
Critical risk of famine for entire Gaza population, monitor says
The entire population of Gaza faces a critical risk of famine, with half a million of them facing starvation, a global hunger monitor has said, calling this a major deterioration since its last report in October.
The latest assessment by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) analysed a period from 1 April to 10 May this year and projected the situation until the end of September, according to a summary of its key findings.
Israel has sealed off Gaza since early March when it resumed its devastating military campaign against militant group Hamas following the collapse of a ceasefire deal, during which aid agencies had delivered thousands of trucks of aid.
The IPC analysis found that 1.95 million people, or 93% of the population in the Israeli-blockaded Palestinian enclave, are living through high levels of acute food insecurity, including 244,000 experiencing the most severe, or "catastrophic", levels.
IPC's October analysis had said 133,000 people were in the "catastrophic" category.
The IPC analysis projected that 470,000 people, or 22% of the population, would fall into the catastrophic category by the end of September, with over a million more at "emergency" levels.
"Urgent action is needed to save lives and avert further starvation, further deaths and a descent into famine," it said.
Israeli officials have said they do not believe Gaza faces a hunger crisis, that enough aid has entered to sustain the enclave's population, and that they want to stop supplies coming under the control of Hamas.
The IPC, in a brief accompanying its latest analysis, said a plan announced on 5 May by Israeli authorities for delivering aid was "estimated to be highly insufficient to meet the population's essential needs".
"The proposed distribution mechanisms are likely to create significant access barriers for large segments of the population," it added.
IPC analyses are produced with contributions from U.N. agencies and NGOs.
The warning of famine in Gaza comes as Israeli attacks continued.
At least 15 people sheltering in a school housing displaced families in Jabalia in the north of the enclave were killed in Israeli attacks overnight, local health authorities said, while at least 12 people were killed in Israeli attacks yesterday.
'Children of Gaza are starving' - UNRWA
Israel has enforced a complete blockade on Gaza since 2 March leaving its 2.3 million population depending on aid supplies that have been dwindling rapidly.
Director of Communications with the UN Agency for Palestinian Refugees Juliette Touma said the children of Gaza are starving as the Israeli blockade of aid entered its ninth week.
Speaking on RTÉ's Morning Ireland, Ms Touma said that all aid UNRWA brings into Gaza is delivered directly to those that need it and allegations of Hamas stealing the aid is just a claim.
"When it comes to UNWRA, we bring aid and we deliver it directly to people in need. We have a system in place that also looks at any reports of aid diversion.
"If we get reports of aid diversion, we will look into them and launch investigations. I really encourage the international media to do much, much more to get into Gaza, to look into these claims."
UNICEF warned that Gaza's children face 'a growing risk of starvation'
Ms Touma said: "What needs to happen right now is for the siege to be lifted for the aid to flow in. People in Gaza have been for more than 18 years dependent on aid coming from outside."
She said she hopes that the release of a US hostage being held by Hamas will lead to aid being allowed into the area.
The Red Cross said last week that its humanitarian response is on the verge of collapse in Gaza while its director-general said that governments must act now to stop the horrors in Gaza.
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Irish Examiner
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Although Israel targeted the periphery of the hospital site, leaving the hospital buildings standing, al-Hams said the strikes had wounded 10 people within the compound, damaged its water and sewage systems and dislodged part of its roof. The attack killed 23 people in buildings beyond its perimeter, he said, 17 more than were reported on the day. The tremors caused by the strikes were like an 'earthquake,' al-Hams said. Al-Hams said he had been unaware of any tunnels beneath the hospital. Even if they were there, he said, it does not justify the attack. 'Israel should have found other ways to eliminate any wanted commander. There were a thousand other ways to do it.' The journey to the hospital revealed much about the current dynamics of the war in Gaza. In a roughly 20-minute ride from the Israeli border, we saw no Palestinians – the result of Israel's decision to order the residents of southern Gaza to abandon their homes and head west to the sea. Many buildings were simply piles of rubble, destroyed either by Israeli strikes and demolitions or Hamas' booby traps. Here and there, some buildings survived, more or less intact; on one balcony, someone had left a tidy line of potted cactuses. We drove in open-top 4x4s, a sign that across this part of southeastern Gaza, the Israeli military no longer fears being ambushed by Hamas fighters. Until at least the Salah al-Din highway, the territory's main north-south artery, the Israeli military seemed to be in complete command after the expansion of its ground campaign in March. The European Gaza Hospital and the tunnel beneath it are among the places that now appear to be exclusively under Israeli control. Under the laws of war, a medical facility is considered a protected site that can be attacked only in very rare cases. If one side uses the site for military purposes, that may make it a legitimate target, but only if the risk to civilians is proportional to the military advantage created by the attack. The Israeli military said it had tried to limit harm to civilians by striking only around the edges of the hospital compound. But international legal experts said that any assessment of the strike's legality needed also to take into account its effect on the wider health system in southern Gaza. In a territory where many hospitals are already not operational, experts said, it is harder to find legal justification for strikes that put the remaining hospitals out of service, even if militants hide beneath them. When we entered the tunnel Sunday, we found it almost entirely intact. The crammed room where Sinwar and four fellow militants were said to have died was stained with blood, but its walls appeared undamaged. The mattresses, clothes and bedsheets did not appear to have been dislodged by the explosions, and an Israeli rifle – stolen earlier in the war, the soldiers said – dangled from a hook in the corner. It was not immediately clear how Sinwar was killed, and Defrin said he could not provide a definitive answer. He suggested that Sinwar and his allies may have suffocated in the aftermath of the strikes or been knocked over by a shock wave unleashed by explosions. If Sinwar was intentionally poisoned by gases released by such explosions, it would raise legal questions, experts on international law said. 'It would be an unlawful use of a conventional bomb – a generally lawful weapon – if the intent is to kill with the asphyxiating gases released by that bomb,' said Sarah Harrison, a former lawyer at the US Defence Department and an analyst at the International Crisis Group. Defrin denied any such intent. 'This is something that I have to emphasise here, as a Jew first and then as a human being: We don't use gas as weapons,' he said. In other tunnels discovered by the Israeli military, soldiers have used Palestinians as human shields, sending them on ahead to scour for traps. Defrin denied the practice. The tunnel was excavated by Israelis, he said. This article originally appeared in The New York Times .