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Starvation in Gaza: what we know about 'entirely preventable' crisis

Starvation in Gaza: what we know about 'entirely preventable' crisis

Yahoo5 days ago
On July 29, 2025, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), the foremost authority on global food security, declared the "worst-case scenario" of famine is unfolding in Gaza "amidst relentless conflicts, displacements, and extremely limited humanitarian access." According to the United Nations' World Food Program, a third of the population was going multiple days without eating. U.N. agencies and independent aid groups accused Israel of not allowing enough aid into Gaza and warned of impending famine.
In the 22 months since militant group Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel and capture of Israeli hostages, more than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel's ensuing offensive, 90% of Gaza's population has been displaced and vast swathes of the enclave has been destroyed by Israel's bombardment, according to The Associated Press.
The IPC noted it was issuing an "alert" and not a formal famine classification. Meanwhile, an international war of words raged on over the severity of the food crisis in Gaza and why it was happening. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed there was "no starvation" and "no policy of starvation" in Gaza. U.S. President Donald Trump disagreed, citing photographs of starving Gazans and saying, "Those children look very hungry."
As we researched how such a catastrophe emerged in Gaza, we found that experts and international aid groups have designated it an "entirely preventable" crisis caused by Israel's control of the flow of food into the region — not just in the two years since the current Israel-Hamas war began, but over decades.
Below, we look at the process for declaring a famine, the authority behind it, what it means to formally declare a famine and the current status of food scarcity in Gaza.
What does it take to declare a famine?
As Snopes has previously reported, the U.N. uses the IPC's standardized scale to inform governments and policymakers about the severity of famine risk in certain regions. The U.N. convenes the independent Famine Review Committee as the primary international body to oversee the analysis of food scarcity. The FRC works with expert panels it recruits, or with nongovernmental organizations and other international agencies, to make sure published analyses of food security risk accurately follow a standardized methodology.
The IPC has a five-phase scale, with the most extreme being a "catastrophe/famine."
(United Nations)
In order for a food security emergency to be formally declared a famine, the following very high thresholds must be met:
The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) defines Famine as a situation in which at least one in five households has an extreme lack of food and face starvation and destitution, resulting in extremely critical levels of acute malnutrition and death.
A Famine classification (IPC Phase 5) is the highest phase of the IPC Acute Food Insecurity scale, and is attributed when an area has at least 20% of households facing an extreme lack of food, at least 30% of children suffering from acute malnutrition, and two people for every 10,000 dying each day due to outright starvation or to the interaction of malnutrition and disease.
The FRC's role, as we reported before, is akin to that of peer reviewers of academic papers. Ultimately, the committee makes the final call on endorsing or rejecting the findings of the expert panels. NGOs and panels cannot use the IPC framework without the FRC approving their work. As the central body protecting the IPC framework, the FRC must, by regulation, technically examine any Phase 5 finding made by other groups or experts before publication, given the severity of the claim.
Alex de Waal, an anthropologist and the author of "Mass Starvation: The History and Future of Famine" described the FRC as "all volunteers, drawn from academia and international agencies, and it has met just over twenty times over the last decade, including four times on Gaza."
The U.N. and governments are expected to declare famines, not the IPC. The U.N. would make a formal statement based on the IPC analysis. While a number of independent U.N. experts declared in July 2024 that famine had spread throughout Gaza Strip, the U.N. itself has not made such a declaration. However, reported by The Associated Press, the IPC says that usually by the time a famine gets declared, it is too late.
Why has no one declared a famine in Gaza yet?
Simply put, the IPC does not yet have the requisite data to state whether a famine is taking place and Israel has not permitted access to the territory to gather data. Although the IPC normally relies on humanitarian partners on the ground to collect this data, it is not easy to come by in Gaza's case.
As of July 29, the IPC said famine thresholds had been reached for food consumption in most of Gaza, and for acute malnutrition in Gaza City, meeting two out of three conditions for it to be declared an official famine.
Death rates, the third piece of data used to calculate a famine, per de Waal, are generally harder to calculate the more disruption exists in a community. The FRC, de Waal noted, is also "scrupulously cautious" and "resistant to alarmist calls." In an email to Snopes, he wrote:
The reason why they couldn't determine famine was that there was no new data (hence it's an "alert" not a report) and it had no mortality data. Having made a projection of famine in May based on a "reasonable worst case scenario", when that scenario unfolded they concluded that famine was unfolding. It's the closest that they can come without having data.
Determining deaths caused solely by hunger and starvation is increasingly difficult in conflict zones. De Waal wrote in the London Review of Books:
In the famine I studied in Sudan in the 1980s, malnutrition was rarely identified as the cause of death. More common culprits by far were measles, malaria and diseases causing diarrhoea, which were spread by people moving around in search of food, overcrowding in unsanitary camps, the collapse of vaccination against childhood diseases – and were more lethal because so many children were underfed. Mass starvation isn't simply individual starvation aggregated, but the collapse of human health in a collapsing society: first displacement and the disruption of water, sanitation and shelter, attended by a drop in consumption of essential foods; then child malnutrition; and in the absence of remedial health and nutrition efforts, the prospect of mass deaths.
