Gaza Is Not Even The Worst Famine On Earth Right Now

Man-made starvation. Humanitarian catastrophe. Genocide. These words are starting to become a refrain. And yet still too many are staying silent as the situation in Gaza deteriorates. Some humanitarian aid is finally breaking through the Israeli blockade, but the damage already done is unfathomable. On Tuesday, the World Food Programme officially announced Gaza is on the brink of a full-scale famine.

According to the WFP:

  • More than 1 in 3 people are now going days at a time without eating
  • Nearly a quarter of Gaza’s population is “enduring famine-like conditions”
  • In Gaza City, malnutrition among children under 5 has quadrupled in two months to 16.5%

And, WFP notes, reports of starvation-related deaths are increasing, but “collecting robust data under current circumstances in Gaza remains very difficult as health systems, already decimated by nearly three years of conflict, are collapsing.” According to the World Health Organization, 63 Gazans have died of starvation this month alone, including 25 children. The agency reported that, as CNN describes, Gaza’s “barely functioning hospitals and clinics,” dealt with more than 11,500 children seeking treatment for malnutrition in June and July.

Amid these conditions, chef José Andrés’ World Central Kitchen resumed aid in Gaza, and Andrés penned an op-ed in The New York Times. “Our teams on the ground are committed and resilient, but our day-to-day ability to sustain cooking operations remains uncertain,” Andrés wrote. WCK had been forced to halt its work in Gaza in May after running out of supplies, and their volunteers were no longer able to obtain ingredients due to Israel shutting down border crossings in March. WCK had served more than 130 million meals and 26 million loaves of bread in Gaza over the first 18 months of the war.

Well before the hunger crisis escalated, this latest war between Israel and Gaza was already one of the deadliest and most destructive conflicts since World War II. A ceasefire, many including the United Nations say, is the only way to make sure the entire population of Gaza will have access to enough food—and the chance to survive this man-made starvation.

As Fresh Take readers, you know that I have not been quiet on what’s been transpiring in Palestine, or the unprecedented federal cuts to global humanitarian aid in the past five months, or the many other regions around the world where food has been twisted into a weapon of war, from Yemen to Sudan.

To be blunt, if you think what’s happening in Gaza is bad—and it is so very bad—there are some places where the situation is even worse. According to WFP, Sudan is currently the only place in the world where famine has been confirmed, and there are at least 10 regions where famine is present there, particularly in northern Sudan. The country has faced decades of conflict, and its most recent one, which started a few months before war broke out in Gaza, has created “the worst displacement crisis in the world.”

I share this because it’s too easy to get wrapped up in the news, and it’s also too easy to shut down and drown it all out. While it’s crucial to protect our peace, we should not use that as an excuse to avoid interrogating the systems that enable these catastrophes in the first place.

— Chloe Sorvino


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Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/chloesorvino/2025/07/30/gaza-is-not-even-the-worst-famine-on-earth-right-now/