
Gaza officials: Dozens killed at food distribution site

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Daily Mirror
4 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Heartbreaking images of Gaza kids on brink of death can no longer be ignored
WARNING - DISTRESSING IMAGES: Severely weak Yezen Abu Ful, two, is among 70,000 children medics warn are now facing malnutrition - as a UN chief blasted the 'indifference and inaction' of global leaders over the Gaza slaughter A starving child clings to his mum in an image victims in Gaza pray the world can no longer ignore. Severely weak Yezen Abu Ful, two, is among 70,000 children medics warn are now facing malnutrition. UN chief Antonio Guterres blasted the 'indifference and inaction' of global leaders over the Gaza slaughter, as children dying from hunger hit 122 since the war began. Keir Starmer vowed the UK will 'pull every lever' to get vital aid into the Strip and added: 'This humanitarian catastrophe must end.' Pitiful cries for help ring out from the depths of despair in Gaza, calling to a world that appears to have stood by and watched the hell of slaughter and starvation unfold. And as yet more horrific images of emaciated children on the brink of death emerge, the call for action to end the suffering of Palestinians in the face of relentless Israeli attacks and blockades grows. In one haunting image, Muhammed Zakariya Ayyub al-Matouk – a tragic sight of skin and bones – clings to his desperate mum in a tent in Gaza City where there is no access to milk, food, or basic necessities. The one-and-a-half-year-old is just one of an estimated 70,000 children said by medics to be in a state of starvation – and up to 28 are believed to be dying every day. Gaza's hospitals yesterday reported nine more deaths from hunger in 24 hours, bringing the total to 122 since the war started. In another harrowing picture, Yezen Abu Ful, two, lies helpless at the Al-Shati Refugee Camp, waiting for food many know may never come until it is too late. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged the world not to ignore the crisis. He said: 'I cannot explain the level of indifference and inaction we see by too many in the international community. The lack of compassion, the lack of truth, the lack of humanity.' Gaza-based journalist Noor al-Shana told how desperate Palestinians are 'tired of empty expressions of solidarity' – as the death toll in the strip hit 59,587. She said: 'We don't want just words, we want actions. There are thousands of children dying now and no one is doing anything. The world is saying 'Free Palestine'. We don't want words, we want solutions.' World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Israel 's actions in Gaza were causing 'man-made mass starvation'. Parents are going without food themselves for days in a bid to save their stricken children. Unicef and other agencies warned Gaza will run out of the therapeutic food needed to save the lives of severely malnourished children by mid-August unless aid is restored. The disturbing scenes came as 221 cross-party MPs demanded Keir Starmer recognise Palestine as a state. But the PM resisted and, writing in the Mirror today, insisted such a move must be part of a wider 'pathway to peace'. But amid the misery, there was a tiny glimmer of hope, as triplets born in April continue to grow. Mum Alaa, 31, and 36-year-old husband Louay feared she would miscarry the tots due to the stress of Israeli airstrikes. The couple, who also have children Alma, seven, and two-year-old Ahmed, had to move three times due to the attacks or military orders – once while she was heavily pregnant. Alaa said: 'We ran in silence. I prayed my babies wouldn't slip away while I escaped death.' With help from an Islamic Relief project, their little girls Israa, Ayla and Aylol were born underweight but alive. Alaa added: 'They are my miracle. My proof that even in war, life insists on being born.' But the babies and their mother could still face problems if they need any more medical care, equipment and drugs fast running out due to the Israeli blockade. Pregnant women are now too malnourished to stand, and even doctors are facing starvation. The women are having operations without anaesthetics. Nurses have to squeeze three or four babies into a single incubator. Doctors have reported a huge increase in miscarriages. Medics at hospitals such as Al Awda in northern Gaza are risking their lives to keep services going. More than 1,500 health workers have been killed while half of all hospitals have had to shut down. Aid workers, too, are suffering from a lack of food. The UN claims at least 100,000 Palestinians are starving. President Emmanuel Macron said France will recognise Palestine as a state immediately, piling pressure on Mr Starmer. A third of MPs in the Commons signed the letter to the PM demanding he follow suit. Charities have demanded Israel allow the UN to distribute aid, which they said is sitting outside Gaza. They called for the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which is responsible for what little aid is getting through, to be shut down amid deaths at food queues. GHF insists those tragedies never happened at its site and the Israeli military said troops have not fired on civilians. Ceasefire talks appear to have stalled amid differing demands from Israel and Hamas, which sparked the war with its October 7 attack that killed 1, 200 people. The group also kidnapped 251, some of whom are still in captivity.