Israeli bombardment has decimated Gaza's health care systems and overwhelmed the remaining hospitals with war casualties. Screening people for malnutrition has become difficult, as has determining causes of death from either starvation or other causes. Hundreds of Gazans killed in Israeli strikes while seeking food aid are being described as victims of famine by Palestinians, even though a number of them may not be technically counted among the "malnourished."
What does the data say right now?
The U.N. says nearly 1,400 people were killed and 4,000 injured trying to obtain food in recent weeks (as of Aug. 5, 2025). At least 859 of the deaths occurred in the vicinity of the U.S.- and Israeli-run private aid organization Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which "bypassed regular humanitarian operations," according to the U.N.
The IPC alert from July 29, 2025, states (emphasis ours):
Food consumption has sharply deteriorated, with one in three individuals going without food for days at a time. Between May and July 2025, the proportion of households experiencing extreme hunger has doubled. The food consumption threshold for Famine (IPC AFI Phase 5) has already been passed for most areas of the Gaza Strip.
The same alert notes that malnutrition has reached "the Famine threshold" in Gaza City, where more than 20,000 children were admitted for treatment for acute malnutrition between April and mid-July. More than 3,000 children were severely malnourished.
Israel's own data confirms less food was going into Gaza as of July 29 than at any other time since Hamas' attack in October 2023. However, the GHF claimed it delivered more than a million boxes of aid to Gazans at its distribution sites as of Aug. 1.
News reports from Gaza detail the deaths of dozens of children and adults from malnutrition in July alone, based on data from the Gaza Health Ministry. The World Health Organization documented that 21 children younger than 5 died of causes related to malnutrition in 2025. The World Food Program said around 100,000 women and children need urgent treatment for malnutrition.
On Aug. 2, the Gaza Health Ministry reported that a total of 85 children had died of malnutrition-related causes thus far in the war, with a total of 127 people dying of malnutrition-related causes overall. The adult deaths were counted over the last few weeks of July alone, according to The Associated Press. A malnutrition clinic in Gaza reported receiving an average of 40 cases weekly, while Nasser Hospital's pediatric department with eight beds was dealing with around 60 cases.
Infant formula also was limited in Gaza as a result of the Israeli-imposed blockade in summer 2025, according to reports from doctors and mothers in the region. In late June 2025, COGAT, the Israeli agency in charge of aid coordination in Gaza said at least 1000 tons of baby food was distributed in Gaza through international agencies. However, their claims were disputed by Gaza's health officials who said not enough of that aid had critical medical equipment, formula and medicine. On Aug. 4, Save the Children reported 43% of examined pregnant and breastfeeding women were malnourished — three times the number screened in March 2025.
What is Israel's role in the starvation crisis?
Unlike starvation caused by natural disaster or geographic inaccessibility, the starvation Gazans are experiencing is a direct result of the territory's destroyed infrastructure and border restrictions imposed on the flow of goods by the Israeli government.
"We declare that Israel's intentional and targeted starvation campaign against the Palestinian people is a form of genocidal violence and has resulted in famine across all of Gaza," a group of U.N. experts stated on July 9.
Israel has denied these accusations. In a news conference in late July, Netanyahu stated that there "is no policy of starvation in Gaza, and there is no starvation in Gaza. … Hamas robs, steals this humanitarian aid, and then accuses Israel of not supplying it."
Other politicians and commentators have similarly shifted blame from Israel and onto Hamas, Gaza's governing militant group. Gazan writer Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib claimed in The Atlantic:
Hamas actually wants a famine in Gaza. Producing mass death from hunger is the group's final play, its last hope for ending the war in a way that advances its goals. Hamas has benefited from Israel's decision to use food as a lever against the terror group, because the catastrophic conditions for civilians have generated an international outcry, which is worsening Israel's global standing and forcing it to reverse course.
Regardless of Hamas' purported actions, Israeli officials have already publicly endorsed aid cutoffs. The claim that Hamas steals humanitarian aid and benefits from Israel's "levering" of food against the Gazan population, if true, doesn't negate the fact that international law explicitly prohibits starvation as a tactic of war.
Furthermore, some Israeli government officials have themselves denied the claim that Hamas steals aid. Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said in May 2025 that "no aid is going to Hamas, period." In a July 2025 New York Times report, two Israeli military officials (speaking on condition of anonymity) asserted that although Hamas allegedly "did steal from some of the smaller organizations," there is no proof Hamas routinely stole U.N. aid.
A July 2025 review by the U.S. Agency for International Development found "no evidence of systematic theft" by Hamas of U.S.-funded humanitarian supplies, which has served as the primary rationale for backing the GHF. On Aug. 5, U.N. experts called for an immediate dismantling of the Israeli-backed U.S. militarized aid distribution operation.
Although the GHF has reportedly raised more than $100 million between its founding in February 2025 and early June, the group has not revealed its funding sources. Later in June, the U.S. State Department publicly transferred $30 million to the foundation.
The GHF's four distribution sites have largely replaced the former U.N. aid distribution system that previously had hundreds of active distribution sites since its founding in February 2025; Israel, as of this writing, continues to uphold its March 2, 2025, blockade on all humanitarian aid from The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East – historically, Gaza's primary source of aid.
As desperation for food has grown in Gaza and hundreds flock to the GHF distribution sites, the number of those killed by Israeli munitions while trying to source food rises.
"The GHF … is an utterly disturbing example of how humanitarian relief can be exploited for covert military and geopolitical agendas in serious breach of international law," U.N. experts wrote at the beginning of August. "The entanglement of Israeli intelligence, US contractors and ambiguous non-governmental entities underlines the urgent need for robust international oversight and action under UN auspices."
