
AFP Journalist Covers War As Gaza Faces Extreme Shortages
"I walk 14 to 15 kilometres (nine miles) every day to reach the news sites," he said.
"This morning, I walked about a 25-kilometre round trip in search of information."
More than 21 months of war between Israel and Hamas have displaced almost all of Gaza's population, triggered severe shortages of food and other essentials, and reduced much of the Palestinian territory to rubble.
Hassouna, 48, said his arduous journeys, in searing heat, were "very, very difficult" and even took their toll on his shoes.
"I used to change my shoes every six months," he said. "Today, I wear out a pair every month."
Whether filming the chaotic scramble for meagre aid or the bloody aftermath of an air strike, Hassouna said that extreme scarcities of food, clean water and medical care in Gaza further complicated his efforts to cover the devastating conflict.
Israel's military campaign in Gaza has killed 59,106 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.
More than 100 aid organisations and human rights groups warned on Wednesday that "mass starvation" was spreading across the population of over two million people, after Israel imposed a more than two-month aid blockade, only easing it a little in late May.
Hassouna, who is based in Gaza City, said his main struggle was accessing enough food to feed himself and his family, including a sick sister who lives with him.
After living through almost two years of conflict, his once full face appears drawn and his eyes sunken.
"My weight used to be around 110 kilograms (over 17 stone), today it is between 65 and 70 kilograms (barely 11 stone)," he said.
The deepening hunger crisis in Gaza has sent the prices of what little food there is soaring, leaving daily essentials out of reach for many.
"Obtaining food in Gaza is extremely difficult. Even when it is available, prices are multiplied by 100," Hassouna said.
He explained that a kilogram of lentils which used to cost three shekels ($0.90) would now set him back 80 shekels ($24).
The price of rice, he said, had gone up 20 fold.
"Access to water is equally difficult, whether it is fresh water or salt water," Hassouna added.
"Children have to queue for four, five, six or even seven hours to collect it".
Hassouna said that his work documenting the conflict sometimes posed problems with Palestinians living in Gaza, who feared Israeli reprisals against journalists.
"Some like journalists, others do not," he said.
"Those who support us come to talk to me, 'Tell us what's happening, when will this war end? Make our voice heard abroad, tell the whole world that we don't want war'.
"Others say the opposite, "Don't come near, don't join us. Journalists are targeted by Israeli bombings'."
Media watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said in early July that more than 200 journalists had been killed in Gaza since Hamas's October 2023 attack sparked the war.
That assault resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Wishing calm for future generations, Hassouna said he wanted to send a message of peace.
"Since our childhood, we have lived in war, and we do not want our children -- or even (Israeli) children -- to experience this," he said.
"We all want a life without conflict." More than 21 months of war have displaced almost all of Gaza's population and triggered severe shortages of food and other essentials AFP
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Int'l Business Times
6 hours ago
- Int'l Business Times
Gaza Famine Warning As Israel Resists Ceasefire Calls
Gaza is slipping into famine, UN-backed experts warned Tuesday, as the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory said the death toll in the nearly 22-month war had surpassed 60,000. The health ministry figure excludes deaths from hunger in the Palestinian territory gripped by dire humanitarian conditions made worse by Israel's total blockade of aid from March to May. This week, Israel launched a daily pause in fighting and opened secure routes to enable UN and non-governmental agencies to distribute food on Gaza's devastated streets. Hundreds of truckloads of aid have begun to arrive. But Israeli strikes continued overnight, killing 30 people in the Nuseirat refugee camp, according to Gaza's civil defence agency -- and experts warn a humanitarian catastrophe of historic proportions is imminent. "The worst-case scenario of famine is now unfolding in the Gaza Strip," said the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification Initiative (IPC), a coalition of monitors tasked by the UN to warn of impending crises. The World Food Programme's emergency director, Ross Smith, likened the situation to some of the worst famines of the past century. "This is unlike anything we have seen in this century. It reminds us of previous disasters in Ethiopia or Biafra," Smith said via video-link from Rome. "We need urgent action now." In a statement released ahead of the IPC report, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office accused Hamas of distorting casualty figures and accused the group of looting food aid destined for Palestinian civilians. "While the situation in Gaza is difficult and Israel has been working to ensure aid delivery, Hamas benefits from attempting to fuel the perception of a humanitarian crisis," the statement said. "We already allow significant amounts of humanitarian aid into Gaza every single day, including food, water and medicine. Unfortunately, Hamas... has been stealing aid from the Gaza population, many times by shooting Palestinians." As late as Sunday, Netanyahu had