The Israeli Siege War
The Strip's residents have faced a humanitarian crisis that is unmatched worldwide due to Israel's continuous, open genocide against the Palestinian people living there. The dearth of food supply, which caused famine throughout the region—particularly in northern Gaza, where people started starving to death—was a sign of how serious the situation was.
Israel's actions went beyond simply unleashing tons of explosives on the Gaza population; in addition, it blocked humanitarian help from reaching the region, making the situation worse. Approximately 2.2 million people live in Gaza, and according to a UN study from the third month of the conflict, all of them "suffer from a crisis or worse levels of acute food insecurity." According to the assessment, 26 percent of the population, or around 577,000 people, had run out of food and were in danger of catastrophic hunger (Phase 5 of the Integrated Food Security Classification) and severe famine.
the world was alerted to the growing danger of hunger in the Gaza Strip by the Integrated Food Security Classification (IPC), which grows daily if current conditions persist. More than half a million individuals, or one in every four homes in the Gaza Strip, are specifically at risk of catastrophic levels of acute food insecurity, the highest degree of warning, according to the committee's study. It admitted that there had already been more than the thresholds for famine brought on by severe food insecurity. Put simply, this indicates that many families in Gaza now face the possibility of starvation-related mortality.
The situation has gotten worse as people in the Gaza Strip, particularly in the north, are forced to grind animal feed in order to create bread in order to survive. The belief among Gaza's population is that starvation will kill us if the bombardment doesn't kill us.