As the occupying power in Gaza (per the United Nations), Israel stands responsible in the eyes of international law for the needs of the local population, according to Article 43 of the Hague Regulations and Article 64 of the Fourth Geneva Convention.
"This crisis is entirely preventable," the WHO said in a news release. The Israeli news outlet Haaretz posited in July 2025: "The situation in Gaza is likely the most extreme example of politically–driven starvation in the 21st century." Statements by the U.N. and other human rights agencies have echoed this claim of a "targeted starvation campaign," which Israel has denied.
Israel maintains control over two of the three main border crossings into the Gaza enclave — meaning that Israel (along with Egypt) regulates the passage of all food, medical supplies, fuel and movement of people in and out of Gaza.
Israel's control over food permitted to enter Gaza has affected the population for more than a decade. Documents released in 2012 indicated Israel historically used a "calorie count" to limit food into Gaza. Even before Israel began tightening its grip on the Gaza border following Hamas' election as the ruling party in 2007, Gazans suffered under Israeli cutoffs that disrupted the flow of goods into Gaza as well as destruction of agricultural infrastructure. For example, Israeli bulldozers systematically razed fields of crops and targeted fishers and confiscated fishing boats, resulting in a dwindling independent supply sector in Gaza.
For decades, Gaza has struggled under the weight of both Israeli occupation and the influx of Palestinian refugees following the mass expulsion of people from their homes during the Nakba, or "catastrophe" — the event between 1947 and 1949 in which armed Zionist militias forcibly claimed the homes, land, and possessions of approximately 750,000 Palestinians. While Israel has upheld this tight border control on Gaza for nearly 20 years, it intensified the existing blockade following Hamas' attack on Israel in October 2023.
"We are imposing a complete siege on Gaza. There will be no electricity, no food, no water, no fuel. Everything will be closed," Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said after the attack.
Aside from destroying housing, schools and other architecture, the heavy bombardment of Gaza that followed Oct. 7, 2023, destroyed vast swaths of agricultural land. According to a May 2025 analysis by the Food and Agriculture Association of the United Nations, more than 95% of Gaza's agricultural infrastructure — including cropland, greenhouses and agricultural wells — is unusable. Additionally, Israel restricted the delivery of necessary tools and supplies such as fuel, which according to the U.N. has prevented Gazans from receiving life-saving health services and preparing their food.
Other sources of food, including many bakeries and Gaza's once-autonomous fishing industry have either been wiped out as a result of Israel's artillery or shuttered as a result of aid blockades.
Israel's grip on Gaza's borders eased during the January 2025 ceasefire, during which the number of aid trucks allowed in skyrocketed before plummeting on March 2 when Israel announced a cut-off of all aid into Gaza. The following chart by The Associated Press illustrates the amount of aid entering Gaza from October 2023 through May 2025 compared with the average amount of aid that entered Gaza before October 2023:
As of this writing, this blockade continues, although Israel has allowed a trickle of aid from surrounding nations via air drops as well as limited aid truck entry. According to the U.N., these air drops are a last-resort measure and carry risks for people on the ground — for example, when the approximately 2,000-pound packages land on tents, crushing those inside. The number of aid trucks entering Gaza also remains insufficient according to the U.N., as of this writing.
The evidence we have shown points toward the starvation of Gazans being a direct result of Israeli policies. As experts from the bipartisan think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies' Global Health Policy Center asserted, "The resumption of food aid alone is insufficient to address the health disaster in Gaza," which is the result of decades of restriction and destruction and for which rehabilitation would necessitate a permanent ceasefire.
How does the debate over 'famine' label affect Gazans?
For many international aid experts and scholars, whether there's an official famine in Gaza is beside the point. As evidenced above, the region is already in crisis and in need of urgent aid and international intervention. A final assessment of its "famine" status might not happen until it's already too late and more people have died.
Oxfam America's director of peace and security, Scott Paul, told the media in July 2025 that action must be taken before a famine is declared and aid organizations need more than just food to address the crisis. Fixing the water and sanitation crisis to prevent disease from spreading is also crucial, he said.
Experts at CSIS noted in late July that it was highly unlikely that a government or international agency would declare famine in Gaza. They wrote:
World leaders cannot wait for a declaration to act while Gazans, including children, are dying each day of starvation. Starvation will continue to kill Gazans until there is a sustained ceasefire and an unencumbered influx of humanitarian assistance, including food, clean water, medical and sanitation supplies, and malnutrition treatments. And even if such assistance were allowed, Gazans will continue to require long-term support following the provision of such aid, as today's starvation will burden children with lifelong physical and cognitive deficits.
De Waal wrote that a famine declaration has more "moral force" than legal consequence. While international humanitarian law has no legal definition of famine, starvation is explicitly prohibited as a weapon of war. Declaring a famine thus has few legal ramifications for perpetrators in man-made catastrophes, though their actions can be prosecuted as war crimes. However, the crime of starvation has never been considered in a court of international law.
Regardless of Gaza's food-insecurity risk designation, it is clear based on the available data and reporting coming out of the region, as well as overwhelming calls from international agencies to increase aid, that aside from the long-term humanitarian aid and holistic support needed to prevent the catastrophe in Gaza from getting even worse, the onus lies on Israel to lift the severe restrictions on food currently creating faminelike conditions in Gaza.
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Israel says UN chief warned it could be listed in upcoming sexual violence report
Israel says UN chief warned it could be listed in upcoming sexual violence report

