
Israel denies Gaza ‘mass starvation' accusations
JERUSALEM : Israel hit back on Wednesday at growing international criticism that it was behind chronic food shortages in Gaza, instead accusing Hamas of deliberately creating a humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian territory.
More than 100 aid and human rights groups said earlier Wednesday that 'mass starvation' was spreading in the Gaza Strip, while France warned of a growing 'risk of famine' caused by 'the blockade imposed by Israel'.
The head of the World Health Organization also weighed in, saying that a 'large proportion of the population of Gaza is starving'.
'I don't know what you would call it other than mass starvation – and it's man-made,' Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters.
But an Israeli government spokesman, David Mencer, said there was 'no famine caused by Israel. There is a man-made shortage engineered by Hamas.'
President Isaac Herzog, visiting troops in Gaza, maintained that Israel was acting 'according to international law', while Hamas was 'trying to sabotage' aid distribution in a bid to obstruct the Israeli military campaign that began more than 21 months ago.
An organisation backed by the United States and Israel, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), began distributing aid in Gaza in May as Israel eased a two-month total blockade, effectively sidelining the longstanding UN-led system.
Aid agencies have said permissions from Israel were still limited, and coordination to safely move trucks to where they are needed was a major challenge in an active war zone.
Mencer accused Hamas, whose attack on Israel on Oct 7, 2023 sparked the war, of preventing supplies from being distributed and looting aid for themselves or to sell at inflated prices.
'Aid has been flowing into Gaza,' he said, blaming the United Nations and its associates for failing to pick up truckloads of foodstuffs and other essentials that were cleared and waiting on the Gaza side of the border.
'Torment'
The US, meanwhile, said its top Middle East envoy was heading to Europe for talks on a possible Gaza ceasefire and an aid corridor, raising hopes of a breakthrough after more than two weeks of negotiations.
With no let-up in deadly Israeli strikes across the territory, getting aid to the more than two million people who need it has become a key issue in the conflict, and doctors and aid agencies have reported increasing cases of malnutrition and starvation.
The humanitarian organisations said in a joint statement that warehouses with tonnes of supplies were sitting untouched, while people were 'trapped in a cycle of hope and heartbreak, waiting for assistance and ceasefires'.
'It is not just physical torment but psychological. Survival is dangled like a mirage,' they added.
The 111 signatories, including Doctors Without Borders (MSF), Save the Children and Oxfam, called for an immediate negotiated ceasefire, the opening of all land crossings and the free flow of aid through UN-led mechanisms.
In New York, the Committee to Protect Journalists added its voice to the appeal, accusing Israel of 'starving Gazan journalists into silence', after AFP reporters in Gaza said they were all affected by the lack of food.
In Khan Yunis, in Gaza's south, residents told AFP how they battled to get food aid, with one man calling it 'a catastrophic scene and a real famine'.
The UN said on Tuesday that Israeli forces had killed more than 1,000 Palestinians trying to get aid since late May, most near GHF sites.
GHF and Israel have accused Hamas of firing on civilians.
Stalled talks
Even after Israel began easing its aid blockade in late May, Gaza's population is still suffering extreme scarcities.
GHF said the UN, which refuses to work with it over neutrality concerns, had 'a capacity and operational problem' and called for 'more collaboration' to deliver life-saving aid.
COGAT, an Israeli defence ministry body overseeing civil affairs in the Palestinian territories, said the 'main obstacle to maintaining a consistent flow of humanitarian aid' was a 'collection bottleneck' that it blamed on international organisations.
Israel's military campaign in Gaza has killed 59,219 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.
