Gaza has become a graveyard – both literally and morally
OPINION
I have been in and out of Gaza many times over the last year, and every time it feels like stepping into an even darker version of the nightmare I had left behind.
I most recently returned in late May, after a long and dangerous journey and went straight to check on two old friends. I was relieved they were still alive, but shocked to feel the bones underneath their clothes as I hugged them. Their faces were gaunt, their arms frail, and their bodies visibly wasting away. They are mothers, like so many others here, giving every scrap of food they can find to their children and surviving on little or nothing themselves. It's a silent, everyday act of love and desperation. Across Gaza, this is the reality: mothers are starving themselves so that their children might have a chance to live.
Since the horrific October 7 attacks on Israeli civilians by Palestinian armed groups, I have asked myself many times whether the relentless killing, maiming, and starving of Gaza's children by Israeli forces could get any worse, any more inhumane. Terrifyingly, it has.
Again, and again.
There have been countless, unimaginable horrors in Gaza since the war began, including the bombing of hospitals and schools, children being disappeared, and the deliberate deprivation of lifesaving humanitarian aid to those in need. The most recent outrage is the near-daily massacre of civilians at the Israeli-backed militarised distribution sites run by the so-called Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).
The GHF's 'safe' corridors to access aid are anything but. Civilians are herded like cattle into barren lots, scanned by drones, and often, shot at while they wait to receive the bare minimum they need to survive. At least 1000 people have been killed and over 5000 injured while trying to access aid at GHF sites.
Yazan, a malnourished 2-year-old Palestinian boy, lays on a mattress in his family's damaged home in the Al-Shati refugee camp, west of Gaza City. Picture: Omar Al-Qattaa/AFP
A protester waves a Palestinian flag in front Lebanese soldiers blocking the road outside the Egyptian Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon. Picture: AP Photo/Hussein Malla
Make no mistake: any humanitarian aid is welcome. But what has been proposed so far – just 1 per cent of what is needed – is the opposite of humanitarian. It's inhumane, effectively guaranteeing continued starvation, lawlessness and desperation. Simply put, the GHF is not a humanitarian aid system. It is a deliberate and deadly failure.
According to the most recent IPC figures, more than 93 per cent of the children in Gaza are at critical risk of famine. Yet there are just four GHF sites replacing the hundreds that the UN and NGOs like Save the Children used to operate under the old humanitarian architecture.
Israeli soldiers stand near a tank near the border with the Gaza Strip on July 23. Picture:A child is given a ride by a protester during a national demonstration for Palestine and Lebanon, in central London, in 2024. Picture: Carlos Jasso/AFP
The international community must demand that food not be used as a weapon of war. It must insist that all parties of the conflict facilitate unfettered access to a wide source of aid that people living in a war zone need to survive. Just delivering a tiny bit of food is no good to a child who is drinking dirty water and will die of a waterborne disease. Food is no good to a child who can't recover from the third degree burns on her legs caused by a bomb blast due to the siege on medical supplies and antibiotics.
Georgia Tracey in Gaza. Picture: Supplied
It's not just the hunger and violence wreaking havoc across Gaza. It's the hopelessness. My colleagues speak of children in our programs expressing suicidal thoughts. We are seeing a sharp increase in children being orphaned not just once, but twice as their foster families also are killed or injured. We're seeing severe behavioural issues, aggression, deep fatigue, disassociation, lack of focus, because, quite simply, children are starving and are exposed to unimaginable trauma every day. Parents are constantly terrified. It's not easy to ask them to send their child to one of our programs when the last time they walked to fetch water they watched someone get shot in the street.
Israeli activists march with sacks of flour towards the Israeli defence ministry headquarters in Tel Aviv. Picture: Jack Guez/ AFP
This picture taken from a position at Israel's border with the Gaza Strip shows smoke billowing during an Israeli strike on the besieged Palestinian territory. Picture: Jack Guez/AFP
Healthcare here is not just collapsing, it's cruel. A British surgeon at Nasser Hospital told me he's performing surgeries on children using expired muscle relaxants. Children are waking up mid-surgery, writhing in pain. A colleague of ours was significantly injured by a bomb blast and needed reconstructive surgery on her foot and pelvis. But doctors told her she had to wait five days as they did not have any beds available and that they had no pain killers for her to take while she waited for the surgery. Imagine sustaining that type of an injury involving shattered bones and shrapnel wounds and being told not only that you could not get emergency surgery, but that you would have to wait for days with no relief. It's medieval.
Georgia Tacey says that every time rumours of a ceasefire begin, hope flickers, then vanishes. Picture: Supplied
Every time rumours of a ceasefire begin, hope flickers, then vanishes. And every time it does, the crash in morale is worse. For our staff, who are among the 'lucky ones' with jobs, the disappointment is visceral. For the tens of thousands of displaced people with no income, no food, and no roof over their heads, it's devastating.
