Famine Declared in Gaza: What to Know

Famine Declared in Gaza: What to Know

Crowds form in Gaza City as Palestinians line up to receive food distributed by a charity amid an ongoing Israeli blockade. Ali Jadallah/Anadolu/Getty Images

Malnutrition has reached alarming levels in Gaza, aid officials say, with famine declared in the territory’s most populated region, and hunger now reportedly affecting civilians as well as journalists, doctors, and other personnel on the ground.  

Last updated August 25, 2025 3:36 pm (EST)

Crowds form in Gaza City as Palestinians line up to receive food distributed by a charity amid an ongoing Israeli blockade. Ali Jadallah/Anadolu/Getty Images
Article
Current political and economic issues succinctly explained.

Sign up to receive CFR President Mike Froman’s analysis on the most important foreign policy story of the week, delivered to your inbox every Friday afternoon. Subscribe to The World This Week.

More From Our Experts

The UN-backed global hunger monitor officially declared on August 20 that there is an “entirely man-made” famine in Gaza City, the enclave’s largest population center prior to the outbreak of the war. The announcement follows weeks of limited aid distribution to the enclave of nearly two million people. 

More on:

Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

Gaza

Israel

Middle East

Humanitarian Crises

Five hundred thousand people—at least a quarter of Palestinians in Gaza—are currently in a state of starvation, according to the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) system that confirmed what it called a “worst-case scenario” famine on August 20. This figure could rise to 640,000 by the end of September, IPC added. 

UN and local health officials have attributed hundreds of deaths in the territory to either malnutrition or violence at food aid distribution sites. Locals and humanitarian officials have said the situation is the worst they’ve witnessed since the start of the conflict in October 2023. 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office has called the IPC famine report an “outright lie.” It contends that Israel has delivered two million tons of aid since the war began and that Hamas has looted many distribution shipments to “finance its war machine.” 

More From Our Experts

International calls are growing for Israel to end limits on aid distribution, which some experts allege is a violation of international humanitarian law. Israeli, Palestinian, and international actors—including the United States and UN agencies—have all been major players in the aid delivery system at various points, though the current aid operation is now limited to one U.S. group with close oversight by Israel. Israeli authorities have said they want an alternative means of delivering aid to Gaza, as they continue to allege that Hamas is seizing the aid at the expense of the Palestinian population.

In response to mounting international criticism, the Israeli military announced on July 27 that it was implementing a “tactical pause” in operations in some areas of Gaza and opening humanitarian corridors to enable UN and aid agency convoys into the enclave. But in late August, the Israeli military pressed on with an expanded offensive into Gaza City, despite calls for Israel to quell the violence.

More on:

Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

Gaza

Israel

Middle East

Humanitarian Crises

What is going on in Gaza?

Misinformation and the lack of outside reporting due to Israel’s media restrictions have made it difficult to develop a clear picture of the situation, experts say. Israeli officials have defended the controversial, for-profit, U.S.- and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

UN officials have said that staff on the ground and other aid workers, doctors, and journalists are now fainting from hunger and exhaustion due to limited food access—all as the reported death toll from food scarcity incidents continues to grow.

Local groups and international aid organizations have highlighted the growing risk to the population in Gaza, too. 

  • As of August 22, at least 273 people have died from starvation in recent weeks, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry. 
  • The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, has said that one million children in Gaza—half the population—are at risk of starvation. 
  • The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that more than fifty children have died of malnutrition since March. 
  • The worsening hunger situation has sent even more people to already overwhelmed hospitals, which the WHO has said are at their “breaking point”—94 percent are damaged or completely destroyed due to the conflict.
  • The United Nations reported that more than one thousand Palestinians have died in recent weeks trying to access food. It warned on Tuesday that Gaza’s “last lifelines keeping people alive are collapsing.”

David J. Scheffer, a CFR expert on international law, said the situation could put Israel at risk of war crimes charges, especially if the international community finds that it is obstructing aid or harming civilians seeking it. “If any strategy of aid obstruction unfolds that leads to starvation among civilians, including willfully impeding relief supplies, then that could risk charges of war crimes,” he said.

Israeli officials have repeatedly rejected allegations that its military actions violate the laws of armed conflict, saying charges have relied on faulty figures provided by Hamas-run health facilities.

The food scarcity has made distribution sites increasingly dangerous. The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said that the Israeli military has “targeted civilians,” accusing them of firing on Palestinians trying to reach aid at a distribution site in northern Gaza. Israel denied the allegation. The Israel Defense Forces said it had “fired warning shots in order to remove an immediate threat” and contested the casualty totals reported. 

A man carrying food walks along the Salah al-Din road near the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip. Eyad Baba/AFP/Getty Images

On July 20, nearly one hundred civilians were fatally shot as they tried to get food aid from UN convoys handing out flour for bread. The week before that, there was a stampede of thousands swarming the GHF aid site, which killed at least twenty people. 

How have aid groups in Gaza responded and how are they affected? 

More than one hundred aid groups operating in Gaza have cautioned that Israel’s aid restrictions are causing a hunger crisis, with Doctors Without Borders stating that “humanitarian organizations are witnessing their own colleagues and partners waste away before their eyes.”

