The food security
situation in northern Gaza is dire and the latest indications are deeply
troubling, said Director of FAO’s Office of Emergencies and Resilience Rein
Paulsen in his address to the United Nations Security Council on Tuesday 12
Nov.
Last Friday, the independent Famine Review Committee found a strong likelihood that famine is occurring or imminent in areas
within the northern Gaza Strip.
“The conflict has
intensified, and so has the damage to objects indispensable to civilian
survival,” Paulsen said pointing to the latest projections indicating that the
population classified in IPC Phase 5 (Catastrophe) is expected to nearly triple
in the coming months.
Already in October, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) revealed that nearly 133,000 people faced catastrophic food
insecurity (IPC Phase 5) and a risk of famine existed across the entire Gaza
Strip between November 2024 and April 2025.
“Men, women, boys and
girls are effectively starving as the conflict rages, with humanitarian
organizations blocked from delivering assistance to those in need,” Paulsen
said emphasizing that the window of opportunity to save people’s lives is now –
tomorrow will be too late.
“By the time famine
has been declared, people are already dying of hunger, with irreversible
consequences that can last generations,” he added.
To this end, Paulsen called for urgent diplomatic
efforts from across the international community to address conflict-induced
food insecurity, including famine in the Gaza Strip. He also urged Council members to remind all
parties to the conflict of their responsibility to protect civilian
infrastructure, critical to the delivery of humanitarian aid, and to ensure the
proper functioning of agrifood systems and markets in situations of armed
conflict.
Agrifood systems have collapsed, and local food
production has decimated across the whole of Gaza. According to the FAO-UNOSAT
most recent geospatial analysis in Gaza… 95 percent of cattle and more than half of sheep and goat herds, have
died. These animal losses
have both removed access to critical and nutritious sources of protein and milk
as well as devastated people’s livelihoods. In addition, food supply across the
entire Gaza Strip has sharply deteriorated while food availability is at an
all-time low.
Paulsen reiterated FAO’s commitment to further
scale up its efforts to respond to famine and prevent its spread in the Gaza
Strip through additional support to enable local food production where possible
and to keep remaining livestock alive and productive.
“Immediate and
unlimited, safe access to people who are in need is indispensable to save lives
and prevent famine. A ceasefire is urgently needed,” he concluded.