Edited News | OCHA , OHCHR , UNITED NATIONS , WFP , WHO
Gaza: Famine “irrefutably” confirmed, UN humanitarians unite in plea for aid access
Famine has been confirmed in Gaza Governorate by the world’s top authority on food security and will spread further within the Strip unless fighting stops and much more aid is allowed in, UN humanitarians said on Friday.
“This is irrefutable testimony… It is a famine, the Gaza famine,” UN relief chief Tom Fletcher told reporters in Geneva just as the report by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC, a 21-agency partnership which includes UN entities and non-governmental organizations, was released.
More than half a million people in the Gaza Strip are facing catastrophic hunger conditions while more than a million more are in a food emergency phase, the report states.
This man-made catastrophic famine could have been prevented by a steady flow of humanitarian aid into the enclave, Mr. Fletcher pointed out.
“Yet food stacks up at borders because of systematic obstruction by Israel,” he said. “It is a famine within a few 100 meters of food in a fertile land.”
The UN's top aid official underscored that the famine in Gaza is “caused by cruelty, justified by revenge, enabled by indifference and sustained by complicity”.
The situation “must spur the world to more urgent action, must shame the world to do better,” he said.
Mr. Fletcher joined a chorus of voices reacting to the IPC report, including that of UN chief António Guterres, who in a statement on Friday called for urgent measures in response to “a man-made disaster”, including “an immediate ceasefire, the immediate release of all hostages and full, unfettered humanitarian access”.
Jean-Martin Bauer, Director of Food Security and Nutrition Analysis for the UN World Food Programme (WFP), stressed that this was the first time that a famine has been confirmed in the Middle East.
Speaking from Rome, Mr. Bauer explained that the IPC classification of famine “only happens when three thresholds are met: extreme food deprivation, acute malnutrition and starvation related deaths”.
“All three have now been breached in Gaza City,” he said.
The WFP official added that these conditions are forecast to spread to Deir Al-Balah and Khan Younis by the end of September, unless aid can be brought in quickly at great scale.
In response to Israeli criticism aimed at undermining the report’s methodology, Mr. Bauer said that the IPC is the “gold standard in food security analysis worldwide”, and clarified that the same indicators have been used, and been widely accepted, in the IPC’s past determinations of famine in Somalia, South Sudan and Sudan.
He also stressed that for the first time since the creation of the IPC twenty years ago, two famines are taking place at the same time: Sudan (since 2024) and now Gaza.
Both Mr. Bauer and Dr. Rik Peeperkorn, the WHO representative in the occupied Palestinian territory, underscored the disastrous health consequences of the current crisis, and notably an “exponential” increase in child malnutrition and acute malnutrition.
Dr. Peeperkorn said that in July alone more than 12,000 children were identified as acutely malnourished - the highest monthly figure ever recorded and a six-fold increase since the start of the year.
In 2025 alone, 206 people have died due to the effects of malnutrition, as verified by WHO, he said.
“Teams, including myself, witnessed people starving,” he said, describing five-year-old children who looked like two-year-olds, and health workers “weak and exhausted”.
The WHO official pointed out malnutrition’s detrimental impact on the immune system, increasing the body’s vulnerability to infectious and other diseases, and making it harder to recover from trauma injuries extremely prevalent in the war-torn Strip.
“This is the human face of a collapsing health, nutrition, water and sanitation system,” he stressed.
“Hunger and malnutrition are not only about empty stomachs,” he said. “It weakens bodies, fuels, disease, cripples health systems and robs children of their future.”
With the declaration of famine in Gaza Governorate, a “nightmare scenario” has become reality, said a spokesperson for UN Human Rights (OHCHR), Jeremy Laurence.
The famine is the “direct result of actions taken by the Israeli Government,” he said. The Israeli military have “destroyed critical civilian infrastructure, almost all agricultural land, banned fishing and forcibly displaced the population - all drivers of this famine,” he said, in addition to restricting and blocking aid.
“It is a war crime to use starvation as a method of warfare, and the resulting deaths may also amount to the war crime of willful killing,” he said.
