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Gaza Today: Under Debris And In Darkness

Gaza Today: Under Debris And In Darkness

In 21 months of war in Gaza, the destruction and damage of 70 percent of buildings has buried the Palestinian territory under millions of tonnes of debris and plunged it into darkness, according to data from the UN and NASA analysed by AFP.
The Israeli army has relentlessly pounded the densely populated territory of 365 square kilometres (141 square miles) in retaliation for Hamas's 2023 attack, which sparked the war and resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people on the Israeli side, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
The Israeli military's campaign in Gaza has killed 59,219 people, mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory.
The material damage has also been devastating: as of April 4, 2025, the Israeli campaign had destroyed 174,500 buildings, according to UNOSAT, the UN's satellite analysis service.
The debris from this destruction is estimated by UNOSAT at 53.5 million tonnes, approximately 10 times the weight of the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt.
On average, this amounts to nearly 146 kilograms of rubble for each square metre of land, according to the UN agency.
Prior to the start of the war, there were buildings destroyed by Israel in Gaza.
But since October 2023, the destruction represents a mass 18 times greater than all the debris from buildings hit by Israel over the previous 15 years.
According to a publication by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) in early July, this mass of debris contains toxic materials likely to expose the Gaza population to health risks.
The agency estimates 3.7 tonnes of asbestos from the debris of old buildings and 2.6 tonnes of toxic waste in the debris of former industrial structures.
Several refugee camps, such as those in Jabalia, Nuseirat, Maghazi, Khan Yunis and Rafah are located in close proximity to "debris potentially contaminated with asbestos", according to UNEP.
Medical facilities have also suffered extensive damage during bombardments by Israel, which accuses Hamas fighters of using hospitals as shelters or bases to launch attacks.
As of June 30, only 18 of the territory's 36 hospitals were "partially" operational, according to the UN.
Of 163 healthcare facilities, just 63 (less than 40 percent) were suitable for providing care.
School buildings, which have been turned into shelters for the displaced, have also faced heavy damage, with the army accusing Hamas of using them to hide fighters.
As of April 1, UNICEF had recorded damage to 501 of the 564 schools it documented, equivalent to nearly 9 out of 10.
Of these, 95 were damaged, potentially severely, and 406 were directly hit.
Before the conflict, the Gaza Strip was supplied with mains electricity for an average of 12 hours per day, according to figures from the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
But in 2024, the power grid was unavailable throughout the day.
The territory's only power plant stopped functioning in the early days of the conflict for want of fuel, and the power lines coming from Israel were cut.
Together, these two sources had met 43 percent of Gaza's electricity needs before the conflict, leaving the remaining demand unfulfilled.
At night, the territory is plunged into darkness. AFP analysed data from NASA's BlackMarble project, which measures radiance (the power of light emission) at the Earth's surface.
On average, from January to May 2025, the night-time radiance in the Gaza Strip was reduced by a factor of 7 compared to the five months prior to the start of the conflict (May to September 2023). For Gaza City, it was 16 times lower.
Only one area maintained a brightness level comparable to that of the pre-war period: the Philadelphi Corridor, a strip of land on the Gaza side of the border with Egypt which is entirely controlled by the Israeli military. The Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza after Israeli air strikes on March 23, 2025 AFP
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Middle East: Aid trucks begin entering Gaza from Egypt – DW – 07/27/2025
Middle East: Aid trucks begin entering Gaza from Egypt – DW – 07/27/2025