been insisting there was "no starvation in Gaza" but even his close international ally, US President Donald Trump, has now warned the situation appears to be "real starvation". Israel imposed a total blockade on Gaza on March 2 after ceasefire talks broke down. In late May, it began allowing a small trickle of aid to resume, amid warnings of a wave of starvation. Then on Sunday, faced with a mounting international chorus of alarm, Israel began a series of "tactical pauses" while allowed aid trucks to cross two border crossings into Gaza, and Jordanian and Emirati planes to airdrop aid. Shipments have ramped up, but for the IPC this effort will not prove enough unless aid agencies are granted "immediate, unimpeded" humanitarian access. "Failure to act now will result in widespread death in much of the Strip," it said, warning that 16 children under the age of five had died of hunger since July 17. "Mounting evidence shows that widespread starvation, malnutrition, and disease are driving a rise in hunger-related deaths," it said. According to Netanyahu's office, the pause in military operations covers "key populated areas" between 10:00 am (0700 GMT) and 8:00 pm every day. Designated aid convoy routes will be secure from 6:00 am to 11:00 pm. COGAT, an Israeli defence ministry body in charge of civil affairs in the Palestinian territories, said more than 200 truckloads of aid were distributed by the UN and aid agencies on Monday. Another 260 trucks were permitted to cross into Gaza to deposit aid at collection points, four UN tankers brought in fuel and 20 pallets of aid were airdropped from Jordanian and Emirati planes, COGAT said. Overnight, however, strikes continued. Gaza's civil defence agency said Tuesday that Israeli air strikes killed at least 30 Palestinians, including women and children, in the central Nuseirat district. Civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal said the strikes were carried out overnight and into the morning and "targeted a number of citizens' homes" in the Nuseirat refugee camp. The local Al-Awda hospital said it had received "the bodies of 30 martyrs, including 14 women and 12 children". An Israeli military spokesman told AFP that he would need more information to enable him to look into the strikes. With aid experts pushing for a ceasefire to enable a large-scale humanitarian operation, Israel's foreign minister addressed reporters in Jerusalem to denounce what he called a "distorted campaign" of international pressure. Gideon Saar told reporters that if Israel was to halt the conflict while Hamas is still in power in Gaza and still holding hostages it would be a "tragedy for both Israelis and Palestinians". "It ain't gonna happen, no matter how much pressure is put on Israel," he said. Miltary transport planes from Jordan and the the United Arab Emirates have begun to drop food pallets into Gaza, but the bulk of the aid effort will have to be carried by trucks AFP Much of Gaza, a densely-packed territory of more than two million Palestinians, lies in ruins and the entire population has been displaced from home at least once AFP Israel has rejected calls for a ceasefire in its war against Hamas despite international warnings that a famine is imminent in Gaza AFP


Int'l Business Times
14 hours ago
- Int'l Business Times
'Food On Table' Outweighs Health Risks For Philippine E-waste Dismantlers
Dexter Barsigan has spent the past 13 years making a living with his bare hands and a pair of pliers, stripping scrapped laptops and air conditioners for metal he can sell to junk shops in the Philippines. But since his hands began aching and his vision started to blur three years ago, there have been days he can only watch his wife and nephew do the job for him. The 47-year-old father of three is a "mambabaklas", the Filipino word for informal dismantlers who scavenge electronic waste for the nickel, aluminum and copper inside. "Dismantling helps us put food on the table. It provides the money to send my kids to school," Barsigan told AFP while sitting along a kilometre-long stretch of Onyx Street, home to hundreds of fellow "e-waste" dismantlers. Their work frequently involves burning away rubber wire casings, releasing a toxic brew of chemicals including lead, mercury and cadmium into the air. Both the Philippine government and the Basel Convention, a global waste management treaty signed by 191 countries, consider e-waste hazardous. "It poses serious threats to human health and the environment," said Irvin Cadavona, a hazardous waste management officer with the environment department, citing health risks ranging from cancer and neurological diseases to respiratory illnesses and birth defects. The World Health Organization said last year exposure to e-waste chemicals can lead to incidents of asthma and reduced lung function in children, while pregnant women are at higher risk for stillbirths and premature delivery. "It's very hard to recycle these (chemicals). When you dismantle (e-waste), you must intricately break it down. It can be very hazardous," Gelo Apostol, an environmental health specialist from Ateneo de Manila University, told AFP. Exposure to the substances can lead to anemia, kidney and thyroid diseases, and nerve damage, he said. The Philippines is among the top e-waste generators in Southeast Asia, according to the United Nations' Global E-waste Monitor, accounting for 540 million kilograms (about 600,000 tons) in 2022. Dismantlers who work at the country's accredited facilities are required to follow stringent guidelines. But their informal counterparts lack the training, regulations and