Hamas's October 2023 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Mediators have been shuttling between Israeli and Hamas negotiators in Doha since July 6 in search of an elusive truce, with each side blaming the other for refusing to budge on their key demands.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
8 hours ago
- The Sun
Gaza civil defence reports 14 killed by Israeli forces amid aid crisis
GAZA CITY: Gaza's civil defence agency reported 14 Palestinians killed by Israeli military actions on Wednesday, even as aid deliveries resumed in the war-torn territory. The conflict, now in its 22nd month, has left Gaza's two million residents facing severe famine, according to a UN-mandated report. Spokesman Mahmud Basal stated that six people died near an aid distribution centre northwest of Rafah. Two more were killed near the Netzarim junction, while another two died in an airstrike near Gaza City's Church of the Holy Family. Four others perished near the Wadi Gaza bridge. The Israeli military said it would review the reports. Media restrictions hinder independent verification of casualty figures. The war began after Hamas's October 7, 2023, attack on Israel, which killed 1,219 people, mostly civilians. Israel's retaliatory offensive has claimed at least 60,034 lives in Gaza, per Hamas-run health ministry data. Under international pressure, Israel announced daily pauses in fighting to allow aid distribution. Over 200 truckloads of food aid were delivered by UN agencies, with additional airdrops from Jordan and the UAE. Both sides accused armed groups of looting supplies, blaming each other for security failures. - AFP


Free Malaysia Today
8 hours ago
- Free Malaysia Today
UK rejects claim that recognising Palestinian state rewards Hamas
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer highlighted the suffering in Gaza in a televised address yesterday. (EPA Images pic) LONDON : Britain today rejected criticism that it was rewarding resistance group Hamas by setting out plans to recognise a Palestinian state unless Israel took steps to improve the situation in Gaza and bring about peace. The sight of emaciated Gaza children has shocked the world in recent days and yesterday, a hunger monitor warned that a worst-case scenario of famine was unfolding there and immediate action was needed to avoid widespread death. Prime minister Keir Starmer's ultimatum, setting a September deadline for Israel, prompted an immediate rebuke from his counterpart in Jerusalem, who said it rewarded Hamas and punished the victims of their 2023 cross-border attack. US President Donald Trump said he did not think Hamas 'should be rewarded' with recognition of Palestinian independence. Asked about that criticism, British transport minister Heidi Alexander – designated by the government to respond to questions in a series of media interviews today – said it was not the right way to characterise Britain's plan. 'This is not a reward for Hamas. Hamas is a vile terrorist organisation that has committed appalling atrocities. This is about the Palestinian people. It's about those children that we see in Gaza who are starving to death,' she told LBC radio. 'We've got to ratchet up pressure on the Israeli government to lift the restrictions to get aid back into Gaza.' France announced last week it would recognise Palestinian statehood in September. Successive British governments have said they would recognise a Palestinian state when it was most effective to do so. In a televised address yesterday, Starmer said that moment had now come, highlighting the suffering in Gaza and saying the prospect of a two-state solution – a Palestinian state co-existing in peace alongside Israel – was under threat. Starmer said Britain would make the move at the UN General Assembly in September unless Israel took substantive steps to allow more aid to enter Gaza, made clear there will be no annexation of the West Bank and committed to a long-term peace process that delivered a two-state solution.


Malay Mail
12 hours ago
- Malay Mail
Even MAGA's having doubts: How Israel is losing the American right — Che Ran
JULY 30 — For decades, Israel could rely on bipartisan, no-questions-asked support from Washington — especially from the Republican right. Evangelicals, conservative pundits, and red-state politicians rallied behind Tel Aviv with Bible verses in one hand and defence budgets in the other. But cracks are forming. Loud ones. And not just on the liberal side of the aisle. In what may be one of the more dramatic shifts in US foreign policy sentiment, parts of Donald Trump's MAGA base — the loudest flag-wavers for Israel since the Bush era — are starting to whisper, hesitate, even pull back. Take this in: in 2017, Democrats sympathised with Israel over the Palestinians by 13 points. By 2025? That number flipped—43 per cent now side with Palestinians. But here's the kicker: even Republicans are wobbling. Last year, 78 per cent of GOP voters said they stood firmly with Israel. This year? Just 64 per cent. Sympathy for Palestinians didn't rise. It's Israel's own standing that dropped. And the signs aren't just in polling data — they're in the people. Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, not exactly a bastion of logic, recently proposed slashing half a billion US dollars from Israel's Iron Dome funding. Only six voted with her. But the shock wasn't in the failure — it was in the fact that the proposal even came from within Trump's camp. Tucker Carlson, once the high priest of Fox News nationalism, openly mocked pro-Israel hawks like Ted Cruz over Iran. He didn't just criticise policy — he questioned their knowledge, their motives, their blind allegiance. When even Tucker stops toeing the line, something's shifting. A supporter displays a bejeweled 'Make America Great Again' necklace at a campaign event by former US President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump in Macon, Georgia, on November 3, 2024. — AFP pic And then there's the bombshell that turned even the die-hard evangelicals uneasy: an Israeli strike on the Holy Family Catholic Church in Gaza. Not the first attack on a church, but the one that finally rang alarm bells across conservative America. Even Mike Huckabee — Mr. 'Israel can do no wrong' — was forced to condemn it. All this, against the backdrop of the Epstein scandal clawing its way back into the headlines. Trump's close personal ties with the convicted sex trafficker are once again under scrutiny. And now, right-wing conspiracy circles are connecting Epstein's enablers to Israel's Mossad. Wild theories aside, the optics are ugly. And MAGA voters — already restless — are paying attention. It's leaking like a burst pipe under Jalan Sultan Ismail during rush hour — just spraying nonsense everywhere and no one knows who's in charge. A recent Pew survey shows 50 per cent of Republicans under 50 now view Israel negatively. That's not just a generational divide — it's a warning shot. Netanyahu's long game was simple: double down on the right, shrug off the left. But now the right's got questions. The money will keep flowing — donors like Miriam Adelson won't shut the tap off anytime soon — but votes are harder to buy. Sympathy even more so. Michael Knowles, a leading conservative voice, put it bluntly: 'You're losing me.' And that sums up the moment. Israel's global image, once bulletproof, is now slipping — on both sides of the American aisle. The Iron Dome may still function, but the narrative shield? Let's just say… it's got a few gaping holes. * This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Malay Mail.