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Michael Southon's avatar

This latest revelation about the IPC’s handling of the Gaza data really highlights the problem: famine isn’t being treated as a scientific classification anymore, it’s being weaponized. Using a partial dataset that showed 16% malnutrition while ignoring the full July numbers (12.2%) is not just sloppy—it’s politicized.

I actually wrote a recent Note on this very issue, pointing out that the amount of food aid entering Gaza has consistently exceeded the needs of its population. That’s why we don’t see the telltale signs of famine across the population, only isolated images of malnourished children used as proof. The IPC lowering thresholds and then cherry-picking data just confirms what many suspected: the famine narrative has more to do with politics than with hunger.

Gaza’s “Famine”: What the Data on Food Aid Really Shows

https://substack.com/@michaelhughsouthon/note/c-149109025?r=5vxvjh&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=notes-share-action

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Opus 6's avatar

Yes, they only used half of the July data – the second half. Because, obviously, the second half of the month is more recent and therefore more relevant. If the second half of July indicates famine, it doesn’t really matter what the first half suggested.

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