DW

time8 hours ago

  • DW

Middle East: Aid trucks begin entering Gaza from Egypt – DW – 07/27/2025

The first aid trucks have arrived in the Palestinian territory to help ease a worsening humanitarian crisis. Israel has announced a pause in the fighting in some areas to help food distribution. DW has the latest. Aid trucks have begun entering Gaza from Egypt, Egyptian state-linked media reported, hours after Israel bowed to mounting pressure to ease the humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian territory. "Egyptian aid trucks begin to enter the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing," Al-Qahera News posted on X, alongside footage of convoys moving in the border area. Israel said Saturday it had begun airdrops of aid after months of accusations that it was restricting aid supplies to the war-devastated territory. On Sunday, the Israeli military said "humanitarian corridors" would allow United Nations aid trucks to deliver food and other vital supplies to Gaza residents. The military also promised "humanitarian pauses" in the fighting in densely populated areas. Aid organizations warned last week of mass hunger among Gaza's population, despite Israeli denials that it was restricting food deliveries. Dozens of Palestinians have died of malnutrition in the past few weeks, according to the Gaza Health Ministry in the Hamas-run enclave. Israel cut off all supplies to Gaza in March, before resuming them in May with new restrictions. Israel's military said Sunday it would begin a "tactical pause" in fighting in three areas of Gaza to help aid agencies deliver food and other supplies. The decision follows huge international pressure on Israel to ease the humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian enclave. Experts have warned of a famine in Gaza due to Israel's curbs on aid supplies. Several hundred Palestinians have been killed in recent weeks while trying to reach food distribution sites. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video The pause will take place daily in Al-Mawasi, Deir al-Balah and Gaza City, from 10 a.m. local time (0700 GMT/UTC) to 8 p.m. (1700 GMT/UTC) until further notice, the military said. Israel also said its military was not active in those areas, but there had been fighting and strikes in recent weeks. The statement added that Israel would designate secure routes to help aid agencies make vital deliveries to people across Gaza. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it had airdropped humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip. "The IDF recently carried out an airdrop of humanitarian aid as part of the ongoing efforts to allow and facilitate the entry of aid into the Gaza Strip," the military posted on Telegram in the early hours of Sunday morning. The drop included seven crates of aid containing flour, sugar and canned food, it added. Footage provided by the IDF showed white parachutes opening from the crates as they were dropped from a plane into the darkness over Gaza. In a statement posted on X late Saturday, the Israeli Foreign Ministry announced that it would "apply a 'humanitarian pause' in civilian centers and in humanitarian corridors to enable the distribution of aid supply" in Gaza. The Foreign Ministry again blamed the United Nations for failing to distribute assistance in the Strip. It added that "Israel rejects the false accusations of 'starvation' propaganda initiated by Hamas." UN officials have rejected responsibility for the failure to deliver aid to Palestinians in Gaza, saying aid workers have not received the permissions necessary to provide food, water and other humanitarian aid safely. The pro-Palestinian activist group Freedom Flotilla said Saturday that Israeli forces had intercepted its latest Gaza-bound aid boat, theHandala. "The Israeli army is here. We are throwing our phones into the sea. See you soon. Stop the genocide," Emma Fourreau, a French member of the European Parliament and part of the Handala crew, posted on X. A livestream broadcast by the group showed the activists sitting on deck with their hands up as Israeli soldiers boarded the boat. The Handala had already sailed closer to Gaza than the group's previous vessel, the Madleen, which was intercepted by Israeli forces last month. At the start of the ongoing war, Israel tightened it maritime blockade of the Palestinian territory, which went into place when Hamas took control of Gaza in Israeli military announced that airdrops of aid to Gaza would resume and that humanitarian corridors would be established for United Nations convoys. "The airdrops will include seven pallets of aid containing flour, sugar, and canned food to be provided by international organizations," it said in a statement. The military's statement did not specify when the humanitarian corridors would open or where. It said that the military "emphasizes that combat operations have not ceased" in Gaza against Hamas. The statement also added that there is "no starvation" in the territory. International health and aid organizations have repeatedly raised concerns about the dire conditions and severe shortage of essential supplies in Gaza during the 21-month conflict. Experts have also criticized airdrops of aid as vastly insufficient for the some 2 million Palestinians in Gaza in desperate need of food, water, medicine and other supplies. Before the start of the war in Gaza, 500 truckloads of goods crossed into the Palestinian territory each day, according to the United Nations The Emirati foreign minister said on Saturday that the United Arab Emirates will resume airdrops to deliver aid to Gaza at once. "The humanitarian situation in Gaza has reached a critical and unprecedented level," Emirati Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan posted on X. "We will ensure essential aid reaches those most in need, whether through land, air or sea. Airdrops are resuming once more, immediately." His remarks follow Israel's announcement on Friday that it would allow airdrops of aid by foreign countries into Gaza to alleviate starvation in the Palestinian territory. The relatives of 50 hostages still in Gaza are growing more frustrated. Some are losing faith that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will ever strike a deal to bring them home. DW's Tania Krämer met Yehuda Cohen in front of the Likud party's Tel Aviv headquarters at a sit-in organized by families of hostages held by Hamas in Gaza. His son, Nimrod, has been held captive for 22 months. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video The United Kingdom is working with Middle Eastern allies including Jordan on plans to airdrop aid into the Gaza Strip and evacuate children in need of medical care, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer's office said on Saturday. "The prime minister set out how the UK will be taking forward plans to work with partners such as Jordan to airdrop aid and evacuate children requiring medical assistance," read a statement after Starmer held a three-way phone call with French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. During the conversation, the three leaders agreed that the humanitarian situation in Gaza was "appalling" and that it would be "vital to ensure robust plans are in place to turn an urgently needed ceasefire into lasting peace," according to the Downing Street readout. "They discussed their intention to work closely together on a plan ... which would pave the way to a long-term solution and security in the region," it continued. "They agreed that once this plan was worked up, they would seek to bring in other key partners, including in the region, to advance it." In Berlin, Chancellor Merz's office spoke of "large agreement" on the call – despite Germany so far refusing to criticize Israel to the extent that the UK and France have done, with the latter even set to officially recognize Palestinian statehood later this year. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video "We will be coordinating very closely in the coming days to take the next steps," said Merz. The phone call came a day after United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres slammed the international community for turning a blind eye to widespread starvation in the Gaza Strip, calling it a "moral crisis that challenges the global conscience." For the first time in months, Israel said it is allowing airdrops, requested by neighboring Jordan. An official in Amman said the airdrops will mainly be food and milk formula. But the head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA), Philippe Lazzarini, warned on social media that airdrops are "expensive, inefficient and can even kill starving civilians" and won't reverse the increasing starvation or prevent aid diversion. "A man-made hunger can only be addressed by political will," he said, demanding: "Lift the siege, open the gates and guarantee safe movements and dignified access to people in need." To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Some 40 people died while trying to access humanitarian aid, including 16 who were shot by Israeli forces, in the Gaza Strip on Saturday, according to local Palestinian authorities and medics. Doctors at the Shifa Hospital in Gaza City said that 16 people were killed and another 300 injured near the northern Zikim border crossing waiting for trucks carrying aid. One witness told the AFP news agency that Israeli troops opened fire "while the people were waiting to approach the distribution point." The Israeli military told AFP that its troops fired "warning shots to distance the crowd" after identifying an unspecified "immediate threat." Elsewhere, Gaza's Hamas-run civil defense agency said nine people were killed in three separate Israeli air strikes in Gaza City, eleven in four separate strikes near the southern city of Khan Yunis and two in a drone strike in Nuseirat refugee camp. The Palestinian militant group Hamas expressed surprise on Saturday at suggestions from US President Donald Trump that the group "didn't really want" a ceasefire and hostage release deal for Gaza. Trump made the allegation on Friday after Israel and the United States walked out of indirect negotiations with Hamas in Qatar that had lasted nearly three weeks. "Trump's remarks are particularly surprising, especially as they come at a time when progress had been made on some of the negotiation files," said a spokesman for the Islamist group which launched the deadly attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, which sparked the current conflict. "So far, we have not been informed of any issues regarding the files under discussion in the indirect ceasefire negotiations", he added. Though not part of the Hamas negotiating team, Hamas politburo member Izzat al-Rishq insisted the group had shown "flexibility" in the talks, but Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff accused Hamas of not "acting in good faith." Hello and welcome to DW's coverage of developments in Gaza, Israel and the wider Middle East on Saturday, July 26. In a three-way conversation with his French and German counterparts, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said the United Kingdom was working with regional partners such as Jordan on a plan to airdrop aid into the Gaza Strip. Meanwhile, medics and Hamas officials said that dozens more Palestinians had been killed by Israeli fire, some while waiting for humanitarian aid.

