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Gaza’s famine: Starvation as a weapon, a crime by design, a test of Muslim nations' conscience

By Azmat Ali
 
For the first time in history, famine has been declared in Gaza City and its surrounding areas. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) has confirmed that the most extreme thresholds of hunger, malnutrition, and death have been met. More than half a million people—nearly a quarter of Gaza’s population—are enduring catastrophic conditions, with the toll expected to rise further by September. This makes Gaza the first IPC-classified famine outside Africa. It is not only a humanitarian catastrophe—it is a devastating indictment of global failure.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres called it “a man-made disaster” and “a failure of humanity itself.” He is right. Gaza’s famine is no act of nature—it is engineered. Systems that sustain life have been deliberately collapsed: food blocked, farmland destroyed, aid obstructed. This is starvation weaponized–a famine imposed by design. The question is no longer about Gaza alone. It is about us: when starvation becomes a tool of war, what becomes of humanity itself?
Guterres warned that famine is “the deliberate collapse of systems needed for survival.” UN aid chief Tom Fletcher went further—accusing Israeli leaders of using hunger as a weapon of war. Since March 2025, Israel has restricted humanitarian aid to a trickle, often halting supply altogether. Bureaucratic blockades and military sieges have turned aid into a bargaining chip. Trucks wait at checkpoints while families starve within reach of full warehouses. This is not collateral damage; it is deliberate policy. Civilian suffering has been elevated to strategy. The famine in Gaza is not separate from occupation—it is its latest, most brutal escalation.
Yet as this famine deepens, Muslim nations remain strikingly silent. As the teaching of Prophet Muhammad, the ummah is one body—that if one part suffers, the rest must respond. But Gaza’s agony has not stirred collective will. Instead, Muslim-majority states hide behind statements, emergency summits, and carefully worded condemnations. Others use Palestine only as a political slogan, abandoning it when sacrifice is required. The result? No coordinated strategy. No united embargo. No sustained aid. Palestinians are starved not only by blockade but by neglect. By their silence, Muslim governments have become spectators to the death of their own brothers and sisters.
The hypocrisy of the so-called international community is equally staggering. When Russia invades Ukraine, the world rallies. When civilians starve in Sudan, outrage follows. But when Palestinian children waste away before cameras, leaders avert their eyes. At the UN, resolutions demanding ceasefires are vetoed. International law is invoked selectively. The starvation of civilians—recognized as a war crime elsewhere—is excused here. The double standard is grotesque. Palestinian lives are treated as expendable because defending them carries political cost. Gaza’s famine does not only expose occupation. It exposes a global order where morality bends to power.
There was a time when Muslim nations wielded leverage. In 1973, an oil embargo reshaped geopolitics overnight. Today, that spirit is gone. Calls for boycotts and sanctions remain fragmented. Governments hesitate, fearing economic loss or Western backlash. Political pressure exists only in words, never in coordinated deeds. Grassroots boycotts—by citizens, students, and civil society—have gained traction. But without state backing, they remain symbolic. Real economic pressure would require unity and sacrifice. That unity is absent.
Even in humanitarian terms, Muslim responses are weak and limited. Aid convoys and donations trickle in, but they do little against structural devastation. Gaza does not only need sacks of flour—it needs reconstruction of its agriculture, water, and healthcare systems. Where are the coordinated investments? Where are the partnerships to rebuild schools, hospitals, and farms? Where is the strategy to secure long-term survival? Instead, Palestinians receive emergency relief and long-term abandonment. What they need is solidarity measured in infrastructure, policy, and protection—symbolic aid convoys staged for cameras.
For Muslims, the failure cuts deeper. Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) said: “He is not a believer whose stomach is full while his neighbor goes hungry.” Yet Gaza’s neighbors and allies—bound not only by geography but by faith—watch hunger gnaw at Palestinian children without decisive intervention. This is not merely a political lapse. It is a spiritual failing. The ummah is failing its own creed. Gaza’s famine is not only a test of humanity—it is a test of Muslim brotherhood. So far, both are failing.
This famine is a crime of commission and omission. Israel imposes it through blockade. But Muslim nations enable it through silence. Western powers enable it through double standards. International institutions enable it through weakness. That is why Guterres’s words sting so sharply: Gaza is “a failure of humanity itself.” The shame is not Israel’s alone. It belongs to every leader who kept quiet, every government that chose alliance over conscience, every state that looked away while children wasted into skeletons.
Solidarity cannot mean words. It must mean action. At least five steps are essential: protected humanitarian corridors with guaranteed channels for food, water, and medicine; collective political action by the OIC and Arab League moving beyond rhetoric to coordinated diplomatic isolation of Israel until famine is ended; economic leverage, as Muslim nations control energy and markets and could force concessions if unity prevailed; long-term reconstruction to restore Gaza’s agriculture, healthcare, and water systems; and moral clarity from religious leaders and intellectuals declaring that famine as a weapon of war is not only a crime against Palestinians but a crime against all humanity. Anything less is complicity.
Gaza’s famine is here. It is centuries in the making, calculated in policy, sanctioned in silence. But it need not be the end. This famine tests us—not just to recognize injustice but to confront it. It asks: can humanity still live up to its promise when survival itself is at stake? If mercy is the highest command, then feeding Gaza’s hungry is the truest act of faith and citizenship. To fail is not only a failure of politics. It is the death of conscience. Gaza’s famine is a test. It can be our disgrace—or our redemption. If we choose mercy, solidarity, and action now, we affirm not only Gaza’s survival but the enduring possibility of a world still capable of justice.
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Azmat Ali is a writer in English and Urdu, with a focus on literature, politics, and religion

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