BBC News
6 hours ago
- BBC News
Almost a third of people in Gaza 'not eating for days,' UN warns
Almost one in three people in Gaza are going days without eating, the UN's food aid programme has warned."Malnutrition is surging with 90,000 women and children in urgent need of treatment," the World Food Programme (WFP) said in a statement to news agency of starvation in Gaza have intensified this week. Nine more people died of malnutrition on Friday, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry - bringing the total such deaths since the war began to which controls the entry of all supplies into Gaza, says there is no restriction on aid getting into the territory and blames Hamas for any malnutrition. An Israeli security official said on Friday that airdrops of aid into Gaza could be allowed in the coming days - something aid agencies have previously cautioned is an inefficient way to get supplies into local media reported the United Arab Emirates and Jordan would carry out the latest drops, a senior Jordanian official told the BBC that its military was yet to receive permission from Israel to do UN has described the move as a "distraction to inaction" by the Israeli move came amid mounting international concern about humanitarian conditions in Friday, Germany, France and the UK called on Israel to "immediately lift restrictions on the flow of aid" into the a joint statement, they called for an immediate end to the "humanitarian catastrophe that we are witnessing in Gaza," and to the war itself, adding that Israel must "uphold its obligations under international humanitarian law"."Withholding essential humanitarian assistance to the civilian population is unacceptable," read the Friday, the UN secretary-general accused the international community for "inaction" in its response to the suffering of Palestinians in the Guterres said he could not "explain the level of indifference and inaction we see by too many in the international community - the lack of compassion, the lack of truth, the lack of humanity".Addressing the Amnesty International global assembly, he said more than 1,000 Palestinians had been killed while trying to access food since 27 May, according to UN records - when the US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) began distributing supplies as an alternative to the UN-led agencies. A US security contractor who worked for the GHF in May and June 2025 told the BBC on Friday that he had "without question… witnessed war crimes" during that Aguilar said he saw the IDF and US contractors using live ammunition, artillery, mortar rounds, and tank fire on civilians at food distribution retired soldier said: "In my entire career, I have never witnessed the level of brutality and use of indiscriminate and unnecessary force against a civilian population until I was in Gaza at the hands of the IDF and US contractors."In its response, the GHF said the claims - which came from "a disgruntled former contractor who was terminated for misconduct a month ago" - were "categorically false". Meanwhile, the future of talks to secure a new ceasefire and hostage-release deal remains uncertain, after the US and Israel withdrew their negotiating teams from President Donald Trump said Hamas "didn't really want to make a deal"."I think they want to die," he has expressed surprise about the US remarks. A senior Hamas official also told the BBC's Gaza correspondent that mediators had informed the group negotiations had not collapsed, and said the Israeli delegation was expected to return to Doha next week. Israel launched a war in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken than 59,000 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the Hamas-run health imposed a total blockade of aid deliveries at the start of March and resumed its military offensive against Hamas two weeks later, collapsing a two-month ceasefire. It said it wanted to put pressure on the group to release its remaining Israeli the blockade was partially eased after almost two months amid warnings of a looming famine from global experts, the shortages of food, medicine and fuel have of Gaza's population has been displaced multiple times and more than 90% of homes are estimated to be damaged or destroyed.


Metro
8 hours ago
- Metro
What happens to the body when it's dying of starvation amid Gaza hunger crisis
A doctor has detailed what exactly happens to a human body when it's dying from starvation, in a plea for Israel to allow aid into Gaza. Dr Amir Khan goes through step by step how the body begins to break down in the days and hours leading up to death, adding: 'It's not peaceful, it's not quick, it's a slow, lonely descent into silence.' The NHS worker told viewers: 'This is a reel I wish I didn't have to make, but it's so important to speak up and for people to know this.' It comes as the United Nation's food agency, the World Food Programme (WFP), said almost a third of people in Gaza are 'not eating for days' and describing the crisis has having reached 'new and astonishing levels of desperation'. The WFP said 470,000 people are expected to have faced 'catastrophic hunger' between May and September this year. Meanwhile, the World Health Organization (WHO) said Gaza is suffering 'man-made mass starvation' because of an Israeli blockade on aid to the enclave. Israel has denied any responsibility, with some ministers and officials even suggesting there is no hunger in Gaza – but has today allowed foreign aid to be parachuted into the territory. The UN has documented the deaths of dozens of people from malnutrition this week, and says others have collapsed in the streets while trying to reach food. In his post Dr Khan explained that when a person is starving the body first uses up glucose, 'its quickest fuel'. He added: 'That's gone in about 24 hours. You feel shaky, dizzy, cold, your stomach cramps, and worse than the hunger is the exhaustion, like your bones are filled with sand. 'Next, the body burns fat. You lose weight rapidly, your cheeks sink, your clothes hang off you, but your brain is still alert and now it's panicking. 'You can't stop thinking about food, the smell of bread, the memory of taste. It becomes torture.' He said the body then starts 'eating muscle, including the heart'. 'You feel weak, too tired to sit up, your legs tremble, every movement is an effort,' he said. 'You speak less and then you stop speaking altogether. Your brain begins to starve, confusion, hallucinations. 'You see things that aren't there, you forget who you are. It's terrifying. You feel freezing cold, even in the heat.' After this your skin breaks down, he explained, and 'your body hurts to lie on but you can't sit up'. 'In the final stages, organs shut down, breathing becomes shallow, heartbeat slows, consciousness fades,' he added. He concludes the reel by telling viewers: 'Children in Gaza are feeling this right now. This isn't happening in a [natural] famine, this is not a natural death, it's a man-made one, and it's preventable. 'Let aid in, don't look away, don't wait for history to judge, speak now.' Today, UN secretary general António Guterres criticised the international community for turning a blind eye to the suffering of starving Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, calling it a 'moral crisis that challenges the global conscience'. 'I cannot explain the level of indifference and inaction we see by too many in the international community – the lack of compassion, the lack of truth, the lack of humanity,' he said in a speech via videolink to Amnesty International's global assembly. More Trending The UK government is among those criticised by campaigners for not taking a stronger stance against Israel's actions, and for continuing to allow the supply of arms to its military. They were, however, among 28 countries to have signed a letter condemning the 'the drip feeding of aid and the inhumane killing of civilians, including children, seeking to meet their most basic needs of water and food'. The statement signed by the 28 foreign ministers added: 'The suffering of civilians in Gaza has reached new depths. The Israeli government's aid delivery model is dangerous, fuels instability and deprives Gazan's of human dignity.' The statement said Israel's war on Gaza 'must end now'. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Tesco urgently recalls lunch time favourites over salmonella fears MORE: Keir Starmer says state is 'inalienable' right of Palestinian people MORE: Wild Nutrition is hosting its first ever London pop-up – here's why you don't want to miss it