The Gaza Strip’s entire population is now at critical risk of famine, with half a million people on the brink of starvation, a global hunger monitor warned Monday.
The latest assessment by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) analyzed a period from April 1 to May 10 this year and projected the situation until the end of September, according to a summary of its key findings.
Israel has sealed off the Gaza Strip since early March when it resumed its genocidal war on Gaza following the collapse of a cease-fire deal, during which aid agencies had delivered thousands of trucks of aid.
The IPC analysis found that 1.95 million people, or 93% of the population in the Israeli-blockaded Palestinian enclave, are living through high levels of acute food insecurity, including 244,000 experiencing the most severe, or “catastrophic,” levels.
IPC’s October analysis had said 133,000 people were in the “catastrophic” category.
The IPC analysis projected that 470,000 people, or 22% of the population, would fall into the catastrophic category by the end of September, with over a million more at “emergency” levels.
“Urgent action is needed to save lives and avert further starvation, further deaths and a descent into famine,” it said.
Israeli officials have said they do not believe Gaza faces a hunger crisis, that enough aid has entered to sustain the enclave’s population, and that they want to stop supplies from coming under Hamas control.
The IPC, in a brief accompanying its latest analysis, said a plan announced on May 5 by Israeli authorities for delivering aid was “estimated to be highly insufficient to meet the population’s essential needs.”
“The proposed distribution mechanisms are likely to create significant access barriers for large segments of the population,” it added.
IPC analyses are produced with contributions from U.N. agencies and NGOs.
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