“Full-blown famine” is present in the northern part of Gaza and is spreading south, said Cindy McCain, the executive director of the World Food Programme.
“What I can explain to you is that there is famine — full-blown famine — in the north, and it’s moving its way south,” McCain told NBC’s Kristen Welker in an interview to air on Sunday.
McCain’s comments are not an official declaration of famine, which must meet certain criteria, but she said it’s based on what WFP employees have seen and experienced in Gaza.
“It’s horror,” she added.
Although it is the first time that the head of the WFP has labeled the situation in Gaza a famine, international organizations have danced around the label for months as the starvation in Gaza has grown more acute. But as historian Yan Slobodkin wrote for Slate, whether or not the severe starvation that’s happening in Gaza is officially declared a famine is, from a humanitarian perspective, irrelevant:








