logo
Gaza's main hospital is overwhelmed with children in pain from malnutrition

Gaza's main hospital is overwhelmed with children in pain from malnutrition

KHAN YUNIS, Gaza Strip — Grabbing her daughter's feeble arm, Asmaa al-Arja pulls a shirt over the 2-year-old's protruding ribs and swollen belly. The child lies on a hospital bed, heaving, then wails uncontrollably, throwing her arms around her own shoulders as if to console herself.
This isn't the first time Mayar has been in a Gaza hospital battling malnutrition, yet this 17-day stint is the longest. She has celiac disease, an autoimmune disorder that means she can't eat gluten and requires special food. But there's little left for her to eat in the embattled enclave after 19 months of war and Israel's punishing blockade, and she can't digest what's available.
'She needs diapers, soy milk and she needs special food. This is not available because of border closures. If it's available, it is expensive, I can't afford it,' her mother said as she sat next to Mayar at Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis.
Mayar is among the more than 9,000 children in Gaza who have been treated for malnutrition this year, according to the United Nations Children's Fund, widely known as UNICEF. Food security experts say tens of thousands of cases are expected in the coming year.
Experts also warn the territory could plunge into famine if Israel doesn't stop its military campaign and fully lift its blockade — but the World Health Organization said last week that people are already starving.
'Everywhere you look, people are hungry. ... They point their fingers to their mouths showing that (they) need something to eat,' said Nestor Owomuhangi, the representative of the United Nations Population Fund for the Palestinian territories. 'The worst has already arrived in Gaza.'
For more than two months, Israel has banned all food, medicine and other goods from entering the territory that is home to some 2 million Palestinians, as it carries out waves of airstrikes and ground operations. Palestinians in Gaza rely almost entirely on outside aid to survive because Israel's offensive has destroyed almost all the territory's food production capabilities.
After weeks of insisting Gaza had enough food, Israel relented in the face of international pressure and began allowing dozens of humanitarian trucks into the territory this week — including some carrying baby food.
'Children are already dying from malnutrition and there are more babies in Gaza now who will be in mortal danger if they don't get fast access to the nutrition supplies needed to save their lives,' said Tess Ingram of the U.N. children's agency.
But U.N. agencies say the amount is woefully insufficient, compared to around 600 trucks a day that entered during a recent ceasefire and that are necessary to meet basic needs. And they have struggled to retrieve the aid and distribute it, blaming complicated Israeli military procedures and the breakdown of law and order inside the territory.
On Wednesday, a U.N. official said more than a dozen trucks arrived at warehouses in central Gaza. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the press. That appeared to be the first aid to actually reach a distribution point since the blockade was lifted.
Israel accuses Hamas of siphoning off aid, without providing evidence, and plans to roll out a new aid distribution system within days. U.N. agencies and aid groups say the new system would fall far short of mounting needs, force much of the population to flee again in order to be closer to distribution sites, and violate humanitarian principles by forcing people to move to receive the aid rather than delivering it based on need to where people live.
On top of not being able to find or afford the food that Mayar needs, her mother said chronic diarrhea linked to celiac disease has kept the child in and out of hospital all year. The toddler — whose two pigtails are brittle, a sign of malnutrition — weighs 15 pounds, according to doctors. That's about half what healthy girl her age should.
But it's getting harder to help her as supplies like baby formula are disappearing, say health staff.
Hospitals are hanging by a thread, dealing with mass casualties from Israeli strikes. Packed hospital feeding centers are overwhelmed with patients.
'We have nothing at Nasser Hospital,' said Dr. Ahmed al-Farrah, who said his emergency center for malnourished children is at full capacity. Supplies are running out, people are living off scraps, and the situation is catastrophic for babies and pregnant women, he said.
In the feeding center of the hospital, malnourished mothers console their hungry children — some so frail their spines jut out of their skin, their legs swollen from lack food.
The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, a leading international authority on the severity of hunger crises, has warned that there could be some 71,000 cases of malnourished children between now and March. In addition, nearly 17,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women will need treatment for acute malnutrition in the coming months.
Mai Namleh and her 18-month-old son, who live in a tent, are both malnourished. She wanted to wean him off of breastmilk because she barely has any, but she has so little else to give him.
She gives him heavily watered-down formula to ration it, and sometimes offers him starch to quiet his hunger screams. 'I try to pass it for milk to stop him screaming,' she said of the formula.
An aid group gave her around 30 packets of nutritional supplements, but they ran out in two days as she shared them with family and friends, she said.
In another tent, Nouf al-Arja says she paid a fortune for a hard-to-find approximately 2 pounds of red lentils. The family cooks it with a lot of water so it lasts, unsure what they will eat next. The mother of four has lost 50 pounds and struggles to focus, saying she constantly feels dizzy.
Both she and her 3-year-old daughter are malnourished, doctors said. She's worried her baby boy, born four months earlier and massively underweight, will suffer the same fate as she struggles to breastfeed.
'I keep looking for (infant food) .... so I can feed him. There is nothing,' she said.
Jahjouh, Shurafa, El Deeb and Mednick write for the Associated Press. El Deeb reported from Beirut and Mednick from Tel Aviv.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dozens of Israeli children develop malignant tumors from sperm donor
Dozens of Israeli children develop malignant tumors from sperm donor