CNN

time27 minutes ago

  • CNN

Israel says UN chief warned it could be listed in upcoming sexual violence report

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has warned Israel about potentially listing the country's armed forces in an upcoming UN report on sexual violence, according to the spokesperson for Israel's mission to the UN. 'I am putting Israeli armed and security forces on notice for potential listing in the next reporting cycle, due to significant concerns of patterns of certain forms of sexual violence that have been consistently documented by the United Nations,' Guterres wrote in the letter sent to Danny Danon, Israel's ambassador to the UN, on Monday. The UN's Office of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict publishes an annual report titled Conflict-Related Sexual Violence, in which it documents sexual violence committed in armed conflict. Guterres' letter to Danon, which was shared by Israel's mission to the UN, said the UN is concerned about 'credible information of violations by Israeli armed and security forces, perpetrated against Palestinians in several prisons, a detention center and military base.' 'Due to consistent denial of access to United Nations monitors,' the letter said, 'it has been challenging to make a definitive determination regarding patterns, trends and systematicity of sexual violence in these situations.' Guterres urged Israel to take 'necessary measures to ensure immediate cessation of all acts of sexual violence.' A 2024 report by leading Israeli human rights group B'Tselem said that sexual violence was repeatedly carried out by soldiers or prison guards against Palestinian detainees. The IDF repeatedly rejected allegations of systematic abuse. Israel runs several prison facilities that hold Palestinians, including Sde Teiman and Ketziot Prison in the country's Negev desert, Megiddo and Gilboa near the West Bank, Etzion in Jerusalem, and more. Last summer, Israel transferred hundreds of Palestinian detainees out of Sde Teiman following a petition from human rights groups – which drew heavily on CNN reporting about the makeshift prison – for it to be shut down. In September, the High Court of Justice warned the prison must abide by the law, but did not order the government to shut it down. ​Responding to the letter on Tuesday, Danon said the 'Secretary-General chooses once again to adopt as their word baseless accusations, which are steeped in biased publications,' urging the UN to focus on sexual violence committed by Hamas. In March, a UN commission found that Israel had 'increasingly employed sexual, reproductive and other forms of gender-based violence' against Palestinians 'as part of a broader effort to undermine their right to self-determination.' It also accused Israel of carrying out 'genocidal acts through the systematic destruction of sexual and reproductive healthcare facilities.' Israel's mission to the UN in Geneva strongly rejected the statement at the time, calling it a 'shameless attempt to incriminate' the Israeli military. Last year, a UN team also found 'clear and convincing' information that hostages in Gaza were sexually abused and there are 'reasonable grounds' to believe the sexual violence was ongoing there. Pramila Patten, the UN special envoy on sexual violence in conflict, said the team had found 'reasonable grounds to believe that conflict-related sexual violence, including rape and gang rape occurred' during Hamas' October 7 terror attack in Israel. It amounted to the UN's most definitive finding on allegations of sexual assault in the aftermath of the attack. CNN's Catherine Nicholls contributed reporting.