protective equipment needed to properly protect themselves. "I strongly believe that some Filipinos are getting sick because of the exposure to e-waste," Cadavona said. Barsigan, who doesn't wear a mask while working, prefers dismantling computer circuit boards with aluminum and copper because they fetch as much as P470 ($8) per kilo. But circuit boards have especially high concentrations of toxic metals that can cause nerve damage when breathed in, Apostol said. While illegal, Onyx Street's e-waste dismantlers also routinely burn wires to extract copper, which is faster than peeling them by hand. Rosana Milan, physician-in-charge at Manila's Pedro Gil Health Center, said her clinic has diagnosed half of the 12,000 people living along the street with respiratory issues, most of them children. "It's very risky for the babies, the toddlers and even the school children... they're sitting beside their father while the father is... burning the rubber," Milan told AFP. "Mostly they have pneumonia, upper and lower respiratory illness, even if they have vaccines." Dismantler Sammy Oligar said his one-year-old grandchild had been diagnosed with pneumonia that a doctor attributed to pollution caused by the burning. "The smoke would enter from our window and the child would inhale it," Oligar told AFP, adding that many of his neighbors were dealing with lung illnesses. Medicins du Monde (MdM), a French humanitarian organisation providing gloves, masks and safety orientations for the dismantlers of Onyx Street, is calling for the recognition of informal e-waste workers. "Health is clearly not their first priority. Their priority is to have food on the table," Eva Lecat, general coordinator of MdM, told AFP. "If (their work) was legal and recognised and regulated, there would be ways to protect people and communities." Cadavona, the waste management officer, said the informal nature of the picker-junkshop relationship made it "very hard" to establish formal recognition for the community. Apostol, the faculty researcher, said an "evidence gap" created by the lack of studies specific to dismantlers might be contributing to a lack of urgency. "But remember, many of the chemicals found in e-waste already have extensive studies on their health effects," Apostol said. "What are we waiting for? To have nationwide data of people who died from e-waste before we take action?" Worried he will be unable to afford treatment, Barsigan told AFP he has avoided doctors, instead putting ointment on his hands and taking a cheap, over-the-counter pain reliever. Once his hands feel a little better, he said, he will put them back to work. "If I stop dismantling, it's as if I have also given up the hope of a better life for my children." Stripping scrapped laptops and air conditioners for metal frequently involves burning away rubber wire casings, releasing a toxic brew of chemicals including lead, mercury and cadmium into the air AFP A child sleeps on a deckchair as workers empty coolant from a discarded air conditioning unit AFP A worker removing copper wiring from a discarded air conditioning component in Manila AFP


DW
a day ago
- DW
Middle East: Germany announces plan to airlift aid to Gaza – DW – 07/28/2025
Germany's Friedrich Merz has announced plans to establish an airlift to deliver aid to Gaza with the support of Jordan. France said there is "no alternative" to a two-state solution to solve the conflict. DW has more. The leaders of Israeli rights organization B'Tselem and Physicians for Human Rights Israel (PHRI) have spoken to the press about their new investigation that found the Israeli government to be committing genocide in Gaza. "Nothing prepares you for the realization that you are part of a society committing genocide. This is a deeply painful moment for us," said B'Tselem Executive Director Yuli Novak. "After decades of separation, and of dehumanization of Palestinians, the horrors of the Hamas-led attack on October 7, 2023, created deep existential fear among Israelis. The extremist, far-right messianic government is using that fear to promote an agenda of destruction and expulsion," Novak said. The lives of Palestinians "are being treated as worthless. They can be starved, killed, displaced – and the situation keeps getting worse. The world must stop the crimes Israel is committing now," he stressed. Dr. Guy Shalev, Executive Director of PHRI, added that "Israel is knowingly destroying Gaza's health system. As people who believe in the sanctity of life, we are obligated to speak the truth: this is genocide, and we must fight it. For 22 months, hospital after hospital has been attacked, patients have been denied life-saving treatment, and aid has been blocked." "This is a clear and consistent pattern of destruction. It is our duty as medical professionals, and to our colleagues in Gaza who are risking their lives to save others under impossible conditions, to face the truth and do everything we can to protect them," he said. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said Monday that Berlin plans to establish an airlift to deliver humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip with the support of Jordan. "We know that this can only be a very small help for the people in Gaza," Merz said, adding it is "a contribution we are happy to make." "We want to end the humanitarian suffering of the civilian population in Gaza as quickly as possible," Merz said. "We want the weapons in Gaza to fall silent immediately. Above all, we want our friends in Israel to finally find peace after the horrific events of October 7, 2023, and to be able to live in lasting security and peace." Jordan has served as a hub for aid deliveries to Gaza and has parachuted food into the territory for the past two days. The Israeli army began dropping aid supplies in the Gaza Strip over the weekend. It also announced the establishment of "humanitarian corridors" for trucks carrying aid supplies. Israel has been accused of engineering the starvation it now seeks to ease by dropping the aid into Gaza. Severe shortages of food and water in the sealed-off Palestinian territory have prompted warnings from UN agencies of "catastrophic hunger." The Israeli government has said an additional 180 trucks carrying aid have now entered Gaza. COGAT, the Israeli military unit responsible for approving and coordinating aid, wrote on X that the trucks are "now awaiting collection and distribution." It comes after 120 trucks were allowed to enter Gaza on Sunday. UN emergency relief coordinator Tom Fletcher told the BBC that the aid deliveries were welcome, but a "drop in the ocean" compared to what's needed. France's foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot made the comment on Monday as he opened a United Nations (UN) conference dedicated to a two-state solution for Israelis and Palestinians. "Only a political, two-state solution will help respond to the legitimate aspirations of Israelis and Palestinians to live in peace and security. There is no alternative," he said. Barrot and his Saudi counterpart Prince Faisal bin Farhan are co-chairing the conference. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres also condemned Israel's "creeping annexation" of the West Bank, saying it is "illegal" and that the "wholesale destruction of Gaza is intolerable." He said that both must stop. On a two-state solution Guterres said, "Unilateral actions that would forever undermine the two-state solution are unacceptable. They must stop." Israel and the US are boycotting the meeting, with the US calling the meeting "counterproductive." The European Commission is discussing a proposal today to partially suspend Israel's access to the Horizon research program. The proposal was mentioned in an agenda published by the Commission. Israel has been participating in the EU's research programs since 1996. Horizon Europeis a $93.5 billion research fund open for the period 2021-2027. Earlier this year, the Israel Innovation Authority reported that Israeli researchers and companies have secured grants totalling more than $1.1 billion between 2021-2024. This comes after several EU countries last week called for more pressure on Israel over the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. EU countries asked the Commission to put more options on the table, as they said Israel was not living up to its commitments on increasing aid. EU and Israeli officials had no comment on the proposal. US President Donald Trump said on a visit to the UK that he had discussed increased aid to Gaza with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and that he was also going to ask British Prime Minister Keir Starmer to join the effort when they met later on Monday. He also added that he felt a ceasefire in Gaza was "possible" a day after he spoke to Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu over the phone. Trump said that he told Netanyahu his current course of action against Hamas wasn't working, and that he needed to try something "different." The president had expressed concern over the weekend at the level of malnutrition in Gaza, which he reiterated to journalists ahead of the meeting with Starmer. At the same time, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi called on Trump to use his considerable influence — US aid is essential to the Israeli military — to "exert all efforts to end this war and allow the entry of aid." Jerusalem-based human rights NGO B'Tselem and Physicians for Human Rights Israel (PHRI) have presented their findings following an investigation into the conduct of the Israeli government and the military in the Gaza Strip. The B'Tselem report points to a decisive shift in policy following the October 7, 2023, attacks on Israeli civilians by Hamas. While purporting to be fighting only Hamas, the report found, the government was engaging in a policy of "mass killing, both in direct attacks and through creating catastrophic living conditions that increase the massive death toll." It also said that Israeli forces had inflicted "serious bodily or mental harm [on] the entire population of the Strip" and had engaged in "large-scale destruction of infrastructure" and "destruction of the social fabric, including Palestinian educational institutions and cultural sites." The report also pointed to "mass arrests and abuse of detainees in Israeli prisons, which have effectively become torture camps for thousands of Palestinians held without trial" and "mass forced displacement, including attempts at ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in Gaza and making the latter an official war goal." It accused Israeli authorities of carrying out an "assault on Palestinian identity through the deliberate destruction of refugee camps and attempts to undermine the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA)." To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video The report points to the 1948 UN definition of genocide as "the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group," and points to both evidence on the ground in Gaza as well as statements made by Israeli officials to back up its findings that a genocide is being carried out in Gaza. The group added that "both morally and legally, genocide cannot be justified under any circumstance, including as an act of self-defense." The report ends with a call to action from both Israeli civil society and the international community to " means available under international law to stop Israel's genocide against the Palestinian people." PHRI also released its report on Monday when it presented "this health-focused legal analysis of Israel's military campaign in Gaza since October 2023, concluding that it constitutes genocide under the 1948 Genocide Convention." "The evidence shows a deliberate and systematic dismantling of Gaza's health and life-sustaining systems — through targeted attacks on hospitals, obstruction of medical aid and evacuations, and the killing and detention of healthcare," the NGO said. Israel has dismissed accusations that its forces are committing genocide and other rights abuses in the Gaza Strip, saying its primary war aim is to eliminate the Hamas militant group. DW spoke to Jamil Sawalmeh, the country director for ActionAid Palestine, about Israel's announcement it would open some land routes to allow aid to enter Gaza. The group is the Palestinian branch of the Johannesburg-based NGO ActionAid. "Unfortunately this does not change the reality because it's very severe. The conditions are horrific," Sawalmeh said. "This temporary and tactical pause is not what we need right now," he said. "We are seeing that children particularly are actually most impacted by the engineered starvation in Gaza." He said he believed the announcement was "only a way to mitigate international pressure and it's not going to be sufficient or adequate for any scale of needs in Gaza." "However, we [also] consider this an opportunity and a call for the international community to continue increasing the pressure using all means to make Israel abide by its international obligations under international law and call for an immediate and permanent ceasefire," he stressed. He also criticized Israel's plan to deliver aid through air drops, asking, "Why do we need these air drops when we have a land crossing [and] tonnes and tonnes of aid piled up by the crossing?" "Previously when these air drops were conducted, some [civilians] were killed directly by the pallets falling from the skies on their head," he said. "Some of these air drops have landed into dangerous combat zones, which means that civilian populations cannot access it. And if they try to access it, they will be subject to direct fire from the Israeli army." German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is set to meet with his Security Cabinet in Berlin a day after speaking to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the phone. Merz said he had urged Netanyahu to improve the humanitarian crises in Gaza, having previously called Israeli policy in the enclave "unacceptable." The cabinet includes Vice Chancellor Lars Klingbeil of the Social Democrats (SPD), the center-left junior coalition partners of Merz's center-right block. Last week, several prominent members of the SPD urged the government to take a stronger stance against Israel after 28 countries, including close allies France and the UK, issued a joint declaration condemning Israel's military actions in Gaza and calling for an end to the war. Representatives of B'Tselem, also known as the Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories, and Physicians for Human Rights Israel (PHRI) are due to present their latest report on the war in Gaza later on Monday. B'Tselem is a Jerusalem-based organization that focuses on human rights abuses in the Palestinian territories, and has expressed criticism of the Israeli government's policies in Gaza and the occupied West Bank. The Israeli government has said that 120 aid trucks having been allowed to enter Gaza, coinciding with a ten-hour pause in military operations in some areas, such as Al-Malawsi and Deir al-Balah. Last week, international criticism of Israel's conduct in Gaza reached a fever pitch as news of mass starvation, particularly of children, continued to circulate. There was also hefty criticism of the US-run and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), one of the few aid organizations that was allowed to operate during Israel's months-long blockade, due to the reports of killings of hundreds of people waiting for aid at their distribution points. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video The UN welcomed the news, a week after Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called what was happening in Gaza a "horror parallel in recent times." The body's Emergency Relief Coordinator, Tom Fletcher, said: "We welcome Israel's decision to support a one-week scale-up of aid, including lifting customs barriers on food, medicine and fuel from Egypt and the reported designation of secure routes for UN humanitarian convoys." Fletcher cautioned, however, that it still wouldn't be enough "to stave off famine and a catastrophic health crisis," before adding: "And no more attacks on people gathering for food." Israel has announced a ten-hour pause in military action for Monday following an increasingly widespread global outcry over the mass starvation in the enclave, which has been under a months-long blockade of aid by the Israeli military. The Security Cabinet of German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is set to meet on Monday afternoon to discuss Berlin's position on Gaza and Israeli conduct there. Also on Monday, two Israel-based NGOs are expected to present their findings after an independent investigation on rights abuses in Gaza.