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Dozens of Israeli children develop malignant tumors from sperm donor

The Health Ministry issued an unusual warning following the discovery of a sperm donor who carried a rare syndrome that increases the risk of many types of cancer in offspring. The Health Ministry issued an unusual statement Wednesday regarding a sperm donor who carried a rare genetic mutation that increases the risk of cancer among offspring. The ministry urged offspring in their forties and fifties who were born from sperm donations in private clinics in the central region to go directly to one of the genetic institutes across the country for testing as soon as possible. The case began several months ago when the family of a deceased sperm donor informed the Health Ministry that he had Lynch syndrome, a condition that increases the risk of developing various cancers, including colon, uterus, stomach, ovaries, and other organs. The deceased had donated sperm at private fertility clinics in central Israel between 1974 and 1985, before regulated sperm banks were established. It's unknown how many children were born from his donations, but the Health Ministry estimates it could be dozens, or even over a hundred. The offspring themselves do not know who the sperm donor is, but it is known that he donated only at private clinics in the central region. According to the Health Ministry, the risk of carrying the mutation among children born from these sperm samples is 50 percent. For carriers, there is now a structured medical surveillance program designed to detect cancer at an early stage and thereby save lives. The Health Ministry called on women and families who received sperm donations during those years in private clinics in the central region to inform their offspring and recommend that they contact one of the 10 genetic institutes across the country directly to check for the mutation. No referral from a doctor is needed, and one can approach directly. The test is not covered by insurance and costs 633 shekels. Those who are found to be carriers will be eligible for full medical treatment, including early detection tests. Prof. Talia Eldar-Geva, head of the Fertility and Reproduction Department at the Health Ministry, said: 'We are aware of the complexity of the situation, especially given that some families who received sperm donations 40-50 years ago may have hidden the fact from their offspring, and may now decide to reveal the 'secret' only because of this incident. But since detecting the carrier status and then performing all the early detection tests can lead to early diagnosis, early treatment, reduced risk of illness, and sometimes even save lives — the Health Ministry feels obligated to address this case.' The Israeli case joins a series of troubling incidents reported in recent years in Europe and the United States, where sperm donors carried rare genetic mutations that were passed on to their offspring, sometimes without them ever knowing. For example, at the recent European Genetics Conference in Milan, a case was presented of a sperm donor from Europe found to be a carrier of Li-Fraumeni syndrome — a very serious genetic condition that causes a high risk of early-onset cancers, including leukemia, breast cancer, and brain cancer. That donor fathered at least 67 children in eight different countries, ten of whom have already been diagnosed with cancer. The mutation in that case affects the TP53 gene, known as the 'guardian of the genome' due to its role in repairing DNA damage. At the time of donation in the early 2000s, the mutation was not yet recognized as a clear risk factor. But today, with advances in genetic testing, it has been identified as a particularly dangerous mutation, and the lab in France that received the samples determined unequivocally that it is cancer-causing. As a result, all the offspring were referred for genetic testing and regular medical supervision. Ten of them have already been diagnosed with cancer, and 23 others were found to be carriers of the mutation. Medical recommendations include regular MRI scans, breast and abdominal checks, and sometimes even periodic blood tests. Sign up for the Health & Wellness newsletter >>

