TO THE WORLD: Please Stop Recurring Gaza Famine!

The imminent threat of famine in the Gaza Strip is deeply alarming, particularly considering the ongoing illegal and comprehensive blockade imposed by Israel for the past 45 days now. This marks the longest uninterrupted restriction on humanitarian aid and essential goods since the beginning of Israel’s genocide in the Strip over 18 months ago.

Euro-Med Monitor’s field team in the Gaza Strip has observed alarming indicators pointing to a severe food crisis that may soon reach the level of famine. The ongoing Israeli blockade has caused a severe and persistent shortage of essential food items necessary for survival, including grains, proteins, and fats. Much of the enclave’s remaining agricultural and food infrastructure has either been bombed or otherwise destroyed, and/or is currently under Israeli military control. As a result, people have been forced to sell their most basic belongings just to secure food, signalling the onset of a breakdown in their ability to endure the hunger.

Families in the Gaza Strip have been forced to cut the number of their daily meals, resulting in noticeable weight loss among residents. In the near-total absence of fresh and nutritious food, most people now rely almost entirely on the enclave’s limited supply of canned goods, while many others have become fully dependent on food banks for their daily meals. However, these food banks have come under intensified Israeli military attacks in recent weeks, further depriving residents of access to even the most basic food necessities.

Israeli forces have deliberately targeted over 37 aid distribution centres and 28 food banks, as part of a systematic policy to starve civilians and exacerbate their suffering. To those outside of the Gaza Strip, this policy should be evident in the scores of published images of Palestinians forced to stand in long lines near these facilities, desperate to obtain a modest meal of rice or soup. Such scenes are unprecedented in the Strip and reflect the horrific humanitarian collapse caused by the Israeli blockade and deliberate targeting of basic survival resources.

Following the closure of all bakeries operating in the Gaza Strip,Euro-Med Monitor’s field team—enduring the same severe humanitarian conditions as the general population—carried out field visits and documented an almost complete absence of bread in the enclave’s markets. 

Additionally, both red and white meats, whether fresh or frozen, are unavailable. The few vegetables that can be found are sold at extremely high prices, far beyond the reach of most residents, particularly after 18 months of disruption to people’s livelihoods and income sources. This deteriorating food security crisis israpidly pushing Palestinians in the Gaza Strip towards imminent famine.

The starvation imposed by Israel on civilians in the Gaza Strip represents one of the most severe and inhumane forms of genocide, as well as a grave violation of human dignity. It extends beyond the mere denial of food, as it also seeks to dismantle the population’s ability to survive by destroying livelihoods, obstructing humanitarian aid, targeting sources of food production, and deliberately disrupting essential supply chains.

The most devastating impacts of this policy fall on women and, tragically, on children. Women and children make up over two-thirds of the Gaza Strip’s population. Children are suffering slow and painful deaths due to severe malnutrition, weakened immune systems, and stunted growth, all driven by the acute shortage of food and medical care. Meanwhile, pregnant and breastfeeding women face life-threatening risks—for themselves and their foetuses or infants—due to the absence of essential nutrition and the total collapse of the healthcare system.

Over one million children in the Gaza Strip are suffering from severe malnutrition, amid widespread food insecurity, the collapse of the Strip’s health infrastructure, an acute shortage of clean drinking water, and the complete absence of even the mostbasic necessities for a dignified life.

The consequences of this policy extend far beyond the present, threatening the very future of Palestinians as a national group. By creating a generation at risk of long-term physical, psychological, and cognitive disabilities, Israel reveals a deliberate and destructive intent—one that aligns with the defining characteristics of genocide under international law.

Currently, 2.3 million people are displaced within the besieged Gaza Strip, enduring severe food insecurity amid relentless daily Israeli bombardment and attacks targeting civilians and essential infrastructure. The risk of famine is an imminent catastrophe, unless immediate action is taken.

