The Biden administration issued a statement disputing a new report alleging the emergence of a famine in northern Gaza, accusing the group which issued the report of using false data in service of advancing an inflammatory narrative regarding the Israel-Hamas war.
On Monday, the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS Net) released a report detailing that a famine had allegedly taken hold of northern Gaza. The report argued that 65,000-75,000 individuals remain stranded in northern Gaza without sufficient access to food.
US Israel Ambassador Jack Lew issued a statement denying the veracity of the FEWS Net report, slamming the organization for peddling “inaccurate” information and “causing confusion.”
“The report issued today on Gaza by FEWS NET relies on data that is outdated and inaccurate. We have worked closely with the Government of Israel and the UN to provide greater access to the North Governorate, and it is now apparent that the civilian population in that part of Gaza is in the range of 7,000-15,000, not 65,000-75,000 which is the basis of this report,” Lew wrote.
“At a time when inaccurate information is causing confusion and accusations, it is irresponsible to issue a report like this. We work day and night with the UN and our Israeli partners to meet humanitarian needs — which are great — and relying on inaccurate data is irresponsible,” Lew continued.
FEWS Net initially released a bombshell report on Monday alleging that “Israel’s near-total blockade of humanitarian and commercial food supplies to besieged areas of North Gaza Governorate” has resulted in mass starvation among scores of innocent civilians. The agency claimed that an “analysis of trends in food consumption and acute malnutrition” in northern Gaza suggest that the enclave now meets the threshold of Integrated Food Security Phase Classification Phase 5 (IPC Phase 5), indicating a famine or catastrophe.
However, in the report, the agency conceded that it did not have the hard data to substantiate their allegations, stating that it relied “on extrapolation, inference, empirical evidence, logic, and expert judgment.”
FEWS Net continued, claiming that Israel’s current policies on food imports into Gaza have rendered the enclave vulnerable to mass starvation casualties.
“In the absence of a change to Israeli policy on the entry of food and nutrition supplies to this area, FEWS NET expects non-trauma mortality levels will pass the Famine (IPC Phase 5) threshold between January and March 2025, with at least 2-15 people dying per day.”
Moreover, the report adds that the risk of famine in the rest of Gaza “remains very credible” due to Israeli restrictions on food imports, armed gangs hijacking humanitarian aid trucks, and Israeli airstrikes on military targets in the area.
Hamas, the terrorist group that sparked the ongoing war by slaughtering roughly 1200 people in southern Israel, often attempts to ransack and hoard aid trucks that enter the Gaza strip. Earlier this month, the UN acknowledged that armed Hamas militants have looted convoys near the Kerem Shalom crossing. The UN suspended aid deliveries into Gaza and called on Israel to provide better security in the enclave.
In the year following the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks, Israel has been repeatedly accused of purposely inflicting famine in Gaza. Despite the allegations, there is scant evidence of mass starvation across the war-torn enclave.
Furthermore, this is not the first time that FEWS Net has attempted to accuse Israel of inflicting famine in Gaza. In June, the United Nations Famine Review Committee (FRC), a panel of experts in international food security and nutrition, rejected claims by the agency that a famine had taken hold of northern Gaza. In rejecting the allegations, the FRC cited an “uncertainty and lack of convergence of the supporting evidence employed in the analysis.”
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