
Every child under five in Gaza at risk of malnourishment, says UN
The UN's World Food Programme said children in this age bracket – around 320,000 in number – have been affected by the collapse of nutrition services and are lacking access to safe water, breast milk substitutes and therapeutic feeding.
Paediatrician Seema Jilani told Al Jazeera that malnutrition 'affects their entire body', putting children at risk of multi-organ failure. She also said that starvation in Gaza is traumatic for children and that 'developmental milestones will be missed'.
Hospitals in Gaza on Monday recorded six new deaths from famine and malnutrition in the past 24 hours, including one child, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. The total number of people who died from hunger-related causes since the start of the war now stands at 181, including 94 children.
The ministry also sounded the alarm over a 'serious escalation' in cases of acute soft paralysis among children as a result of 'infections and acute malnutrition'.
In a statement, it said it has so far recorded three deaths from Guillain-Barre syndrome, a rare condition that causes sudden numbness and muscle weakness in most of the body.
Entry of over 22,000 aid trucks blocked
Gaza's government said Israel was deliberately blocking more than 22,000 humanitarian aid trucks from entering the territory as part of a systematic campaign of 'starvation, siege and chaos'. The Palestinian territory has been under total Israeli blockade since March 2, shortly before Israel ended a two-month ceasefire and resumed attacks.
Mosab al-Dibs, 14, has been at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City for about two months after suffering a severe head injury when an Israeli air raid struck his family's tent in May.
The boy is largely paralysed and severely malnourished because the facility no longer has supplies to feed him. 'Mosab now suffers from severe malnutrition,' his mother, Shahinaz al-Dibs, said. 'He suffers convulsions as a result of a hit that affected his brain. Even his nerves are stiff.'
The situation in Gaza was nothing short of catastrophic.
by Ahmad Alhendawi, Middle East director of Save the Children International
At a school-turned-shelter for displaced Palestinians in northern Gaza, Samah Matar said her sons – six-year-old Yousef and four-year-old Amir – have cerebral palsy and need a special diet.
Youssef weighed 14kg (31lb) before the war. Now, he weighs 9kg (20lb). Amir, who weighed 9kg (20lb), is now less than 6kg (13lb). 'Before the war, their health was excellent,' she said. 'Now, there is no baby formula or diapers, and I can hardly find flour for them. Sugar, the main ingredient in their meals, is unavailable.'
Ahmad Alhendawi, Middle East director of Save the Children International, told Al Jazeera that the situation in Gaza was 'nothing short of catastrophic.'
'This is about almost four months of this blockade, of starvation that has built over weeks and months, and to come back from that point of extreme malnutrition and starvation requires a sustained supply of food and medical equipment and also food supplements for children in need,' he said.
'It's possible to reverse some [of the damage done to children by hunger], but I'm afraid that some of this damage would be irreversible at this stage.'
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Al Jazeera
4 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Israel turns swaths of Gaza into ‘lifeless wastelands' as attacks intensify
At least 35 people, including 13 seeking aid, have been killed on Thursday in Israeli attacks across Gaza, according to Palestinian health authorities, as four more people died from malnutrition amid a growing starvation crisis in the besieged territory. Eight people were killed in an Israeli air strike on a residential home in Gaza City in northern Gaza, medical sources told Al Jazeera. Two other people were killed in an Israeli attack on the city's Tuffah neighbourhood, hospital sources told Al Jazeera. The killings come as Israel escalates its attacks on Gaza City, the largest city in the enclave, after the country's security cabinet approved plans for the military to seize the city, an operation that could forcibly displace hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to concentration zones in southern Gaza. The plan has received international condemnation from the United Nations and even dissent from within Israel's own military. Al Jazeera correspondents reported on Thursday that large swaths of northern Gaza have been turned into 'lifeless wastelands' amid the Israeli escalation. Palestinians in Gaza City have spoken of their fears of further displacement, following an Israeli forced evacuation order to areas further south, in advance of the proposed occupation. Walaa Sobh said she had already been displaced during the war from the northern city of Beit Lahiya to Gaza City, and was unable to move again. 'We're afraid to move anywhere else, because we have nowhere to go, no income – and I am a widow,' she told Al Jazeera. 'If they want to force us out, then at least find us a place, give us tents, especially for the widows, the children, and the sick. You're not only displacing one or two people; you're displacing millions who have nowhere to stay.' Another woman, Umm Sajed Hamdan, said she would refuse to follow the order. 