I know Gaza often feels far away for Australians. But please believe me when I say this is not a political crisis. It is a moral one. What's happening here is not a natural disaster, it is human-made, and it is preventable. And if we accept what is happening now in Gaza, what's to stop other actors thinking they too can get away with it elsewhere? It sets a dangerous new precedent where one party to a conflict can choose what rights a civilian population can and cannot have, without any regard for international law. And the whole world becomes less safe.
Never before has the systematic starvation and dehumanisation of an entire population been so well documented, filmed and sent to our devices to watch in real time every day. The Australian government must speak louder, not just for aid access, but for the basic dignity and protection of civilians. We need pressure. We need accountability. We need an end to the killing.
Save the Children's Georgia Tacey has been working on the Gaza program for over 12
months, including being deployed there a number of times since November 2024. She is
currently back in Australia.
Originally published as Gaza has become a graveyard – both literally and morally
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ABC News
8 hours ago
- ABC News
Israel has begun airdrops in Gaza but aid groups say it's not enough. Here's the reality
After weeks of global condemnation sparked by images of starving people in Gaza, Israel on Sunday announced changes to aid operations in the strip. It would start airdropping pallets of food in the territory, it said, as well as make it easier for humanitarian groups to bring trucks of aid to Gaza. But after just two days there has been criticism that the airdrops are expensive, ineffective and dangerous. One aid agency called it a "smokescreen" and a "distraction". Humanitarian groups have also said far more is needed to feed the roughly 2 million people inside Gaza. So why has Israel announced them, and how much food will they really deliver to hungry Palestinians? On Sunday, Israel and a coalition of other countries, including Jordan and the United Arab Emirates, began airdropping parcels of food in Gaza. At the same time, the Israeli military announced military operations — including bombing and fighting — would "pause" for 10 hours a day in different parts of Gaza, to make it easier to distribute aid. The military also said it would create "humanitarian corridors" to provide secure routes the United Nations and other aid agencies could use to take food through the strip. Designated secure routes for convoys delivering food and medicine will be in place between 6am and 11pm, it said. The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), which coordinates aid deliveries in Gaza, said the population needed more than 62,000 tonnes of food aid per month. That amount would just cover people's most basic needs, the WFP said. WFP said in the past two months it had been able to deliver about 22,000 tonnes of food aid — just one-sixth of what was needed. "The quantity of food aid delivered to date is still a tiny fraction of what a population of over 2 million people need to survive," it said in a recent update. Nearly one in three people in Gaza have not eaten for days at a time, the WFP said. About 500 trucks of aid — including food and other supplies like medical equipment — entered Gaza each day on average before the war, according to the UN. Many aid groups say a full ceasefire, to allow for aid to be distributed over land, is the only way to address the hunger crisis. It's hard to give an exact answer to that question. But humanitarian organisations say it won't be enough. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said the airdrop it did on Sunday consisted of seven pallets carrying supplies such as flour, sugar and canned food. It did not say how much food exactly each pallet contained, or how many people they were expected to feed. While it's hard to know how much food will be delivered on the ground, previous airdrop expeditions have given us some insight. Last year the ABC joined a UK RAF airdrop flight over Gaza and learned that each trip parachuted 12 pallets of food — weighing about 11 tonnes total — into Gaza. At the time, 11 tonnes was equivalent to just one truck full of food. On Sunday, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates parachuted 25 tonnes of aid into Gaza, according to Jordanian officials. That would amount to about two trucks' worth of humanitarian aid. On Monday, an extra 20 pallets of aid were airdropped, said Israel's Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT), which is responsible for coordinating aid into Gaza. One of the issues with using airdrops to distribute aid is that it's difficult to make sure it gets to the people who need it most, said Olga Cherevko, the spokesperson for the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Gaza. There have also been reports of some Palestinians being injured by the air drops, she added. "Any effort to provide aid to people here is a welcome thing," she said. "But as we have previously said … the most efficient way is to bring aid by land." Palestinians in Gaza also told the ABC they were worried they could not access the airdropped supplies. One man, who only gave his name as Salah, said he was trying to support 14 members of his family, and could not reach the aid as it was being dropped in areas far from where he was living. "The distribution via airplanes is difficult — the crowds of people, it is very difficult to reach it, especially the elderly and the sick," he said. "There should be a different way, a solution that will benefit everyone." Samah Shahin, who lives with health issues including diabetes and high blood pressure, said she and her family — including children and grandchildren — hadn't eaten for two days. "What they send from air, neither me nor the people in the camp benefit from it," she said. "The aid that arrives is stolen, we don't get to see anything from the aid … we want our share." Aid organisations said there were a few issues, including Israel blocking aid entering Gaza for weeks at a time and challenges with movement inside the strip making it difficult to distribute supplies. Israel blocked all aid entering the strip for 11 weeks, from March 2 to May 21. "The Gaza Strip has been deprived of the proper scale of assistance for months," Antoine Renard, the World Food Programme country director for Palestine who is currently in Gaza, told Radio National Breakfast. "That means that people are lacking any of the basics." Last week more than 100 humanitarian agencies warned mass starvation was spreading across the strip. The World Health Organization (WHO) labelled it a man-made crisis — a claim disputed by Israel. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claimed Hamas had been stealing aid and impeding its distribution, and also blamed groups such as the UN for failing to deliver the aid. Israel claimed the UN had left hundreds of truckloads of food waiting at depots inside the Gaza border — criticism the UN and humanitarian agencies have rejected. The organisations accused Israel of failing to provide safe routes for convoys to travel through Gaza, making it too dangerous for staff to pick up supplies and take them to the areas needed. The head of the UN's Palestinian aid agency, Philippe Lazzarini, described the resumption of airdrops as a "distraction" and "smokescreen". "Driving aid through is much easier, more effective, faster, cheaper and safer. It's more dignified for the people of Gaza," he posted on X. Jordan and the United Arab Emirates, which conducted some of the first airdrops, also said the aerial aid was not a substitute for delivery by land. Aid agencies said more than 100 truckloads of aid had been collected since Sunday, but warned far more was needed. "This is progress, but vast amounts of aid are needed to stave off famine and a catastrophic health crisis," said Tom Fletcher, the United Nations' Emergency Relief Coordinator, in a statement issued overnight. COGAT said 200 trucks of aid were collected and distributed on Monday. An additional 260 trucks had entered Gaza and were awaiting collection and distribution, along with hundreds of others still queued for UN pick-up, it said.

The Australian
a day ago
- The Australian
Food arrives in Gaza after Israel pauses some fighting
Truckloads of food reached hungry Gazans on Monday after Israel promised to open secure aid routes, but humanitarian agencies warned vast amounts more were needed to stave off starvation. With Gaza's population of more than two million facing famine and malnutrition, Israel bowed to international pressure at the weekend and announced a daily "tactical pause" in fighting in some areas. "For the first time, I received about five kilos of flour, which I shared with my neighbour," said 37-year-old Jamil Safadi, who shelters with his wife, six children and a sick father in a tent near the Al-Quds hospital in Tel al-Hawa. Safadi, who has been up before dawn for two weeks searching for food, said Monday was his first success. Other Gazans were less fortunate; some complained aid trucks had been stolen or that guards had fired at them near US-backed aid centres. "I saw injured and dead people. People have no choice but to try daily to get flour. What entered from Egypt was very limited," said 33-year-old Amir al-Rash, still without food and living in a tent. Israel imposed a blockade on Gaza on March 2 after talks to extend a six-week ceasefire broke down. Nothing was allowed into the territory until late May, when a trickle of aid resumed. Now, the Israeli defence ministry's civil affairs agency says the UN and aid agencies had been able to pick up 120 truckloads of aid on Sunday and distribute it inside Gaza, with more on the way Monday. - Basic supplies - Jordan and the United Arab Emirates have begun air-dropping aid packages by parachute over Gaza, while Egypt has sent trucks through its Rafah border crossing to an Israeli post just inside Gaza. The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, cautiously welcomed Israel's "humanitarian pauses" but warned Gaza needed at least 500 to 600 trucks of basic food, medicine and hygiene supplies daily. "We hope that UNRWA will finally be allowed to bring in thousands of trucks loaded with food, medicine and hygiene supplies. They are currently in Jordan and Egypt waiting for the green light," the agency said. "Opening all the crossings and flooding Gaza with assistance is the only way to avert further deepening of starvation among the people of Gaza." Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has strongly denied Israel was deliberately starving civilians as part of its intense 21-month-old war to crush the Palestinian group Hamas. Military spokesmen say the UN and aid agencies should quickly make use of the lull in fighting and secure aid routes, urging them to pick up and distribute aid delivered to Gaza border crossings. "An additional 180 trucks entered Gaza and are now awaiting collection and distribution, along with hundreds of others still queued for UN pickup," said COGAT, a defence ministry body that oversees Palestinian affairs. "More consistent collection and distribution by UN agencies and international organisations equals more aid reaching those who need it most in Gaza." UNRWA insisted it was ready to step up distribution, with 10,000 staff inside Gaza, waiting for deliveries. "According to our latest data one in every five children is malnourished in Gaza City. More children have reportedly died of hunger; bringing the death toll of starving people to over 100," the statement said. Over the weekend aid trucks began arriving from Egypt and Jordan and dropping their loads at distribution platforms just inside Gaza, ready to be picked up by agencies