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A predictable, preventable crisis

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Mon, Mar 25, 2024 11:14 AM

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Plus: Expensive homes and cars, an attack in Russia, and more March 25, 2024 Welcome back from the w

Plus: Expensive homes and cars, an attack in Russia, and more March 25, 2024 [View in browser]( Welcome back from the weekend. There's a risk of a horrific famine in Gaza — a crisis that was entirely predictable and preventable. Senior reporter Nicole Narea and reporter Ellen Ioanes are here to explain. —Caroline Houck, senior editor of news   [Aid workers distribute food in Gaza.] Dawoud Abo Alkas/Anadolu via Getty Images Half of Gaza now faces famine Every resident of Gaza is at risk of crisis levels of food insecurity — and half are at risk of famine. Yes, you read that right: Nearly six months into the Israeli invasion after Hamas's October 7 attacks, every single Gaza resident is at risk of at least crisis-level food insecurity, defined as households having high levels of malnutrition or resorting to “irreversible” coping mechanisms like selling livestock or furniture to afford even an insufficient diet. It’s a crisis that has unfolded at a speed utterly unprecedented this century — and also one that was [repeatedly]( [predicted]( and entirely avoidable if Israel were not placing [severe]( [restrictions on aid](. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), the primary organization tracking food insecurity worldwide, defines five levels of food insecurity: Phase 1 (minimal), Phase 2 (stressed), Phase 3 (crisis), Phase 4 (emergency), and finally, Phase 5 (famine). More than 1 million people in Gaza could face famine by mid-July if a Rafah escalation occurs, according to a [new IPC report](. Soon, “more than 200 people [will be] dying from starvation per day,” a UN aid spokesperson [told reporters last week](. Though the Israeli government, through its official channels and to Vox, [denies the possibility of famine in Gaza and disputes numbers released in the IPC report](, facts on the ground show increasing desperation for the people of Gaza. “If you cut off food, water, and power to a population that is fully dependent on importing, this is what you get,” Jeremy Kondynyk, president of Refugees International, told Vox in an interview. “I mean, that is just math.” [chart showing that all of Gaza's population is at level 3 of the IPC's food insecurity phase system or higher] Nicole Narea/Vox How bad is this? The speed at which Gaza has reached its current depth of food insecurity is practically unheard of in the 21st century. “I can't think of another situation in which you have the entire population of an area in this level of food insecurity in such a short space of time,” Ciarán Donnelly, the International Rescue Committee’s senior vice president for crisis, response, recovery, and development, told Vox. Famines have become rarer because the world produces far more food than is necessary to feed the global population, and humanitarian networks have stepped up to address gaps in access. The IPC has only officially designated two famines since its founding in 2004: the 2011 famine in Somalia and the 2017 famine in South Sudan. Most modern famines [tend to have political causes](, including wars and authoritarian rule, that magnify the already destructive effects of droughts, natural disasters, pests, climate change, or other natural stressors on the food supply. The looming famine in Gaza, however, has no natural causes. The share of Palestinians in Gaza facing the highest levels of food insecurity as defined by the IPC system makes this one of the worst acute hunger crises in recent memory. Even at the peak of Somalia’s [worst drought in 40 years]( and amid the ongoing [civil war in Yemen](, there was not such a high concentration of people experiencing crisis and emergency levels of food insecurity and famine. [chart coomparing Gaza's current food insecurity crisis to Somalia (Oct 2022) and Yemen (Oct 2023)] Nicole Narea/Vox How’d we get here, then? Prior to the October 7 attacks on Israel, the Israeli government tightly controlled the flow of goods entering Gaza, having ramped up oversight since Hamas took over the territory in 2007 and creating what many [international law experts call a de facto occupation](. Then, two days after the Hamas attacks, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant [ordered a “complete siege” on Gaza](, barring fuel, food, water, and [electricity]( from entering the territory. (Siege warfare against an occupied territory is [illegal under international law](.) While Israel later allowed limited [supplies, including food]( and [medical aid,]( to enter the territory, and [minimal sources of clean water]( have been restored, none of these necessities are near the level that they were before the war started. “One-fourth of calories needed is what's getting in,” Tak Igusa, professor of civil and systems engineering at Johns Hopkins University and a contributor to a [joint Johns Hopkins and London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine report on death projections in Gaza due to the war](, told Vox. “So