Gaza is ‘hungriest place on Earth' with all its people at risk of famine, says UN
Gaza is ‘hungriest place on Earth' with all its people at risk of famine, says UN

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Gaza is ‘hungriest place on Earth' with all its people at risk of famine, says UN

Gaza is 'the hungriest place on Earth', according to the UN, which has warned that the Palestinian territory's entire population is at risk of famine. Jens Laerke, a spokesperson for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said the territory was 'the only defined area – a country or defined territory within a country – where you have the entire population at risk of famine. One hundred per cent of the population at risk of famine,' he said on Friday. 'Gaza is the hungriest place on Earth.' Laerke detailed the difficulties faced by the UN in delivering humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip. Nine hundred trucks of humanitarian aid had been authorised by Israel to enter the strip since the blockade was partially lifted, but so far only 600 had been off-loaded on the Gaza side of the border, and a smaller number of shipments had then been picked up for distribution within the territory because of security considerations, he said. Laerke said the mission to deliver aid was 'in an operational straitjacket that makes it one of the most obstructed aid operations not only in the world today, but in recent history'. Once truckloads entered Gaza, they were often 'swarmed by desperate people', he said. Daniel Meron, Israel's UN ambassador, rejected the claim, saying UN agencies 'cherrypick the facts to paint an alternative version of reality and demonise Israel'. 'In a desperate effort to remain relevant, they lambast the best efforts of Israel and its partners to facilitate delivery of humanitarian aid to the civilian population. UN feeds Hamas, we make sure aid gets to those in need,' he wrote on X. In a reflection of the increasingly dire conditions inside the territory, a UN spokesperson said late on Friday that 'armed individuals' had raided a warehouse at a field hospital in Deir al-Balah, 'looting large quantities of medical equipment, supplies, medicines, nutritional supplements that was intended for malnourished children'. Hamas said on Friday it was 'thoroughly reviewing' Israel's response to a US proposal for a Gaza ceasefire deal, although one of the militant group's officials said the plan did not meet any of the Palestinians' 'just and legitimate demands'. Related: One afternoon in Gaza, two family tragedies: the childhoods cut short by Israeli airstrikes Hamas has described the latest proposal as more biased in favour of Israel than previous versions. It said it was consulting other 'Palestinian factions', a term referring to other groups operating under Hamas's rule in Gaza, such as Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Late on Thursday, Benjamin Netanyahu told the families of hostages held in Gaza that Israel had accepted the draft deal presented by Steve Witkoff, Donald Trump's Middle East envoy. Deep differences between Hamas and Israel have stymied previous attempts to restore a ceasefire that broke down in March after only two months when Israel renewed its offensive. Israel has insisted that Hamas disarm completely and be dismantled as a military and governing force, and that all 58 hostages still held in Gaza be returned before it will agree to end the war. The Israeli government fears a lasting ceasefire and withdrawal would leave Hamas with significant influence in Gaza, even if it surrenders formal power. The Israelis are concerned that with time Hamas may be able to rebuild its military might and eventually launch more 7 October-style attacks. On the other hand, Hamas fears Israel could break the ceasefire again and resume the war, which the