The international community bears direct responsibility for the escalating famine in the Gaza Strip, which has resulted from Israel’s deliberate use of starvation as a weapon—a systematic tactic in its campaign of genocide against the Palestinian people, aimed at erasing them as a national group.

Without international intervention, the crisis will soon reach apoint of no return, with daily deaths now expected because of the severe food shortage and people’s weakened immunity. This is occurring under the continued blockade, the systematic denial of humanitarian aid, and the widespread destruction of critical infrastructure, while the absence of effective international intervention allows the humanitarian collapse to accelerate unchecked.

Israel must be held accountable for using starvation as a weapon against civilians, which is a war crime under international humanitarian law and a serious violation of its obligations as an occupying power. Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor emphasises that this tactic is part of a broader campaign to destroy the Palestinian community, constituting genocide under international law.

The international community, the United Nations, and States Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention must act urgently to lift the blockade on the Gaza Strip and guarantee the safe, consistent delivery of food and medical aid, as the onset of famine is already taking lives and eroding the basic conditions for survival. Immediate action is also needed to stop the Israeli policies of slow killing and forced displacement of Palestinians in the Strip; this action must include launching a comprehensive humanitarian response to provide residents not only with food, but other essentials such as clean water, temporary shelter, and healthcare.

UN agencies such as the World Food Programme (WFP), the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) must strengthen their mandates and swiftly scale up interventions by issuing emergency reports, holding press briefings, advocating for humanitarian corridors, and ensuring protection for all civilians trapped in the Gaza Strip by Israe land its allies.

  • CrossFireArabia

    CrossFireArabia

    Dr. Marwan Asmar holds a PhD from Leeds University and is a freelance writer specializing on the Middle East. He has worked as a journalist since the early 1990s in Jordan and the Gulf countries, and been widely published, including at Albawaba, Gulf News, Al Ghad, World Press Review and others.

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    Stories From Hell: Food at Gun-point

    Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) continues to treat scores of patients suffering from life-changing injuries, chronic pain, and psychological trauma sustained while attempting to access food assistance from US-backed, so-called Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) sites. This militarized food distribution scheme launched one year ago but only ran for six months before being forced to stop after significant controversy and criticism.

    The GHF, which replaced a 400-site UN-coordinated aid distribution system, was run by Israel with financial support from the United States and other allies. GHF sites became operational on May 26, 2025, and were “secured” by private American armed contractors, with Israeli forces maintaining control over the wider perimeter.

    US-backed aid distribution points are sites of orchestrated killing

    Read more

    Violence occurring at and related to GHF’s four distribution points led to deaths and injuries for thousands of people who were desperately seeking food during Israel’s months-long total blockade.

    An MSF staff member checks Saad's patient file at Al-Mawasi primary health care center. Saad has to wear an external fixator after he was injured during a GHF food distribution in 2025.
    At Al-Mawasi primary health care center, an MSF staff member greets Saad, who has to wear an external fixator after he was injured during a GHF food distribution in 2025. Palestine 2026 © Nour Alsaqqa/MSF

    The legacy of the GHF is widespread violence against hungry people

    “As MSF has documented with medical evidence, people who were seeking food in desperate and siege-like conditions suffered horrendous levels of targeted and indiscriminate violence,” said Joan Tubau, MSF head of mission for the Occupied Palestinian Territory.

    “Children were shot in the chest while reaching for food, people were crushed or suffocated in stampedes, and entire crowds were gunned down at distribution points. Today, many GHF-related patients are entirely dependent on charity and community kitchens due to their mobility issues and lack of ability to work and provide for their families.”

    People who were seeking food in desperate and siege-like conditions suffered horrendous levels of targeted and indiscriminate violence.Joan Tubau, MSF head of mission for the Occupied Palestinian Territory

    Between June and October 2025, MSF teams recorded at least 32 deaths and treated 1,885 patients for injuries linked to the GHF sites at MSF’s Al-Attar and Al-Mawasi primary health care centers in Khan Younis.