'Famine', 'Starvation': The Challenges In Defining Gaza's Plight
'Famine', 'Starvation': The Challenges In Defining Gaza's Plight

Int'l Business Times

timea day ago

  • Int'l Business Times

'Famine', 'Starvation': The Challenges In Defining Gaza's Plight

The United Nations and NGOs are warning of an imminent famine in the Gaza Strip -- a designation based on strict criteria and scientific evidence. But the difficulty of getting to the most affected areas in the Palestinian territory, besieged by Israel, means there are huge challenges in gathering the required data. The internationally-agreed definition for famine is outlined by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), an initiative of 21 organisations and institutions including UN agencies and aid groups. The IPC definition has three elements. Firstly, at least 20 percent of households must have an extreme lack of food and face starvation or destitution. Second, acute malnutrition in children under five exceeds 30 percent. And third, there is an excess mortality threshold of two in 10,000 people dying per day. Once these criteria are met, governments and UN agencies can declare a famine. Available indicators are alarming regarding the food situation in Gaza. "A large proportion of the population of Gaza is starving", according to the World Health Organization's chief, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. Food deliveries are "far below what is needed for the survival of the population", he said, calling it "man-made... mass starvation". Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said on Friday that a quarter of all young children and pregnant or breastfeeding women screened at its clinics in Gaza last week were malnourished, blaming Israel's "deliberate use of starvation as a weapon". Almost a third of people in Gaza are "not eating for days" and malnutrition is surging, the UN's World Food Programme (WFP) said Friday. The head of Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City on Tuesday said that 21 children had died across the Palestinian territory in the previous 72 hours "due to malnutrition and starvation". The very few foodstuffs in the markets are inaccessible, with a kilogramme (two pounds) of flour reaching the exorbitant price of $100, while the Gaza Strip's agricultural land has been ravaged by the war. According to NGOs, the 20 or so aid trucks that enter the territory each day -- vastly insufficient for more than two million hungry people -- are systematically looted. "It's become a technical point to explain that we're in acute food insecurity, IPC4, which affects almost the entire population. It doesn't resonate with people," said Amande Bazerolle, in charge of MSF's emergency response in Gaza. "Yet we're hurtling towards famine -- that's a certainty." NGOs and the WHO concede that gathering the evidence required for a famine declaration is extremely difficult. "Currently we are unable to conduct the surveys that would allow us to formally classify famine," said Bazerolle. She said it was "impossible" for them to screen children, take their measurements, or assess their weight-to-height ratio. Jean-Raphael Poitou, Middle East programme director for the NGO Action Against Hunger, said the "continuous displacements" of Gazans ordered by the Israeli military, along with restrictions on movement in the most affected regions; "complicate things enormously". Nabil Tabbal, incident manager at the WHO's emergency programme, said there were "challenges regarding data, regarding access to information". For France's foreign ministry, malnutrition and the "risk of famine" is the "result of the blockade imposed by Israel". The Israeli military denies it is blocking humanitarian aid entering Gaza. On Tuesday it claimed that 950 truckloads of aid were inside the Strip waiting for collection and distribution by international organisations. Israeli government spokesman David Mencer insisted there was "no famine caused by Israel. There is a man-made shortage engineered by Hamas." Hamas has consistently denied that. The New York Times on Saturday reported that, according to two senior Israeli military officials and two other Israelis involved, "the Israeli military never found proof" supporting the official Israeli allegation. NGOs have accused Israel of imposing drastic restrictions. More than 100 NGOs -- including MSF, Caritas, Save the Children, Amnesty International, Medecins du Monde, Christian Aid and Oxfam -- have urged Israel to open all land crossings and "restore the full flow of food" into Gaza. A fresh Gaza IPC assessment is due very soon. For some, the technical debates over a famine declaration seem futile given the urgency of the situation. "Any famine declaration... comes too late," explained Jean-Martin Bauer, the WFP's director of food security and nutrition analysis. In Somalia in 2011, when famine was formally declared, half of the total number of victims of the disaster had already died of starvation. Israel launched its military campaign in Gaza after a deadly attack by Palestinian militant group Hamas on October 7, 2023. The Israeli campaign has killed nearly 60,000 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory. Hamas's October 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures. Naeema, a Palestinian mother, carries her malnourished two-year-old son Yazan as they stand in their damaged home in the Al-Shati refugee camp in Gaza City AFP Displaced Palestinians at the Nuseirat refugee camp in Gaza seen hauling hard-to-get food parcels and other items AFP

Israel-Hamas war: Gaza's humanitarian crisis in numbers – DW – 07/25/2025
Israel-Hamas war: Gaza's humanitarian crisis in numbers – DW – 07/25/2025