working inside the war-shattered territory. But their number still falls far short of what is needed, aid agencies warn, calling for a permanent ceasefire, the reopening of more border crossings and a long-term large-scale humanitarian operation. - Field hospital C-section - Truce talks between Israel and Hamas -- mediated by Egypt, Qatar and the United States -- have stumbled, and Netanyahu remains determined to push on with the campaign to destroy Hamas and recover Israeli hostages held in Gaza. Gaza's civil defence agency said 16 people were killed by Israeli fire Monday. Agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal said they included five people killed in an overnight strike on a residential building in the southern Gaza district of Al-Mawasi. A pregnant woman was among the dead, according to the Palestinian Red Crescent, which said its teams saved the woman's foetus by performing a Caesarean section in a field hospital. The violence in Gaza came against the backdrop of a UN conference in New York where France and Saudi Arabia will lead a diplomatic effort to revive the moribund push for a two-state peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians. bur-dc/dv

News.com.au
a day ago
- News.com.au
Food arrives in Gaza after Israel pauses some fighting
Truckloads of food reached hungry Gazans on Monday after Israel promised to open secure aid routes, but humanitarian agencies warned vast amounts more were needed to stave off starvation. With Gaza's population of more than two million facing famine and malnutrition, Israel bowed to international pressure at the weekend and announced a daily "tactical pause" in fighting in some areas. "For the first time, I received about five kilos of flour, which I shared with my neighbour," said 37-year-old Jamil Safadi, who shelters with his wife, six children and a sick father in a tent near the Al-Quds hospital in Tel al-Hawa. Safadi, who has been up before dawn for two weeks searching for food, said Monday was his first success. Other Gazans were less fortunate; some complained aid trucks had been stolen or that guards had fired at them near US-backed aid centres. "I saw injured and dead people. People have no choice but to try daily to get flour. What entered from Egypt was very limited," said 33-year-old Amir al-Rash, still without food and living in a tent. Israel imposed a blockade on Gaza on March 2 after talks to extend a six-week ceasefire broke down. Nothing was allowed into the territory until late May, when a trickle of aid resumed. Now, the Israeli defence ministry's civil affairs agency says the UN and aid agencies had been able to pick up 120 truckloads of aid on Sunday and distribute it inside Gaza, with more on the way Monday. - Basic supplies - Jordan and the United Arab Emirates have begun air-dropping aid packages by parachute over Gaza, while Egypt has sent trucks through its Rafah border crossing to an Israeli post just inside Gaza. The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, cautiously welcomed Israel's "humanitarian pauses" but warned Gaza needed at least 500 to 600 trucks of basic food, medicine and hygiene supplies daily. "We hope that UNRWA will finally be allowed to bring in thousands of trucks loaded with food, medicine and hygiene supplies. They are currently in Jordan and Egypt waiting for the green light," the agency said. "Opening all the crossings and flooding Gaza with assistance is the only way to avert further deepening of starvation among the people of Gaza." Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has strongly denied Israel was deliberately starving civilians as part of its intense 21-month-old war to crush the Palestinian group Hamas. Military spokesmen say the UN and aid agencies should quickly make use of the lull in fighting and secure aid routes, urging them to pick up and distribute aid delivered to Gaza border crossings. "An additional 180 trucks entered Gaza and are now awaiting collection and distribution, along with hundreds of others still queued for UN pickup," said COGAT, a defence ministry body that oversees Palestinian affairs. "More consistent collection and distribution by UN agencies and international organisations equals more aid reaching those who need it most in Gaza." UNRWA insisted it was ready to step up distribution, with 10,000 staff inside Gaza, waiting for deliveries. "According to our latest data one in every five children is malnourished in Gaza City. More children have reportedly died of hunger; bringing the death toll of starving people to over 100," the statement said. Over the weekend aid trucks began arriving from Egypt and Jordan and dropping their loads at distribution platforms just inside Gaza, ready to be picked up by agencies working inside the war-shattered territory. But their number still falls far short of what is needed, aid agencies warn, calling for a permanent ceasefire, the reopening of more border crossings and a long-term large-scale humanitarian operation. - Field hospital C-section - Truce talks between Israel and Hamas -- mediated by Egypt, Qatar and the United States -- have stumbled, and Netanyahu remains determined to push on with the campaign to destroy Hamas and recover Israeli hostages held in Gaza. Gaza's civil defence agency said 16 people were killed by Israeli fire Monday. Agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal said they included five people killed in an overnight strike on a residential building in the southern Gaza district of Al-Mawasi. A pregnant woman was among the dead, according to the Palestinian Red Crescent, which said its teams saved the woman's foetus by performing a Caesarean section in a field hospital. The violence in Gaza came against the backdrop of a UN conference in New York where France and Saudi Arabia will lead a diplomatic effort to revive the moribund push for a two-state peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians.