, the improvements seen in April could be rapidly reversed,” the agency added. 

The IPC’s famine review panel previously  said there is not enough data to make a determination on whether there is a famine in Gaza since research was being blocked by “conflict and humanitarian access constraints.” 

The Geneva-based group Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor said Monday that “the Famine Review Committee’s inability to declare the current food situation in the Gaza Strip to be a famine does not negate the existence of famine in the strip, as pockets of famine are forming and spreading among different age groups, particularly children, and there is a noticeable increase in deaths from hunger, malnutrition, and related diseases.”

“The committee’s failure to declare the existence of a famine is solely related to its inability to provide certain technical information because of illegal Israeli restrictions and policies that aim to conceal evidence related to the crimes it commits and prevent criminal investigations into them by independent U.N. and international committees, particularly by preventing these committees from entering the strip,” the group added. 

U.N. World Food Program Executive Director Cindy McCain said last month that “full-blown famine” had taken hold in Gaza and was spreading south. According to Gaza officials, at least 40 people—mostly children—have died from malnutrition and dehydration during the 262-day Israeli onslaught. Almost all of the victims are from northern Gaza.

Israel began bombing, and later invaded, Gaza after Hamas-led attacks left more than 1,100 Israelis and others dead and over 240 others kidnapped on October 7. At least some of the victims were killed by Israeli forces in so-called “friendly fire” incidents, according to Israeli and international media reports.

Since then, Israeli forces have killed at least 37,626 Palestinians—most of them women and children—in Gaza, while wounding over 86,000 others, according to Palestinian and international agencies. At least 11,000 people, including over 4,000 children, are missing and presumed dead and buried beneath the rubble of hundreds of thousands of bombed-out homes and other buildings.

Michael Fakhri, the United Nations special rapporteur on the right to food and a law professor at the University of Oregon, said in late February that Israel is committing genocide by intentionally starving Gazans. Israel’s siege—and Israeli attacks on humanitarian aid shipments, workers, and recipients—are being reviewed by the International Court of Justice as part of a South Africa-led genocide case backed by over 30 countries and regional blocs.


First published in Common Dreams. Licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.

Brett Wilkins

Brett Wilkins is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

14 comments on “Brett Wilkins: UN to Warn Half a Million Gazans Facing ‘Catastrophic’ Food Insecurity

  1. Barbara Huntington
    June 28, 2024

    And this morning, despair.

    Like

  2. drmandy99
    June 26, 2024

    The situation in Gaza is absolutely horrendous. What can each of us do to make it more comprehensible to those who either don’t know or don’t want to know? Call our politicians, write and/or call our mainstream media outlets, stand together with the protesters. If we choose to vote for anyone who supports this genocide, what does this say about us and about our nation?

    Like

    • Vox Populi
      June 27, 2024

      So many of our politicians have been bought by lobbyists, it’s difficult to decide how to participate in electoral politics.

      >

      Liked by 1 person

  3. boehmrosemary
    June 26, 2024

    And Trump is already planning to build condos by the Gazan seaside together with his son-in-law.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. boehmrosemary
    June 26, 2024

    And Trump is determined to wipe Palestine from the map. Standing with Netanyahu. God help us all..

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Reese E. Forbes
    June 26, 2024

    This sums up why I will Not be voting for Biden again.

    Jill Stein spoke here in St Louis, and she will not be giving arms and ammunition to Zionist Israel (which is paid for by your and my tax dollars). She will have an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and will not instruct her UN rep to veto all peace plans as Biden has.

    Like

    • Vox Populi
      June 26, 2024

      Thanks, Reese. I worry about Trump being elected, so I’ll probably hold my nose and vote for Biden.

      >

      Liked by 1 person

    • melpacker
      June 26, 2024

      I agree on voting for at least some progressive other than the two murderers of the mainstream parties. I completely understand the fear that drives many to vote for Biden, and that fear-mongering will only be increasing as we move closer to election day. I share the fears but also share fear of a continued Dem leadership which is perhaps even more hawkish than the GOP it that’s possible. For me, it really comes down to a simple question that goes like this. “Can I face myself in the morning mirror knowing that I voted for a candidate who is supporting genocide in Palestine? Can my moral and ethical self survive that onslaught?” And the answer for me is a resounding NO and has been so for as long as I can remember and hopefully for as long as I live. I do not argue with those who succumb to those fears nor will I condemn them for voting those fears, and only hope that such respect and the right to vote as we choose will be mutually respected.

      Like

    • Barbara Huntington
      June 27, 2024

      I think we will lose what’s left of our democracy if T is elected snd I fear a vote for Stein is one for T, so I will also hold my nose and vote for Biden

      Like

  6. melpacker
    June 26, 2024

    Warning some and warnings go and then more warnings come…and more go while the warnings do little to bring an end to the genocide fully supported and even emboldened by our government’s insistence on providing “cover” with its ineffectual “pier” constructed on Gaza shore and yielding little in increased aid but likely bringing profits to some US corporation that produced the material structure. Then more warnings come, both of new bombings and of famine again, and the warnings yield more deaths by bomb and slow starvation of those lucky enough to avoid the US supplied explosives shredding the tents of the “displaced” Gazans. The warning of imminent starvation/famine could easily have been resolved long ago by the US refusing all arms shipments and an announcement that it would work with the UN to provide armed support for thousands of loaded aid trucks waiting on the Rafah crossing to enter Gaza. Defy Israel, announce “we’re coming” and challenge Israel to “try and stop us”.

    Liked by 2 people

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