CARE International, a global nonprofit working on hunger and poverty in more than one hundred countries, has been operating in Gaza and the West Bank since 1948 and was one of the first organizations to respond to the recent Gaza crisis. 

What they’re seeing in Gaza now, its Chief Humanitarian Officer Deepmala Mahla told CFR, is “worsening by the minute.” She described cities turned to rubble, children clutching empty pots, and people “shrinking” by the day due to starvation. As of late July, her team in Gaza had not received an aid shipment in 140 days.

The World Food Program, which also has staff in Gaza, has raised alarm about the situation, saying “nearly one person in three is not eating for days.” Journalists working in Gaza are also affected by the food shortages. French news agency Agence France-Presse (AFP) has reported that its employees in Gaza are starving.

“Since AFP was founded in 1944, we have lost journalists in conflicts, some have been injured, others taken prisoner. But none of us can ever remember seeing colleagues die of hunger,” the outlet’s union said.

What led to this crisis?

Humanitarian aid has long been a contentious aspect of the war between Israel and Hamas since it broke out in 2023. It has frequently been cited as a sticking point in the last few weeks’ ceasefire negotiations. 

Steven A. Cook, CFR senior fellow for Middle East Studies, said it has been challenging to track aid over time, as information coming out of the region is difficult to parse and often misleading. The situation is also much more complex than most reports capture, he said.

Aid levels over the war’s twenty-one months have fluctuated, CARE’s Mahla said. But generally, “it has continuously deteriorated,” she told CFR. “Our ability to deliver it has gone down drastically this year.” 

In March, Israel halted shipments of aid into Gaza, citing Hamas’s siphoning off the aid for itself, an allegation the group has denied. That ban lasted eleven weeks, until Israel began to allow aid back in by May via GHF. Cook said that Israel pursued this model to keep Hamas from using stolen aid to generate revenue to pay its fighters. But the aid brought in by GHF so far has been a trickle of what was previously provided, both earlier in the war and before the war.

“They were unable to scale it in a way that would actually deliver it in an effective and safe way,” Cook explained. “It clearly has not worked and has cost many people’s lives.” 

What have the Israeli, Hamas, and international roles been? 

The United States has supported the GHF with at least $30 million in June—though tranches of the money won’t be released until the GHF completes certain tasks, including pre-vetting partners. With the Donald Trump administration’s distrust of the United Nations, Cook said, the alternative aid channel was more appealing since it was not affiliated with the international body, but instead with its ally, Israel. The IPC analysis of GHF’s operations said their current distribution plan would “lead to mass starvation, even if it was able to function without the appalling levels of violence.” 

U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee added to Israel’s dispute of the IPC famine declaration. In an X post, he wrote that “the uninformed who claim that Israel is starving Gaza” should know that “tons of food has gone into Gaza but Hamas savages stole it.” 

Hamas and Israel are both provocateurs in the melee of aid chaos, Cook said. Hamas has incited violence at aid sites to create chaos, he said, knowing that the Israelis will be blamed for the chaos in Gaza. Israel’s motivations for constricting aid are both to keep it out of the hands of Hamas and as a means of wielding political control to “demoralize the population,” said Cook.  

Hamas has insisted that aid is funneled solely through the United Nations, which raises concerns among some experts that Hamas has been able to take advantage of the UN system.

“The malnutrition that’s happening is clearly a function of the fact that the Israelis withheld aid for eleven weeks and then moved into this mode of the GHF,” Cook said. But “the distribution of aid was hardly easy when it was being run by UN aid agencies.”

A Palestinian mother sits with her malnourished son in the Al-Shati refugee camp, July 23, 2025. Omar Al-Qattaa/AFP/Getty Images

What’s next for Gaza? 

Humanitarian watchdogs are calling for the immediate reduction of bureaucratic barriers to bringing aid in and stopping the targeting of aid workers.

A group of twenty-eight foreign ministers including Canada, Japan, and the United Kingdom condemned the recent deaths at food aid sites in a statement on Tuesday and said that the war “must end now.” U.S. Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff on Thursday announced his team was cutting short its latest efforts to broker a ceasefire and hostage deal, saying Hamas “shows a lack of desire.” He said in a statement, “We will now consider alternative options to bring the hostages home and try to create a more stable environment for the people of Gaza.” 

In the absence of a ceasefire, “The rules of engagement for military troops should prioritize the lives of innocent civilians seeking humanitarian relief under desperate wartime conditions threatening their very survival,” Scheffer said. 

But Cook adds that “there’s been no indication to me that the White House, the State Department, anybody, has really leaned on the Israelis to allow the United Nations to distribute aid. We’ve been hobbled by our own politics over the United Nations.”

Will Merrow created the graphic for this article.

Creative Commons
Creative Commons: Some rights reserved.
Close
This work is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) License.
View License Detail
Close

Top Stories on CFR

Malaysia

CFR President Michael Froman analyzes the big picture of a trade strategy that may be emerging.

Nigeria

The Trump administration’s accusations that Nigeria is allowing targeted killings of Christians distract from the bigger problem of jihadist and other forms of indiscriminate violence.

United States

Government tensions have upended the economic relationships between the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Despite this, public- and private-sector North American members of the Trilateral Commission appeared committed to finding a path forward.