'I am a mother of five and the wife of a detainee. I cannot escape with my children from one place to another,' Hamdan told Al Jazeera. 'I would rather face death here in Gaza City than go to al-Mawasi.' Al Jazeera's senior political analyst Marwan Bishara said Israel's plans to occupy Gaza City are a serious cause for concern. 'It's a terrible escalation, really,' said Bishara. '[Netanyahu] really intends to reoccupy Gaza … send the military in and just take it on again.' The humanitarian consequences of Israel expanding its offensive in Gaza 'would be dire' for Palestinians who have already endured 22 months of displacement and bloodshed, Mohamed Elmasry, professor at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, told Al Jazeera. 'These are people who have been displaced – in many cases more than 10 times and in some cases more than 20 times already – and quite literally dodging bombs for the past 22 months,' Almasri said. 'And they are starving in addition to all that.' Elmasry described the Israeli plan as part of a broader effort to push Palestinians out of Gaza. 'Israel wants to empty the Gaza Strip, and it wants at least all the land from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea,' he said. Truce talks As Israel continues to escalate attacks on Gaza City, Mossad spy chief David Barnea is visiting Qatar in an effort to revive talks over a Gaza ceasefire, two Israeli officials told the Reuters news agency on Thursday. The visit follows a reported expression of positivity from Hamas officials to restart ceasefire negotiations during a meeting with Egypt's intelligence chief in Cairo earlier this week. Earlier on Thursday, Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Sharren Haskel said that a non-Israeli, peaceful civilian administration for Gaza was among the Israeli government's five key principles for ending the war. The other principles include the release of captives still held in Gaza, the surrender of weapons by Hamas, the full demilitarisation of Gaza, and Israel retaining overriding security control, he said. Aid still 'a drop in the ocean' Meanwhile, more than 100 aid groups on Thursday accused Israel of obstructing life-saving aid from entering Gaza, resulting in vast quantities of relief supplies remaining stranded in warehouses across Jordan and Egypt as more Palestinians starve. 'Despite claims by Israeli authorities that there is no limit on humanitarian aid entering Gaza, most major international NGOs [nongovernmental organisations] have been unable to deliver a single truck of life-saving supplies since 2 March,' the groups said. There is aid sitting all around the boundary between Israel and Gaza that is not being allowed in, Natasha Davies, a nursing activity manager with Doctors Without Borders, known by its French initials MSF, told Al Jazeera. 'We've had a couple of trucks in [to Gaza], but really, it's just a drop in the ocean … We run primarily a trauma surgical hospital, so every single patient has a wound of some sort that needs fixing with supplies that we are intermittently receiving,' Davies said by videolink from Gaza's southern city of Khan Younis. 'It's just a humanitarian catastrophe. There are these GHF sites, which are slaughter masquerading as aid, which create mass casualty incidents, which create more injuries for us to treat with limited resources,' she said. Basal Mahmoud, Gaza's civil defence spokesperson, told Al Jazeera Arabic that the aid currently entering the enclave is 'not sufficient at all'. He said at least 1,000 trucks of various supplies are needed each day, adding that only about 100 trucks enter daily, most of them going to traders rather than meeting market needs. Dr Munir al-Bursh, director of Gaza's Health Ministry, said Israel is starving to death 'all sorts of people', including children and women. He warned that 40,000 children under one were suffering from malnutrition, 250,000 children under five face life-threatening food shortages, and 1.2 million children under 18 are living in severe food insecurity. 'We are facing overwhelming, frightening figures,' al-Bursh told Al Jazeera Arabic. The accusations from aid groups came as United States President Donald Trump said he would like to see journalists gain access to Gaza to see humanitarian efforts. Israel has not allowed foreign reporters to enter Gaza since the start of its war on the besieged enclave, unless they are under Israeli military escort. 'I would be very fine with journalists going,' Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. 'And it's a very dangerous position to be in, as you know, if you're a journalist, but I would like to see it.' The total number of aid seekers killed since May 27, when Israel introduced a new aid distribution mechanism through the US-based GHF, has reached at least 1,881, with more than 13,863 injured, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. The total count of hunger-related deaths is now 239, including 106 children, the ministry records. Israel's war on Gaza has killed at least 61,776 people and wounded 154,906. An estimated 1,139 people were killed in Israel during the October 7, 2023, attacks, and more than 200 were taken captive.


