
A young surgeon tries to save lives at a crippled Gaza hospital

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Asharq Al-Awsat
12 hours ago
- Asharq Al-Awsat
WHO: Nearly 12,000 Children Under Five in Gaza Have Acute Malnutrition
Around 12,000 children aged under five in Gaza are suffering from acute malnutrition, and hunger-related deaths are rising, the Director General of the World Health Organization said on Thursday. "In July, nearly 12,000 children under five years were identified as having acute malnutrition in Gaza, the highest monthly figure ever recorded," Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at his organization's headquarters in Geneva. At least 99 people have died, including 64 adults and 35 children, of whom 29 were younger than five, from the start of this year to July 29. Between June and July, the number of admissions for malnutrition almost doubled - from 6,344 to 11,877 - according to the latest UNICEF figures available. Some 2,500 of those children are suffering from severe malnutrition. Tedros called for greater volumes of sustained aid, via all possible routes. The WHO said it was supporting Gaza's four malnutrition centers, but that supplies of baby formula and nutritional foods were very low. "The overall volume of nutrition supplies remains completely insufficient to prevent further deterioration. The market needs to be flooded. There needs to be dietary diversity," said Rik Peeperkorn, WHO's representative for the occupied Palestinian Territory, via video link. A global hunger monitor has said a famine scenario is unfolding in the Gaza Strip, with starvation spreading, children dying of hunger-related causes and humanitarian access to the embattled enclave severely restricted. The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said food consumption across Gaza had declined to its lowest level since the onset of the war. Eighty-one percent of households in the tiny, crowded coastal territory of 2.2 million people reported poor food consumption, up from 33% in April.


Arab News
a day ago
- Arab News
GHF aid distribution sites in Gaza becoming ‘laboratories of cruelty,' says medical charity
LONDON: Doctors Without Borders has accused a controversial aid initiative in Gaza of enabling the systematic targeting and killing of civilians, it was reported on Thursday. In a scathing new report, the medical charity — also known by its French acronym MSF— said aid distribution centers run by the US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation had become sites of 'orchestrated killing.' Raquel Ayora, one of the charity's general directors, said: 'In MSF's nearly 54 years of operations, rarely have we seen such levels of systematic violence against unarmed civilians. 'The GHF distribution sites masquerading as 'aid' have morphed into a laboratory of cruelty. This must stop now.' The group is calling for GHF's operations to be scrapped immediately and replaced with a UN-led system. It has urged governments and donors to 'suspend all financial and political support for the GHF.' In a report by Sky News, the channel contacted both the GHF and the Israel Defense Forces for comment. In an interview on Wednesday, IDF spokesperson Nadav Shoshani dismissed the allegations, claiming: 'I think that is completely false,' and described some reports of shootings as 'fake news.' Between June 7 and July 24, MSF says it treated 1,380 people wounded near GHF aid sites at two of its clinics. Among the injured were 71 children, 25 of them under the age of 15. The charity said 28 people were dead on arrival. Among the cases were an 8-year-old girl shot in the chest, and a 12-year-old boy hit in the abdomen. The charity described several injuries as precise and deliberate. 'The distinct patterns and anatomical precision of these injuries strongly suggests the intentional targeting of people within and around the distribution sites, rather than accidental or indiscriminate fire,' the report stated. Gunshot wounds recorded at MSF's Al-Mawasi Clinic showed 11 percent struck victims in the head or neck, while 19 percent were to the torso. In Khan Younis, injuries to the lower limbs were more common. One patient, Mohammed Riad Tabasi, said: 'We're being slaughtered. I've been injured maybe 10 times. I saw it with my own eyes, about 20 corpses around me; all of them shot in the head (and) in the stomach.' The report also documented 196 injuries caused by stampedes or chaos during aid distribution. One woman died of likely asphyxiation in a crush. Others, MSF said, were beaten or robbed after receiving food. The GHF took over much of Gaza's aid provision in May after Israel ended an 11-week blockade. But the operation has drawn mounting international criticism. A previous Sky News investigation linked GHF-led aid drops to spikes in fatalities, and UN officials have condemned the system as 'death traps.' UN experts this week called the program 'an utterly disturbing example of how humanitarian relief can be exploited for covert military and geopolitical agendas in serious breach of international law.' They reiterated calls for Israel to restore access for UN agencies and humanitarian nongovernmental organizations. MSF echoed the demand and directly urged the US to end its support. 'Despite the condemnations and calls for dismantling it, the global inaction to stop GHF is baffling,' said Aitor Zabalgogeazkoa, MSF's emergency coordinator. The IDF maintains that humanitarian access is not being obstructed. 'There is no limit of aid getting into Gaza,' Shoshani said. 'Every day, hundreds of trucks go into Gaza.' Israeli officials argue the GHF model prevents supplies being stolen by Hamas and ensures they reach civilians directly. Steve Witkoff, the US' special envoy to the Middle East, last week toured one of the sites. 'We're putting up money to get the people fed,' US President Donald Trump declared at the same time.


Arab News
2 days ago
- Arab News
Gaza Humanitarian Foundation to ‘scale up' number of sites from 4 to 16
LONDON: The US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation will 'scale up' its sites in Gaza from four to 16, US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee has said. In an interview with Fox News, Huckabee said: 'The immediate plan is to scale up the number of sites up to 16 and begin to operate them as much as 24 hours a day.' The GHF was conceived by Israelis, is operated by American contractors on the ground, and receives diplomatic and financial support from the US, The New York Times reported. It currently operates four aid distribution sites, mostly in southern Gaza. Huckabee and Steve Witkoff, the US' special envoy to the Middle East, visited a GHF site in the enclave last week. Huckabee's comments are viewed as a response to mounting criticism of Israel's war and humanitarian strategy for Gaza. Aid groups have warned that the enclave is in the grip of a rapidly worsening hunger crisis, with Palestinians confronting famine levels of food insecurity. The World Food Programme, a UN body, has said that the humanitarian crisis in Gaza has reached 'new and astonishing levels of desperation, with one-third of the population not eating for multiple days in a row.' Observers widely viewed the launch of the GHF as an Israeli attempt to supersede Gaza's existing humanitarian network, which was largely run by the UN. The foundation has been severely criticized by the UN and has faced a boycott, after UN officials said its methods violated humanitarian law. Hundreds of Palestinians seeking food have been shot dead near GHF sites since the foundation began operations in May, health workers in the enclave have said. Israeli forces are stationed close to the sites, and the country's military said its troops had fired 'warning shots' toward crowds of desperate Palestinians. Huckabee said: 'The president has been telling us he wants food into the hands of hungry people, but he wants it in a way that it doesn't get into the hands of Hamas. That's exactly what we did when we stood up GHF.' He added that the foundation coordinated with the Israeli military but was not under its control, and that its results were 'pretty phenomenal.'