iron wire logo black and red
War Terrorism & Unrest | Rights & Freedoms

More than 100 agencies say mass starvation spreading across Gaza, accusing Israel of aid ‘siege’

8 hours ago
More than 100 agencies say mass starvation spreading across Gaza, accusing Israel of aid ‘siege’
Originally posted by: BBC.com

Source: BBC.com

  • ‘Our nurses don’t have enough energy to stand’, says Canadian doctor in Gazapublished at 09:44 British Summer Time

    Dr Deirdre Nunan in a blue scrubs and cap leans against an orange and red wall

    An orthopaedic surgeon at Nasser hospital in southern Gaza tells the BBC News channel that malnutrition in the Strip is harming her patients’ recovery from surgery.

    Having been based in Khan Younis for the last three weeks, Canadian doctor Deirdre Nunan describes seeing “outcomes that are much worse than we would normally have expected” as patients’ wounds become infected and refuse to heal as a result of aid shortages.

    Dr Nunan says the lack of aid has meant that “even formerly healthy adult men and women are just skin and bones here”.

    And she adds that shortages are impacting on the performance of hospital staff, warning: “Our nurses don’t have enough energy to stand up for the duration of their shift.”

    “Not even the very basic minimums of standards for human life are being met here,” she adds.

  • Cost of essential items rockets as Gazans cope with scarce suppliespublished at 09:27 British Summer Time

    Rushdi Abualouf
    Gaza correspondent, reporting from Istanbul

    Essential supplies remain scarce in Gaza, with basic food items now priced well beyond the means of most families.

    “It’s outrageous – prices are on fire,” says one Gaza resident. “Every day we need 300 Israeli shekels (£66.52) just for flour!”

    The price of lentils and chickpeas has climbed from 10 to 100 shekels per kilo, the resident tells the BBC, making it nearly impossible to prepare even the simplest of meals.

    “You’d need 600 shekels (£133) daily just to eat lentils and one loaf of bread.”

    By comparison, a 1kg bag of lentils and a loaf of bread at one of the UK’s largest supermarket chains costs roughly £3.25.

    But food isn’t the only burden among Palestinians, says another resident. You also need firewood, water, power and phone credit.

    “We’re exhausted. We can’t even stand up to walk anymore,” he says.

    Small personal donations from relatives abroad are helping some families get by, but the cost of cash commission exceeds 50%, making it impractical.

  • Weeks of Israeli killings reported at Gaza aid sitespublished at 09:15 British Summer Time

    A photograph of a Palestinian man in Gaza looking towards the camera while holding a cardboard box with GHF branding above his headImage source, Getty Images

    As we mentioned in the post below, there have been regular reports of Palestinians being killed while seeking aid since the Israeli and US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) began operating in late May.

    Both Israel and the GHF have disputed death tolls, recorded by the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza.

    However, the ministry’s figures are widely seen as a reliable count of bodies seen by Gazan hospitals and its totals are backed up by the UN’s own count.

    Some of the deadliest incidents in recent days include:

    At the end of June, when the death toll at aid sites was 500, BBC Verify published an investigation examining several earlier incidents where Israel was accused of killing civilians seeking aid.

  • US defends controversial aid system as Gazans continue to starvepublished at 09:04 British Summer Time

    A Gazan man in a dark football jersey with the Adidas logo on the top right side carries a sack of humanitarian aid on his head. A child and a woman can be seen in the blurred background next to a tent encampmentImage source, Reuters

    As aid agencies denounce the spread of “mass starvation” in Gaza, the US has been defending the controversial distribution scheme used to hand out food to Palestinians inside the enclave.

    For two months, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), with the backing of Israel and Washington, has taken over from international aid organisations as the main distributor of aid in Gaza.

    The UN has repeatedly condemned the plan, saying it would “militarise” aid. Since then, there have been near-daily reports of killings of people trying to collect food.

    Israel’s military has responded to some of these reports saying it’s fired “warning shots” at people who they described as “suspects” or posing a threat.

    Pressed by the BBC that the approach is leading to starvation, a State Department spokeswoman says the current situation “works”. She claims it’s stopping Hamas exploiting aid and called resistance to it bizarre.

  • At least 17 Palestinians killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza, civil defence sayspublished at 08:45 British Summer Time

    Rushdi Abualouf
    Gaza correspondent, in Istanbul

    At least 17 Palestinians, including four children and an infant, have been killed in Israeli airstrikes on the Gaza Strip since early Wednesday morning, according to a spokesperson for Gaza’s Hamas-run Civil Defence.