Israel says UN chief warned it could be listed in upcoming sexual violence report
Israel says UN chief warned it could be listed in upcoming sexual violence report

CNN

time40 minutes ago

  • CNN

Israel says UN chief warned it could be listed in upcoming sexual violence report

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has warned Israel about potentially listing the country's armed forces in an upcoming UN report on sexual violence, according to the spokesperson for Israel's mission to the UN. 'I am putting Israeli armed and security forces on notice for potential listing in the next reporting cycle, due to significant concerns of patterns of certain forms of sexual violence that have been consistently documented by the United Nations,' Guterres wrote in the letter sent to Danny Danon, Israel's ambassador to the UN, on Monday. The UN's Office of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict publishes an annual report titled Conflict-Related Sexual Violence, in which it documents sexual violence committed in armed conflict. Guterres' letter to Danon, which was shared by Israel's mission to the UN, said the UN is concerned about 'credible information of violations by Israeli armed and security forces, perpetrated against Palestinians in several prisons, a detention center and military base.' 'Due to consistent denial of access to United Nations monitors,' the letter said, 'it has been challenging to make a definitive determination regarding patterns, trends and systematicity of sexual violence in these situations.' Guterres urged Israel to take 'necessary measures to ensure immediate cessation of all acts of sexual violence.' A 2024 report by leading Israeli human rights group B'Tselem said that sexual violence was repeatedly carried out by soldiers or prison guards against Palestinian detainees. The IDF repeatedly rejected allegations of systematic abuse. Israel runs several prison facilities that hold Palestinians, including Sde Teiman and Ketziot Prison in the country's Negev desert, Megiddo and Gilboa near the West Bank, Etzion in Jerusalem, and more. Last summer, Israel transferred hundreds of Palestinian detainees out of Sde Teiman following a petition from human rights groups – which drew heavily on CNN reporting about the makeshift prison – for it to be shut down. In September, the High Court of Justice warned the prison must abide by the law, but did not order the government to shut it down. ​Responding to the letter on Tuesday, Danon said the 'Secretary-General chooses once again to adopt as their word baseless accusations, which are steeped in biased publications,' urging the UN to focus on sexual violence committed by Hamas. In March, a UN commission found that Israel had 'increasingly employed sexual, reproductive and other forms of gender-based violence' against Palestinians 'as part of a broader effort to undermine their right to self-determination.' It also accused Israel of carrying out 'genocidal acts through the systematic destruction of sexual and reproductive healthcare facilities.' Israel's mission to the UN in Geneva strongly rejected the statement at the time, calling it a 'shameless attempt to incriminate' the Israeli military. Last year, a UN team also found 'clear and convincing' information that hostages in Gaza were sexually abused and there are 'reasonable grounds' to believe the sexual violence was ongoing there. Pramila Patten, the UN special envoy on sexual violence in conflict, said the team had found 'reasonable grounds to believe that conflict-related sexual violence, including rape and gang rape occurred' during Hamas' October 7 terror attack in Israel. It amounted to the UN's most definitive finding on allegations of sexual assault in the aftermath of the attack. CNN's Catherine Nicholls contributed reporting.