All the speakers insisted that urgent steps must be taken to reverse the escalating hunger crisis.
Humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher reiterated his call for a ceasefire to Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu “and anyone who can reach him”.
“Open the [border] crossings north and south, all of them,” he said, pleading for humanitarian access to the Strip. “Let us get food and other supplies in unimpeded and at the massive scale required. End the retribution.”
The UN official said that it was “too late for far too many, but not for everyone” in the war-torn enclave.
“For humanity's sake, let us in,” he implored.
-Ends-
Story: “Gaza City famine – UN OCHA, WFP, WHO, OHCHR” – Friday 22 August 2025
Speakers:
TRT: 04’11”
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
ASPECT RATIO: 16:9
DATELINE: 22 August 2025 - GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
Geneva Press briefing
SHOTLIST
1
1
Edited News | WHO , UNMAS
Desperate and dangerous conditions in Gaza continue to hamper recovery efforts for the wartorn enclave's people, the UN health agency said on Friday, while demining experts warned that they’ve “barely scratched the surface” in assessing the level of contamination of unexploded ordnance.
2
1
2
Press Conferences , Edited News
The continued support of UN Member States to Lebanon will be “indispensable” to boost the country’s national armed forces and provide humanitarian assistance with more than one million people still uprooted by the Middle East war, the UN's peacekeeping chief said on Wednesday.
2
1
2
Press Conferences , Edited News | UNECE
Middle East war: After oil and gas shortages, concerns grow over critical minerals crunch
The shipping crisis in the Strait of Hormuz caused by war in the Middle East has exposed a new threat: a looming shortage of strategic minerals needed to drive economies all over the world and a race by countries to obtain them.
1
1
1
Edited News | IOM
Millions of desperate Sudanese return home amid dire conditions as war rages – IOM
Three years into the devastating conflict in Sudan, nearly four million displaced people have returned to their places of origin across the country, only to face “another struggle for survival”, the UN International Organization for Migration (IOM) said on Tuesday.
1
1
1
Edited News | UNESCO
UNESCO protects cultural sites in war-torn Middle East, confirming damage to key heritage.
1
1
1
Edited News | UN WOMEN
The war in Gaza has inflicted a far higher toll on women and girls than in previous conflicts in the Palestinian enclave, with more than 38,000 killed by Israeli air bombardment and land military operations since Hamas-led terror attacks in Israel sparked the war in October 2023, UN Women said on Friday.
1
1
1
Edited News | UNHCR
In 2025, nearly 900 Rohingya refugees were reported missing or dead in the Andaman Sea and Bay of Bengal, making it the deadliest year on record in South and Southeast Asia, the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, said on Friday.
1
1
1
Edited News | UNFPA , IFRC
Lebanon faces escalating violence, with new mothers uncertain of safety amid ongoing crises.
1
1
1
Edited News | FAO , UNHCR , WHO
Sudan: 14 million displaced; hunger and attacks on health continue as war enters fourth year
As Sudan approaches the third anniversary of a brutal civil war, millions remain displaced and hungry while the health system lies in ruins, with no end to the violence in sight, UN agencies said on Friday.
1
1
1
Edited News | WHO , UNHCR , WFP
Lebanon: People ‘still under the rubble’ after massive strikes as ambulances, hospitals come under threat – UN humanitarians
With Lebanon still reeling from Israel’s devastating airstrikes on 8 April, UN humanitarians reported new fears of attacks on ambulances and looming food shortages in the south of the country on Friday.
1
1
1
Edited News | UNHCR , WHO
Lebanon: disease risks on the rise as displacement surges
With displacement in Lebanon past the one million mark, UN humanitarians warned on Tuesday about the spread of infectious diseases in shelters and surging mental health needs.
1
1
1
Edited News | UNIFIL
UN peacekeepers are supporting civilians who’ve chosen to stay in the south amid deadly dangers from Israel-Hezbollah clashes, UNIFIL spokesperson Kandace Ardiel tells us.