    Neama Awad

    “Even if it meant death, I had to go bring food”

    I am from Miraj, originally from Rafah. Everything was destroyed. The occupation came near us. They were shooting at our children and here too we are displaced. I only wish to return home. Honestly, my situation is very bad. I am sick, and my husband is sick.

    I went looking for a loaf of bread. I went walking as I don’t even have one shekel for transportation. One day people came and said, ‘Go to the aid point in Al-Tina to get food.’ I said I would go. I wanted to bring food for my children. There was no food, nothing. We became skin and bones. I went to the aid distribution because we had no support at home — no flour, no food, no aid reaching us, not even a loaf of bread.

    View moreA Palestinian woman injured at a GHF site in Gaza.

    Palestine 2026 © Nour Alsaqqa/MSF

    Patients recount horrific scenes

    “My friend was executed in front of my eyes,” said Karim, a former barber who suffered life-changing injuries permanently damaging a nerve in his leg. “It still haunts me. Both of us were caught and handcuffed [by Israeli soldiers] behind our backs. A drone hovered above me, and four men were asked to take me away.”

    Mustafa, a taxi driver from Rafah, developed a heel infection that caused rotting after a gunshot wound broke two of his bones as he was trying to access food. His 17-year-old nephew was shot in the head and killed by a sniper.

    “[It] was so humiliating,” Mustapha said. “Thousands of people would run towards [the food], then the IDF would shoot on us from fixed points. Two thirds of the injured people in Gaza I know were cases from GHF.”

    Saad Hussein, MSF patient

    “Hunger: That is what made us go”

    I am from southern Rafah. Neither our grandfather nor the many displaced people before us lived through this. So many homes were destroyed. Everyone was displaced. We were living in the Iqlimi area, but with the famine and everything that was happening, we were forced to leave. We have children, pregnant women, and breastfeeding mothers. We had to take whatever we could because nothing was available. We were forced to go to the American aid distribution points.

    We had no clean food, no clean clothes, no clean bathrooms. Nothing was clean. We did not eat breakfast, lunch, or dinner. We would bring lentils from the community kitchen and survive on them until the next day. My mother, my brothers, my brother’s six orphaned children, my brother’s wife, me, my mother, and my father. God is with us and with them.

    View morePortrait of Saad Hussein. Saad was injured in 2025 during a food distribution by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.

    Palestine 2026 © Nour Alsaqqa/MSF

    The opposite of humanitarian work

    The GHF also played a key role in the malnutrition crisis manufactured by Israel. The drastic reduction of food and aid distribution points compounded by the total siege, intensified violence, mass displacement, and destruction of health facilities had a direct role in the famine declared in mid-2025, with devastating consequences on vulnerable groups such as pregnant women, newborns, and children.

    “Nothing about GHF was a humanitarian solution,” Tubau said. “One year on, the magnitude of the harm inflicted on people at GHF distribution points without any accountability requires an independent investigation. Israel has an obligation to ensure unhindered humanitarian access and condemns aid models, including the GHF, that fail to alleviate suffering.”

    My friend was executed in front of my eyes. It still haunts me. Both of us were caught and handcuffed [by Israeli soldiers] behind our backs.Karim, MSF patient

    This militarized system of aid delivery resulted in significant harm and suffering and should never be replicated. Israel, the US, and all actors of influence to ensure that aid is non-militarized, accessible, and built on independence, impartiality, neutrality, and humanity. Civilians must be able to safely reach humanitarian assistance — based on vulnerability and need — wherever they choose to reside, and at scale.

    *Names of patients have been changed for their safety.

    MSF

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    In The Grip of Starvation: Israel Will Not Let Gaza Rest!

    Gaza Government Media Office Advisor Taysir Muhaysin warned of a gradual return to famine in the Gaza Strip as a result of continued Israeli policies restricting aid entry and other basic necessities.