just imagine having one-fourth of what you usually eat for such a long duration. And it’s getting worse.” Aid groups on the ground say Israel is to blame. The Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT), the Israeli military unit charged with overseeing civilian matters in Gaza and the West Bank, told Vox in a statement that it does not block entry of humanitarian aid to Gaza. It inspects supplies entering Gaza to prevent weapons or anything that could be used for military purposes from reaching Hamas. Though Israel is no longer maintaining an all-out blockade as a matter of policy, accounts from NGOs on the ground show that in practice Israel prevents huge amounts of aid from entering. Oxfam [published a report]( this week accusing Israel of deliberately doing so, with aid trucks waiting an average of 20 days to enter and Israel rejecting a warehouse's worth of supplies, including oxygen, incubators, water, and sanitation equipment. James Elder, a spokesperson for UNICEF, described to Vox witnessing plentiful aid, ready and waiting to cross into the region — then seeing only a dozen trucks cross through. If the food insecurity crisis continues on its current trajectory, more Palestinians in Gaza will die of hunger and preventable infectious diseases that attack the weakened immune systems of hungry people. Researchers at Johns Hopkins University [project]( that by August the number of excess deaths in Gaza — including from disease outbreaks — could potentially exceed 85,000 if there’s an escalation in the conflict. And an escalation seems likely: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claims he has no choice but to order an [imminent ground invasion]( of Rafah, the area of southern Gaza where [as many as 1.4 million people are trapped]( trying to avoid intense conflict in the rest of the region. “So many, many warnings have been made,” Elder said. “And history will judge very, very poorly those who had the decision-making power — and we must be very clear, children are suffering, children are dying, dehydrating to death, because of decisions made by those in power. Children's pain is avoidable. Their loss is avoidable.” —[Nicole Narea]( and [Ellen Ioanes](   [Listen]( Beyoncé country Beyoncé has a new country album. The first single has already broken records and drawn criticism from those who think of country music as a “white” genre. Except it’s not. [Listen now](   AROUND THE WORLD - Russia reels from a terrorist attack — and battles over where to place the blame: "All signs point to ISIS in a terrorist attack that killed over 130 people near Moscow, but Vladimir Putin is connecting it to the war in Ukraine" [[Vox](] - The true cost of a soda: Includes horrific forced sterilization and child marriage in one Indian state that's a sugar-producing powerhouse and whose sugar makes it into Cokes and Pepsis. [[NYT](] MONEY - Walmart wants you: If you’re a higher-income customer than they’ve previously targeted, that is. How are they trying to appeal to rich people? Duck breast and blazers. [[Bloomberg](] - Hope you don’t have any big life changes planned: Because while the economy’s doing great, it’s not so much if “you want a new job, a new home, or a new car.” [[Business Insider](] [A house with for sale sign in front] Steve Pfost/Newsday RM via Getty Images ALSO IN THE NEWS - The future will have fewer children: And where they’re born is changing. “More than half the world's population will be born in sub-Saharan Africa by 2100, with just 1 in 10 children born in what are high-income countries today.” [[CFR](] - I’ve highlighted cool stories about ants to you before: So not to belabor the point, but this one about the surprising “good reasons” queens might have for eating their young is also fascinating. [[New Scientist](] - In case you missed it: The conclusion of the Missing Kate Middleton saga was a sad one: The princess announced she has an undisclosed form of cancer. Her diagnosis is "part of a frightening global trend.” [[Vox](]   Ad  [Learn more about RevenueStripe...](   The Supreme Court will weigh in on January 6 What could possibly go wrong? Vox's Ian Millhiser digs in. [Read more »](   Are you enjoying the Today, Explained newsletter? Forward it to a friend; they can [sign up for it right here](. And as always, we want to know what you think. We recently changed the format of this newsletter. Any questions, comments, or ideas? We're all ears. Specifically: If there is a topic you want us to explain or a story you’re curious to learn more about, let us know [by filling out this form]( or just replying to this email. Today's edition was edited and produced by Caroline Houck. We'll see you tomorrow!   Ad  [Learn more about RevenueStripe...](   [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( [TikTok]( [WhatsApp]( This email was sent to {EMAIL}. Manage your [email preferences]( [unsubscribe](param=sentences). If you value Vox’s unique explanatory journalism, support our work with a one-time or recurring [contribution](. View our [Privacy Notice]( and our [Terms of Service](. Vox Media, 1701 Rhode Island Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20036. Copyright © 2024. All rights reserved.

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