Israel Conducts Deadly Strike Against 'Fake' Aid Workers in Gaza
Israel Conducts Deadly Strike Against 'Fake' Aid Workers in Gaza

Newsweek

timean hour ago

  • Newsweek

Israel Conducts Deadly Strike Against 'Fake' Aid Workers in Gaza

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) recently conducted a deadly strike targeting what it claimed were armed individuals posing as staff for an international organization dedicated to providing food relief, according to an Israeli military official. The news came as the IDF has sought to push back against a global outcry over the killing of civilian workers in the Gaza Strip, alleging some of them were affiliated with Hamas and other armed factions. Israel has been condemned for its recent killing of an Al Jazeera journalist and his crew, whom the IDF claims were members of Hamas. The Israeli military official told reporters Tuesday that the incident occurred over the weekend after IDF troops identified a gathering of "a few dozen" armed individuals traveling near an IDF post in Gaza. The Israeli forces then observed a parked vehicle bearing the insignia World Central Kitchen (WCK), prompting Israeli personnel to contact the Washington, D.C.-based food security organization to verify that the individuals were not affiliated with the group. The Israeli military official described the situation as one of "armed men in southern Gaza, near an IDF post, posing as humanitarian workers, knowing that the IDF will be much more careful when we see them." "We were able to verify in real time with the WCK that this, in fact, is not related to their organization, and is, in fact, a fake vehicle," the Israeli military official said. "And still, we waited for the people to leave the vehicle." "We were waiting for another identification in real time of the same people to see again that they are still the same people, still armed people," the Israeli military official added. "We waited for them to get out of the car, and then we went forward and eliminated those armed men who were near our troops." A screengrab from an undated video shared by the Israel Defense Forces purports to show armed men posing as World Central Kitchen aid workers in Gaza. A screengrab from an undated video shared by the Israel Defense Forces purports to show armed men posing as World Central Kitchen aid workers in Gaza. Israel Defense Forces What We Know The Israeli military official told Newsweek that the IDF was not yet able to determine whether the armed individuals were members of Hamas or any other militant group operating in Gaza. "I'm unable to say they are directly connected to Hamas," the Israeli official said. "We're very careful when we say [there is a] connection, to which organization. We want to be able to verify and have concrete connection when we speak, and be very responsible with the information we put out." The IDF later issued a statement announcing the strike. "In a targeted airstrike last week, five armed terrorists were eliminated while near a vehicle marked with the emblem of the international humanitarian aid organization 'World Central Kitchen' (WCK), despite having no affiliation with the organization, and while posing a threat to our troops," the IDF said. "The terrorists deliberately affixed the emblem and wore yellow vests in an attempt to conceal their activity and avoid being targeted, cynically exploiting the status and trust afforded to aid organizations," the IDF added. What Is World Central Kitchen? World Central Kitchen, founded in 2010 by Spanish American chef and restauranteur José Andrés, operates to provide food relief in areas of crisis around the world, including conflict zones such as Ukraine and Gaza. Late last month, The New York Times published an op-ed by Andrés titled "The World Cannot Stand By With Gaza on the Brink of Famine." In it, he disputed Israel's claims of Hamas looting humanitarian aid convoys and criticized what he called a "blockade" imposed by Israel against food entering Gaza. Days later, World Central Kitchen published an article confirming that it was once again "getting some ingredients and supplies into Gaza we are using to cook for vulnerable families and medical facilities in the community of Deir Al-Balah," near where the deadly incident involving Israeli forces and armed fighters was said to have occurred. World Central Kitchen has yet to issue a statement acknowledging the incident. Newsweek has reached out to World Central Kitchen and the José Andrés Group for comment. Caught in Crossfire News of the incident comes just two days after the IDF announced the killing of a prominent Al Jazeera journalist, Anas Al-Sharif, in strikes targeting Gaza City on Sunday. The IDF claimed that Sharif had covertly operated as part of the "Hamas East Jabaliya Battalion" that was responsible for rocket attacks. Al Jazeera has rejected this claim and a number of international organizations, including the United Nations and the Committee to Protect Journalists have condemned the strike. Israel has previously acknowledged fault in targeting World Central Kitchen staff in Gaza. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the killing of seven aid workers by Israeli drone fire in April 2024 a "a tragic event in which our forces unintentionally harmed non-combatants in the Gaza Strip." "This happens in war," Netanyahu said at the time. "We are conducting a thorough inquiry and are in contact with the governments. We will do everything to prevent a recurrence." When another Israeli strike killed at least three World Central Kitchen workers in November, the IDF asserted that the target of the operation was a member of Hamas and called on the organization to investigate its employees.

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