    He told the Sanad News Agency the amount of aid entering Gaza by truck does not exceed 27% of that stipulated in the last ceasefire agreement.

    Muhaysin stated the Israeli policy of reducing aid is not limited to food and humanitarian supplies, but extends to fuel, including diesel, gasoline, and cooking gas, which is an essential commodity for Palestinian families to manage their daily lives and prepare whatever food they can find under the difficult living conditions.

    Read also: Al-Hayek: Gaza sounds the alarm of famine due to declining aid

    Government institutions in the Strip continue to perform their duties at the minimum level possible, given the available resources and the exceptional circumstances Gaza is experiencing, whilst Muhaysin denying an administrative vacuum in the enclave.

    He affirmed that Gaza government institutions continue to function and maintain a minimum level of stability and essential services essential to the population.

    The Media Office Advisor indicated different government bodies expressed their full readiness to hand over their administrative and executive responsibilities to the “technocratic committee” as soon as it arrives in the Strip to begin its work, in accordance with the ceasefire agreement signed in 10 October, 2025. He stressed however, there are real obstacles as procedure and conditions is imposed by the Israel occupation that prevent this.

    A Complex Humanitarian Crisis…

    Muhaysin warned the living conditions in Gaza are really a “complex humanitarian crisis” affecting all aspects of life.

    “Hundreds of thousands of citizens are still living in tents amidst the spread of epidemics and diseases,” whilst pointing to the decline in the capabilities of the health system and municipal services in addition to the severe shortage of food and essential shelter supplies.

    The health sector faces increasing risks due to the ongoing shortage of fuel and medical supplies. Muhaysin noted the administration of the Al-Aqsa Hospital were forced to shutdown about 50% of its power generators, and this threatens the lives of patients, especially kidney patients, premature infants, and those in operating rooms and intensive care units.

    “What Gaza is witnessing today represents an ongoing humanitarian catastrophe, caused by the decisions and measures imposed by the Israeli occupation, which has led to an unprecedented deterioration in living, health, and humanitarian conditions.”

    He pointed out that the technocratic committee that is yet to enter the Gaza Strip needs to assuming its responsibilities across the entire enclave, and this needs to happen with the concurrent withdrawal of the Israeli occupation forces from the areas they reoccupied in Gaza and the commencement of international forces operations tasked with monitoring and security separation under the terms of the ceasefire.

    Muhaysin accuses the Israeli occupation of attempting to impose new realities on the ground through excluding areas east of what is known as the “yellow line” from the committee’s administrative responsibility. He said these go against the principles agreed upon in the proposals put forward to end the ongoing crisis.

    He concluded by saying the occupation continues to impose its own vision on the future of the Gaza Strip by repeatedly introducing new conditions and ideas, contradicting the fundamental understandings and initiatives discussed over the past months. This, he asserted, obstructs any genuine efforts to alleviate the suffering of the population and end the escalating humanitarian crisis.

    The specter of famine is returning to haunt the Gaza Strip, and is coinciding with the tightening of military measures at the crossings controlled by the Israeli occupation. Such prevents the entry of humanitarian and relief aid, and allows militias affiliated with the occupation to steal the incoming aid.

    At the end of May, the Palestinian Council of Ministers warned of the severity of UN reports that indicate that about 1.6 million Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, nearly 77% of the population, face the immediate threat of famine due to declining humanitarian funding and reduced aid flow.

    In a previous statement to Sanad News Agency, Ali al-Hayek, head of the Palestinian Businessmen Association, warned of the deteriorating humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip. He emphasized that famine indicators are becoming increasingly apparent amid the continued decline in humanitarian aid and the curtailment of relief organizations’ operations. He noted the Gaza situation “threatens the onset of an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe.”

    This article is based on an extended interview by Advisor Taysir Muhaysin published in Arabic by the Sanad News Agency and republished crossfirearabia.com

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