
Israeli fire mows down starving Palestinians in Gaza as hunger deaths surge
Dozens more Palestinians have been wounded, according to health officials.
In northern Gaza, at least 67 people were killed near the Zikim crossing when an Israeli strike hit crowds gathering for aid. Another six people were killed near a separate distribution site in the south. The day before, 36 Palestinians were killed in similar circumstances.
The death toll brings the total number of people killed while trying to access food relief to more than 900 since May.
Ahmed Hassouna, who attempted to collect food from an aid site of the United States-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), described the moment Israeli forces opened fire.
'There was a young man with me, and they started firing gas at us. They killed us with the gas. We barely made it out to catch a breath,' he told Al Jazeera.
Another man, Rizeq Betaar, carried a wounded elderly man away from the gunfire.
'We were the ones who carried him on the bicycle… There are no ambulances, no food, no life, no way to live any more. We're barely hanging on. May God relieve us,' he said.
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) said a convoy of 25 trucks carrying aid came under gunfire shortly after entering Gaza.
'WFP reiterates that any violence involving civilians seeking humanitarian aid is completely unacceptable,' the agency said in a statement.
Israel's military said its forces fired 'warning shots' at what it called 'an immediate threat', but denied deliberately targeting aid convoys.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) warned on Sunday the situation in Gaza has reached 'catastrophic' levels, with children 'wasting away' and some dying before aid reaches them.
'People are risking their lives just to find food,' OCHA said, calling the conditions 'unconscionable'.
The US-based Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) also denounced Israel's continuous attacks on aid seekers.
'The escalating massacres of starving Palestinian women, children and men murdered with US-supplied weapons and with the complicity of our government as they desperately search for food to feed their families is not only a human tragedy, it is also an indictment of a Western political order that has enabled this genocide through inaction and indifference,' said Nihad Awad, CAIR's national executive director, in a statement.
'Western governments cannot claim ignorance. They are watching in real time as innocent civilians are intentionally starved, forcibly displaced, and slaughtered – and are choosing to do nothing. History will long remember the Western world's indifference to the forced starvation, ethnic cleansing and genocide in Gaza.'
Man-made starvation
Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, said staff in Gaza are sending desperate messages about the lack of food.
'All man-made, in total impunity. Food is available only a few kilometres away,' he wrote on X, adding that UNRWA has enough supplies at the border to feed Gaza for three months. But Israel has been blocking aid since March 2.
Dr Mohammed Abu Afash, the director of the Palestinian Medical Relief Society in Gaza, told Al Jazeera women and children are collapsing from hunger.
'We are heading into the unknown. Malnutrition among children has reached its highest levels,' he said, warning of a looming disaster if aid is not allowed in immediately.
Gaza's Ministry of Health echoed that warning, saying hundreds of Palestinians suffering from malnutrition and dehydration could soon die.
'We warn that hundreds of people whose bodies have wasted away are at risk of imminent death due to hunger,' a spokesperson said.
Palestinian families say basic staples such as flour are impossible to find. The ministry said at least 71 children have died of malnutrition since the war began in 2023, while 60,000 others show signs of severe undernourishment.
On Sunday alone, it reported 18 deaths linked to hunger.
Food prices have soared beyond the reach of most people in Gaza, where 2.3 million are struggling to survive under siege conditions implemented by Israel.
Al Jazeera's Hind Khoudary, reporting from central Gaza, said a 35-day-old baby in Gaza City and a four-month-old child in Deir el-Balah had died of malnutrition at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital.
'The mother was touching her body, saying, 'I am sorry I could not feed you,'' Khoudary said.
'Parents go to the GHF distribution sites to risk getting killed or leave their children starving. We met a mother who is giving her children water just to fill their stomachs. She can't afford flour – and when she could, she couldn't find it.'
More forced evacuations
Meanwhile, more Palestinians are being forced to flee. After Israel dropped leaflets containing evacuation threats over neighbourhoods in Deir el-Balah, residents reported air attacks on three homes in the area, prompting families to leave with what little they could carry.
Israel's military said it had not yet entered those districts but promised to continue targeting what it called 'terrorist infrastructure'.
Reporting from Deir el-Balah, Al Jazeera's Hani Mahmoud said: 'We are face to face with another misleading evacuation order. People are told to move to al-Mawasi, a so-called safe zone, but since day one, Palestinians have been killed there.
'This is not a safe zone. There is no safe zone in a war zone. Palestinians know that walking into al-Mawasi is like walking into a death trap – they'll be killed in days, hours, or even minutes.'
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