Gaza City – A new report by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) has sounded the alarm on the deteriorating humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip, revealing that the entire population of 2.1 million is now at critical risk of famine. The report underscores the dire consequences of 19 months of ongoing conflict, compounded by severe restrictions on humanitarian aid.
The IPC, a globally recognized framework for assessing food insecurity, concluded that more than half a million people in Gaza are already facing starvation, and the situation is rapidly spiraling beyond control. According to the report, the risk of famine in Gaza is not only “possible” but “increasingly likely” — a declaration that has triggered renewed international concern and urgent calls for immediate intervention.
Blockade Intensifies Humanitarian Collapse
Since early March 2025, Israel has imposed a complete blockade on the entry of food, medicine, and essential humanitarian supplies into Gaza. The Israeli government has stated that the measure is part of an intensified pressure campaign on Hamas to release 59 remaining hostages held since the escalation of hostilities began.
However, numerous international aid agencies and human rights organizations have decried the blockade as a form of collective punishment, warning that using starvation as a weapon of war may constitute a war crime under international law.
“Food is not a bargaining chip. Denying access to life-saving aid is not only morally reprehensible — it is illegal,” said Dr. Amina El-Sayed, Middle East director at the International Humanitarian Action Coalition (IHAC). “We are watching a preventable famine unfold in real time, and the international community must not stay silent.”
The IPC’s Stark Findings
The IPC report, developed through a collaboration of UN agencies, NGOs, and independent analysts, utilized on-the-ground data and satellite assessments to project the state of food insecurity in Gaza. Key findings include:
- 100% of the population in Gaza is experiencing some level of food insecurity, with over 520,000 people in IPC Phase 5 — Catastrophe/Famine.
- Malnutrition rates among children have skyrocketed, with 1 in 3 children under five acutely malnourished.
- Crop destruction, water scarcity, and economic collapse have eliminated local food production.
- Aid deliveries have decreased by over 85% since the March blockade began.
“The numbers speak for themselves. This is a human-made famine, driven by policies and not by natural disaster,” said James T. Redfield, a senior analyst with the IPC Global Support Unit.
International Law and Accusations of War Crimes
Legal experts and rights groups have warned that the blockade may violate the Geneva Conventions, which prohibit the starvation of civilians as a method of warfare.
Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) have all released statements urging international accountability, with calls for the International Criminal Court (ICC) to investigate potential violations of international humanitarian law.
In a joint statement, a coalition of aid organizations wrote:
“The deliberate obstruction of aid, compounded by military operations in civilian areas, has created the conditions for famine. The world must not allow this to become another chapter of indifference.”
Humanitarian Access: A Lifeline That Must Be Restored
Despite growing international pressure, humanitarian corridors into Gaza remain closed or severely restricted, with only sporadic convoys allowed through under heavy scrutiny. Aid workers report that even when trucks are permitted entry, distribution is nearly impossible due to damage to infrastructure, ongoing hostilities, and a collapsed healthcare system.
“We are running out of time. What is needed now is unimpeded humanitarian access and a ceasefire that allows for immediate relief operations,” said Marie Lemoine, emergency coordinator with the World Food Programmed (WFP).
The WFP, UNRWA, and dozens of non-governmental organizations are calling for:
- Immediate cessation of hostilities to enable aid distribution.
- Restoration of access to humanitarian corridors without political preconditions.
- Emergency funding to scale up food, water, and medical aid.
- International diplomatic intervention to prevent further civilian suffering.
A Call to Action from the Global Community
The situation in Gaza represents one of the gravest humanitarian crises in recent memory. The IPC’s warning is a final red flag before a full-scale famine sets in — one that could claim tens of thousands of lives, many of them children.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres released a brief statement:
“The world must not avert its eyes. Famine in Gaza is not inevitable. It is preventable — but only if we act now.”
As political debates continue, aid workers on the ground urge the public, governments, and institutions to rise above divisions and respond with humanity.
“We do not need more time — we need more courage,” said Dr. Lina Abboud, a pediatrician with the Red Crescent in Gaza. “Every day of inaction is another grave dug for a child.”
