Prøve GULL - Gratis
Gaza and Sudan show AI alone can't detect famine
The Independent
|October 21, 2025
This year has brought a grim milestone, with two famines recorded simultaneously in Gaza and Sudan, collectively impacting millions. It’s the first time this has happened since the universal food insecurity measurement system, known as the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), was established in 2004.

While the ceasefire in Gaza has led to hope that food security in the territory will improve, humanitarian situations elsewhere in the world are escalating due to challenges including humanitarian aid cuts. A report published by the World Food Programme (WFP) this week highlighted how key challenges include record levels of food insecurity in the Democratic Republic of the Congo; soaring malnutrition rates in Afghanistan, where food assistance is now only reaching 10 per cent of the population; and a spiralling crisis in Haiti, where food aid recipients are now receiving receiving food worth half of WFP's standard monthly rations, as a result of budget constraints.
“The world is facing a rising tide of acute hunger that threatens millions of the most vulnerable - and the funds needed to help us respond are drying up,” said the WFP executive director Cindy McCain.
While “IPC 5” is seen as constituting a famine, even in IPC 3 or 4 - which last year affected 300 million people around the world - there is a risk of children dying from starvation, according to Save the Children. As Simon Levine, famine expert at the think tank ODI Global, explains: “IPC 2 is really not very good at all, three is when you start to get worried, four is when you're very worried, and five should never ever happen.”
But the ability for humanitarian organisations to detect and monitor food insecurity on the IPC scale was thrown into serious question this year when the US government-funded Famine Early Warning System Network, or Fews Net, which is widely seen as the gold standard tool in famine detection, went dark after President Donald Trump's sudden closure of the US Agency for International Development (USAID) left it unfunded in January.

Denne historien er fra October 21, 2025-utgaven av The Independent.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Independent

The Independent
Bell and Brody still sparkle in this moreish romcom
Netflix's 'Nobody Wants This' returns for season two with the same strengths, says Nick Hilton, but new weaknesses
3 mins
October 23, 2025

The Independent
The Met failed Giuffre once – they must not do so again
The force insists that the royal family is not above the law. But its refusal to act on allegations against Prince Andrew tells a very different story
5 mins
October 23, 2025

The Independent
How to fix Britain's railways
As the industry haemorrhages money, a leading transport expert tells Simon Calder how better railcards, reservations and more first-class carriages might bring in extra revenue
3 mins
October 23, 2025

The Independent
Putin tries to revive summit after airstrikes on Ukraine
Eight cities targeted by Russia in deadly drone attack
3 mins
October 23, 2025

The Independent
Starmer backs ‘scrutiny’ of Andrew’s peppercorn rent
Sir Keir Starmer has backed calls for Prince Andrew to appear before MPs to give evidence in parliament, following revelations about his living situation.
3 mins
October 23, 2025

The Independent
Migrant deported to France returns to UK on small boat
Blow for Starmer and his flagship 'one in, one out' scheme
4 mins
October 23, 2025

The Independent
Chelsea's teenage wonders teach hapless Ajax a lesson
Suffice to say the kids were alright.
3 mins
October 23, 2025

The Independent
Candidate favoured to chair grooming gang probe quits
A second candidate lined up to chair the grooming gang inquiry has withdrawn after survivors raised concerns that he had links to the police.
3 mins
October 23, 2025

The Independent
Channel Tunnel rail faces biggest shake up in decades
Double-decker trains and competition to Eurostar will improve capacity and should help to lower ticket prices
5 mins
October 23, 2025

The Independent
US hits another 'narco' boat killing 2 and over 30 in total
Donald Trump’s administration has struck another alleged drug-carrying vessel, killing two people on board, in what appears to be the first attack in the Pacific Ocean.
3 mins
October 23, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size