Gaza’s catastrophic food shortage means mass death is imminent, monitor says
- In northern Gaza, 70 per cent of people are experiencing catastrophic hunger, UN-backed assessment warns
- Report comes as Israel faces mounting pressure to streamline the entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza

Extreme food shortages in parts of the Gaza Strip have already exceeded famine levels, and mass death is now imminent without an immediate ceasefire and surge of food to areas cut off by fighting, the global hunger monitor said.
The Integrated Food-Security Phase Classification (IPC), whose assessments are relied on by UN agencies, said 70 per cent of people in parts of northern Gaza were suffering the most severe level of food shortage, more than triple the 20 per cent threshold to be considered famine.
The IPC on Monday said it did not have enough data on death rates, but estimated residents would be dying at famine scale imminently, defined as two people out of every 10,000 dying daily from starvation or from malnutrition and disease.
Gaza’s health ministry has said 27 children and three adults have died so far from malnutrition.

“The actions needed to prevent famine require an immediate political decision for a ceasefire together with a significant and immediate increase in humanitarian and commercial access to the entire population of Gaza,” it said.