Israeli government would be permitted to do after 60 days under the deal. The militant group has rejected the demand to give up its weapons and says Israel must pull its troops out of Gaza and commit to ending the war. Netanyahu also faces political constraints: his far-right coalition partners have threatened to bring down his government if he ends the war too soon. That would leave the prime minister more vulnerable to prosecution on longstanding corruption charges and to investigations into the failures surrounding the Hamas attack in 2023. The far-right security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, said on Friday it was time to use 'full force' in Gaza. 'Mr Prime Minister, after Hamas rejected the deal proposal again – there are no more excuses,' Ben-Gvir said on his Telegram channel. 'The confusion, the shuffling and the weakness must end. We have already missed too many opportunities. It is time to go in with full force, without blinking, to destroy, and kill Hamas to the last one.' The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a private logistics group backed by the US and endorsed by Israel, expanded its food distribution to a third site on Thursday. Heavily criticised by the UN and other aid groups as inadequate and flawed, the group's operation began this week in Gaza after Israel's 11-week blockade on aid entering the territory. Laerke said that by having people collect aid rather than delivering it to them where they are, they become a target for looters once they leave the site. 'It is so desperate and tragic and frustrating, and wildly unhumanitarian,' he said. The launch was marred by tumultuous scenes on Tuesday when Israeli troops opened fire on a large crowd, killing at least one civilian and injuring dozens. The chaotic start to the operation has raised international pressure on Israel to get more food in and halt the fighting in Gaza. GHF says it has so far supplied about 1.8m meals, and plans to open more sites in the coming weeks. Netanyahu has faced growing criticism from key international allies in recent days. The French president, Emmanuel Macron, said on Friday that abandoning war-torn Gaza to its fate and giving Israel a 'free pass' would kill the west's credibility with the rest of the world. 'If we abandon Gaza, if we consider there is a free pass for Israel, even if we do condemn the terrorist attacks, we will kill our credibility,' Macron told a top defence forum in Singapore, adding: 'And this is why we do reject double standard.' Israel responded by accusing the French president of undertaking a 'crusade against the Jewish state'. 'There is no humanitarian blockade. That is a blatant lie,' Israel's foreign ministry said in a statement, defending its efforts to allow in aid. 'But instead of applying pressure on the jihadist terrorists, Macron wants to reward them with a Palestinian state. No doubt its national day will be October 7.' Macron said recognition of a Palestinian state with conditions was 'not only a moral duty, but a political necessity'. A 'hardened stance' would mean dropping an assumption that human rights were being respected, and applying sanctions, he said. Israeli jets continued to pound Gaza on Friday, killing at least 14 people in Jabaliya refugee camp, according to medics who received the bodies at al-Shifa hospital in northern Gaza. The previous day, Israeli strikes killed 45 people, including 23 in the Bureij camp in central Gaza Strip, Palestinian medical workers said. Israel launched its campaign in Gaza in response to the devastating Hamas attack in southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which 1,200 people were killed and 251 hostages taken into Gaza, according to Israeli tallies. The campaign has killed more than 54,000 Palestinians, Gaza health officials say, and left the territory in ruins.

At least 27 Palestinians killed by Israeli fire at food point, Gaza officials say
At least 27 Palestinians killed by Israeli fire at food point, Gaza officials say

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

At least 27 Palestinians killed by Israeli fire at food point, Gaza officials say

At least 27 people were killed by Israeli fire as they waited for food at a distribution point set up by an Israeli-backed foundation in Gaza, according to health officials in the strip. It is the third such incident in three days, with Israel admitting on Tuesday for the first time that its forces shot at individuals who were moving towards them. The Gaza civil defence spokesperson Mahmoud Bassal told Agence France-Presse: 'Israeli forces opened fire with tanks and drones on thousands of civilians who had gathered since dawn near the al-Alam roundabout in the al-Mawasi area, north-west of Rafah.' It is the same site where on Sunday more than 30 Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire while they were heading to the distribution hub. Gaza's health ministry said 27 people were killed early on Tuesday. Hamas-affiliated media also carried the reports. The United Nations' human rights chief, Volker Türk, described the 'deadly attacks' on civilians around food distribution as a war crime. 'Deadly attacks on distraught civilians trying to access the paltry amounts of food aid in Gaza are unconscionable,' Türk said. 'Attacks directed against civilians constitute a grave breach of international law and a war crime.' 'There were three children and two women among the dead,' Mohammed Saqr, the head of nursing at Nasser hospital, which received the 27 bodies, told the Guardian. 'Most of the patients had gunshot wounds, others had shrapnel all over the bodies, which means they were targeted with tanks or artillery munitions.' Doctors at Nasser hospital said the Israeli forces had mostly targeted the heads, the chest and the upper parts of the bodies of the victims, and that the health facility was running out of blood units and medical supplies. Hisham Mhanna, a spokesperson for the International Committee of the Red Cross, confirmed its field hospital in Rafah had received 184 wounded people, 19 of whom were declared dead on arrival. Eight more later died from their wounds. A video circulating on social media documented the arrival of injured people at the Red Cross hospital from a food distribution point in Gaza's Rafah governorate. It showed dead bodies and the injured being dragged by people inside the health facility. In a statement, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said troops fired shots near a food distribution complex after noticing 'a number of suspects moving towards them'. 'The forces fired evasive shots, and after they did not move away, additional shots were fired near the individual suspects who were advancing towards the forces. 'The individuals were moving towards forces in a way that posed a threat to them,' the military said, without specifying who the suspects were. A spokesperson for the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), an Israeli-backed organisation that has taken over the distribution of food in Gaza, told the Associated Press the group ''was saddened to learn that a number of civilians were injured and killed after moving beyond the designated safe corridor'. Witnesses told the Guardian the shooting started in the city's Flag Roundabout area, about 1km (0.6 miles) away from the food distribution hub. Fadi Abu Mohammad, 43, said his relative Mohammad Abu Shamala, 22, was killed near the aid site. ''When gunfire opened on the civilians, he was struck by a bullet in the back and died instantly,'' he said. ''He was supposed to get married next month.'' ''Going back to the aid distribution is a huge risk and a potential death sentence, but everyone who went had no other choice. If they aren't killed by bullets or shelling, they will die of hunger,'' said Fadi. Ahmad al-Shaer, 22, who went to the aid distribution point with his friend Hasni Abu Shanab, 35, said the gunfire started at about 5am. 'When the shooting began, Hasni lay flat on the ground to avoid the bullets, but even then a bullet hit him, it pierced one of his legs, exited, and then penetrated the other leg, where it lodged. The gunfire was coming from all directions and bullets were falling everywhere around him,' he said. Shaer said Abu Shanab was moved to Nasser hospital and that the facility was 'full of people in critical condition. There aren't enough beds, rooms or medical equipment for all the cases.' He added: 'Hasni went to the aid site because he had no other choice. He was desperate to feed his three children. He had nothing to offer them and couldn't meet their basic needs.' Tamer Nassar, 33, from Beit Hanoun, who has been displaced to al-Mawasi in Khan Younis said: 'I went at dawn to the American food aid distribution point in Rafah. The gunfire suddenly and deliberately erupted at everyone present in the distribution area. Bullets were raining down on us from everywhere: from the sea, from the air, from the hills, from all directions. I was a victim, along with many others around me; some were injured, others were killed. 'I raised my shoulder while trying to lie on my stomach, and that's when the first bullet struck my shoulder,' he said. 'Anyone who tried to help the wounded was also shot at. We decided to go there today despite the extreme danger. If we had food at home to silence our children's hunger, we wouldn't have gone and risked our lives. They took images of my injuries and found that the first bullet had entered and exited, but the second one remained lodged in the bone and shattered it.' Related: Public support for Israel in western Europe at lowest ever recorded by YouGov The shootings follow other similar incidents recently in which Palestinians have been killed and injured by Israeli fire as they sought food at newly established distribution points. Last Wednesday, Hamas accused Israel of killing at least three Palestinians and wounding 46 others near one of the GHF distribution sites. The Israeli military said its troops fired warning shots in the area outside the compound to re-establish control as thousands of Palestinians rushed to the site. More than 30 Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire on Sunday as they went to receive food at a GHF distribution point, according to witnesses. A hospital run by the Red Cross confirmed it treated many wounded. The Israeli forces denied 'firing at civilians' in Sunday's incident. However, an IDF official admitted that Israeli soldiers fired 'warning shots toward several suspects who advanced toward the troops', near the food distribution site, without specifying who the suspects were. Gaza's Government Media Office said Israel had killed more than 102 civilians since the opening of the of aid centres run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. Israel imposed a blockade on all supplies in March, saying Hamas was seizing deliveries for its fighters, which the group denies. Earlier this month, a global hunger monitor said half a million people in the strip faced starvation. The GHF took over the handling of aid despite objections from the UN and other humanitarian organisations, who criticised the new system for food distribution, saying it would not be able to meet the needs of Gaza's 2.3 million people, and it allowed Israel to use food as a weapon to control the population. The Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse contributed to this report.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store