DW

time2 days ago

  • DW

Israel-Hamas war: Gaza's humanitarian crisis in numbers – DW – 07/25/2025

The situation in the Gaza Strip is catastrophic: scant aid supplies are trickling in while international organizations warn of a famine. Here are the key numbers at a glance. Most of the buildings have been destroyed, hospitals have had to close and food is scarce. The reality in the Gaza Strip is catastrophic. Around 90% of the more than 2 million inhabitants have now fled within the territory, and some have already been forced to move several times. With the latest evacuation order for the city of Deir al-Balah, 87.8% of the Gaza Strip is now under evacuation orders or within the Israeli military's restricted military zones, according to the UN emergency aid office OCHA. The population is now crammed into 12% of the Gaza Strip, it said on Tuesday. International pressure on Israel is growing, with 28 states, including France, the UK and many other Western nations, calling for an end to the war. According to OCHA, 58,380 Palestinians (as of 15 July 2025) have died since the war started in the Gaza Strip in October 2023, including many women and children. OCHA, which is responsible for coordinating humanitarian affairs, cites data from the Health Ministry in Gaza. The ministry is run by Hamas, which Israel, the US, Germany, the EU and other organizations designate as a terrorist organization. The United Nations and Israeli intelligence officials deem the numbers reported by Gaza's health ministry as reliable. Given Israel's ongoing military operation in the small enclave, numbers cannot be independently verified. Several third-party studies have indicated the true death toll could be nearly twice as high. According to a study by an international research team, more than 80,000 Palestinians are said to have been killed by January of this year. The scientific journal reported on the study, which was conducted under the direction of Michael Spagat from Royal Holloway College, University of London, in late June 2025. The scientists worked closely with the research organization The Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research (PCPSR), which is funded by the European Union, among others. PCPSR staff surveyed 2,000 families about deaths within their household and then extrapolated the figures. A study published in the Lancet in January of this year also found that deaths in Gaza were being underreported. For this study, obituaries on social networks were compared with the Health Ministry's lists. The war in Gaza was triggered by a terrorist attack Hamas led on Israel on October 7, 2023. Around 1,200 people were killed, and Hamas abducted 251 people as hostages in the Gaza Strip. According to official Israeli information, 50 people kidnapped from Israel are still being held in the Gaza Strip, at least 20 of whom are believed to be alive. According to the on Tuesday, 895 Israeli army personnel have also died in the war. After almost two years of war, the lack of basic goods entering the Gaza Strip has had dramatic consequences. Many Palestinians are suffering from hunger, often lacking most basic necessities. According to Welthungerhilfe, a German non-profit humanitarian assistance organization, the 25 remaining bakeries had to close at the beginning of April. Most of the 177 community kitchens have also run out of supplies, Welthungerhilfe told DW. Almost one in three people eat nothing for days on end, the UN World Food Program (WFP) told DW. For most of them, food aid is the only way to get any food at all. According to the latest IPC report from May 2025, which many aid organizations also refer to, according to DW research, the entire population of the Gaza Strip is now affected by acute food insecurity (IPC level 3). According to the definition, this means that the choice of food is limited, and people have to work extremely hard to get the calories they need. According to the IPC, 470,000 people in the Gaza Strip are at risk of catastrophic hunger (IPC level 5). This corresponds to acute danger to life due to hunger; there is an extreme lack of calories per person per day. The IPC system (Integrated Food Security Phase Classification) is an internationally recognized instrument for measuring and classifying hunger and food security. Five levels are defined, ranging from phase one, "minimal," to "stressed," "crisis," "emergency," and phase five, "Famine." It is also forecast that more than 71,000 children and an estimated 17,000 mothers will require urgent treatment for acute malnutrition in the coming months. According to UNICEF, the UN's children's humanitarian agency, children are considered to be acutely malnourished if their weight is less than 80% of the appropriate weight for their age. Teams from the aid organization Doctors Without Borders also noted a sharp rise in cases of "acute malnutrition" in mid-July. According to the nongovernmental organization, hundreds of women and children with severe and moderate malnutrition are currently being treated in health centers, and the numbers are clearly on the rise. According to Gaza's Health Ministry, people are dying of hunger every day, most of them children. On Tuesday, for example, 15 people died of starvation. This cannot be verified independently. Providing medical care in Gaza is also becoming increasingly difficult. According to an assessment by the aid organization Doctors Without Borders in July 2025, no hospital is fully functional at the moment. The facilities that are still in operation are completely overburdened. According to the NGO, the conditions for treatment are catastrophic: most hospitals no longer have electricity or running water. The World Health Organization (WHO) reported that 18 out of 36 hospitals were still partially operational at the end of June. Almost 40% of the points of contact for basic medical care — doctors' surgeries, outpatient clinics and aid offered by NGOs — were still operational. The field hospitals are also limited; only two are fully intact. Israel blocked humanitarian supplies to the Gaza Strip for 11 weeks in the spring, aggravating the situation even further. All supplies are increasingly scarce: food, water, medicine and fuel, which is necessary for the operation of hospitals and public community kitchens. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which Israel and the US support, has been distributing food at a few distribution centers since the end of May. However, there have been repeated reports of fatal incidents near the GHF distribution points, including in recent days. For a long time, aid organizations have been pressing to be allowed to resume their provision of relief supplies to the region. In an interview with DW, the World Food Program explained that since the end of the aid blockade on May 21, an average of 20 to 30 WFP trucks with food have reached the Gaza Strip every day. The amount delivered is only a small fraction of what the more than 2 million people in the Gaza Strip need to survive. During the ceasefire, 600 to 700 trucks crossed the border every day.

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