Al Jazeera
11 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
Israeli attacks on Gaza kill 23 people as four more die from malnutrition
At least 23 people, including 10 seeking aid, have been killed on Thursday in Israeli attacks across Gaza, according to Palestinian health authorities, as four more people died from malnutrition amid a growing starvation crisis in the besieged territory. Hospital sources told Al Jazeera that 10 people seeking aid were among 12 people killed by Israeli forces near Rafah in southern Gaza. One person was killed and several others were wounded in an Israeli attack near an aid distribution site, the sources said. Eight people were killed in an Israeli air strike on a residential home in Gaza City in northern Gaza, medical sources said. Two other people were killed in an Israeli attack on the city's Tuffah neighbourhood, hospital sources told Al Jazeera. The killings come as Israel escalates its attacks on Gaza City, the largest city in the enclave, after the country's security cabinet approved plans for the military to seize the city, an operation that could forcibly displace hundreds of thousands of Palestinians to concentration zones in southern Gaza. The plan has received international condemnation from the United Nations and even dissent from within Israel's own military. Al Jazeera correspondents reported on Thursday that large swaths of northern Gaza have been turned into 'lifeless wastelands' amid the Israeli escalation. Palestinians in Gaza City have spoken of their fears of further displacement, following an Israeli forced evacuation order to areas further south, ahead of the proposed occupation. Walaa Sobh said she had already been displaced during the war from the northern city of Beit Lahiya to Gaza City, and was unable to move again. 'We're afraid to move anywhere else, because we have nowhere to go, no income – and I am a widow,' she told Al Jazeera. 'If they want to force us out, then at least find us a place, give us tents, especially for the widows, the children, and the sick. You're not only displacing one or two people; you're displacing millions who have nowhere to stay.' Another woman, Umm Sajed Hamdan, said she would refuse to follow the order. 'I am a mother of five and the wife of a detainee. I cannot escape with my children from one place to another,' Hamdan told Al Jazeera. 'I would rather face death here in Gaza City than go to al-Mawasi.' Al Jazeera's senior political analyst Marwan Bishara said Israel's plans to occupy Gaza City are a serious cause for concern. 'It's a terrible escalation, really,' said Bishara. '[Netanyahu] really intends to reoccupy Gaza … send the military in and just take it on again.' Truce talks As Israel continues to escalate attacks on Gaza City, Mossad spy chief David Barnea is visiting Qatar in an effort to revive talks over a Gaza ceasefire, two Israeli officials told the Reuters news agency on Thursday. The visit follows a reported expression of positivity from Hamas officials to restart ceasefire negotiations during a meeting with Egypt's intelligence chief in Cairo earlier this week. Earlier on Thursday, Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Sharren Haskel said that a non-Israeli, peaceful civilian administration for Gaza was among the Israeli government's five key principles for ending the war. The other principles include the release of captives still held in Gaza, the surrender of weapons by Hamas, the full demilitarisation of Gaza, and Israel retaining overriding security control, he said. Aid still 'a drop in the ocean' Meanwhile, more than 100 aid groups on Thursday accused Israel of obstructing life-saving aid from entering Gaza, resulting in vast quantities of relief supplies remaining stranded in warehouses across Jordan and Egypt as more Palestinians starve. 'Despite claims by Israeli authorities that there is no limit on humanitarian aid entering Gaza, most major international NGOs [nongovernmental organisations] have been unable to deliver a single truck of life-saving supplies since 2 March,' the groups said. There is aid sitting all around the boundary between Israel and Gaza that is not being allowed in, Natasha Davies, a nursing activity manager with Doctors Without Borders (MSF), told Al Jazeera. 'We've had a couple of trucks in [to Gaza], but really, it's just a drop in the ocean … We run primarily a trauma surgical hospital, so every single patient has a wound of some sort that needs fixing with supplies that we are intermittently receiving,' Davies said by videolink from Gaza's southern city of Khan Younis. 'It's just a humanitarian catastrophe. There are these GHF sites, which are slaughter masquerading as aid, which create mass casualty incidents, which create more injuries for us to treat with limited resources,' she said. The total number of aid seekers killed since May 27, when Israel introduced a new aid distribution mechanism through the US-based GHF, has reached 1,881, with more than 13,863 injured, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. The total count of hunger-related deaths is now 239, including 106 children, the ministry records. Israel's war on Gaza has killed at least 61,776 people and wounded 154,906. An estimated 1,139 people were killed in Israel during the October 7, 2023, attacks, and more than 200 were taken captive.


Al Jazeera
21 hours ago
- Al Jazeera
LIVE: Israel kills at least 100 in a day, 8 more starve to death in Gaza
At least 100 Palestinians were killed in Israeli attacks across Gaza on Wednesday, as Al Jazeera's correspondent reports that large swaths of the enclave's north have been turned into 'lifeless wastelands' due to Israel's intensifying assault. At least eight more people, including three children, have starved to death, bringing the total number of hunger-related deaths in the enclave to 235, including 106 children, Gaza's Ministry of Health said.