    The spokesman says three separate airstrikes targeted two residential apartments and a tent shelter, resulting in the deaths of 17 people, including eight members of a single family.

    Another 24 individuals were wounded in the attacks, he adds.

    Search and rescue teams are still recovering bodies and assisting the injured at the sites of the strikes, the spokesperson says.

    The Israeli military has not commented on the incidents so far.

  • Israeli military ‘deepens operation’ as ground and air attacks continuepublished at 08:31 British Summer Time

    In an operational update from the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), it says it has been operating throughout the Gaza Strip.

    The statement adds they have struck “approximately 120 terror targets” across the Strip, with “a number of terrorists” killed by aircraft in Jabalia as they approached Israeli ground forces.

    In Gaza City, the troops are “deepening their operational activity”, the IDF adds.

  • Gazans collapsing in the street from hunger, UN agency reportspublished at 08:15 British Summer Time

    A 14-year-old Palestinian boy, who medics say is malnourished, lies on a bed at Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza.Image source, Reuters

    Image caption,

    A 14-year-old Palestinian boy, who medics say is malnourished, pictured on a bed at Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza on Tuesday

    The UN’s humanitarian agency Ocha released a new update on Tuesday, warning of “the rapid collapse of the last lifelines keeping peoplealive”. Citing local health officials, it says:

    • More than a dozen Palestinians, including children, died of hunger in the past 24 hours (the Hamas-run health ministry put the figure at 33 in 48 hours)
    • Hospitals have admitted people suffering severe exhaustion from not being able to eat
    • “Others are said to be collapsing in the streets,” the statement says
  • Malnutrition starkly on the rise, WHO official tells BBCpublished at 07:58 British Summer Time

    Rik PeeperkornImage source, Getty Images

    A World Health Organization (WHO) official has told the BBC of seeing children in Gaza who look younger than their age because of malnutrition.

    Speaking to our colleagues on the Today programme, WHO representative for the West Bank and Gaza Dr Rik Peeperkorn says malnutrition is “starkly on the rise” in Gaza.

    “In 2025 only, we talk about nearly 30,000 children who are malnourished,” he explains.

    Dr Peeperkorn visits Gaza frequently, and describes how on his latest trip, his team “saw a child in a malnutrition ward… a child that looks like they’re two when actually they’re five”.

    “The lack of basic food supplies is affecting everyone,” he adds. “It’s even affecting our colleagues in Gaza, a kind of lethargy all over.”

  • 33 dead from malnutrition in 48 hours, Hamas-run ministry said on Tuesdaypublished at 07:36 British Summer Time

    A crowd of people stand near a fenced-off zone which appears to be the aid pointImage source, Getty Images

    Image caption,

    A GHF aid point near the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, photographed in June

    As conditions deteriorate in Gaza, the Hamas-run health ministry is now dividing its death toll into categories.

    Yesterday, it said that 33 people, including 12 children, had died from malnutrition the past 48 hours, bringing the total to 101, including 80 children overall.

    It also said 1,026 people have been killed by Israel’s military while seeking food aid since the US- and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) distribution system began on 27 May.

    A slightly higher figure, 1,054, figure was used by the UN on Tuesday.

    According to the UN, about 87.8% of Gaza is now covered by Israeli evacuation orders or is within Israeli militarised zones, leaving the 2.1 million population squeezed into about 46 sq km (18 sq miles) of land.

    In total, the Hamas-run health ministry reports at least 59,029 people have been killed in Gaza since 7 October 2023, when the Israeli military launched a campaign in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 were taken hostage.

  • Israel says 950 trucks’ worth of aid waiting for distribution in Gazapublished at 07:19 British Summer Time

    A still from a video shared by IDF spokesman Nadav Shoshani, which he says shows aid inside GazaImage source, X

    Image caption,

    A still from a video shared by IDF spokesman Nadav Shoshani, which he says shows aid inside Gaza

    Despite criticism from humanitarian organisations, Israel says crucial supplies are waiting in Gaza, ready to be delivered to Palestinians.

    Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesperson Nadav Shoshani shared a video of “950 trucks worth of aid”, which he says are “for international organizations to pick up and distribute to Gazan civilians”.

    “This is after Israel facilitated the aid entry into Gaza,” he adds.

    The aid agencies do not dispute there is undistributed aid inside Gaza. In their statement, they say “tons” of aid and critical supplies are waiting “just outside Gaza, in warehouses – and even within Gaza itself”.

    But, these organisations claim that they have been “blocked from accessing or delivering them” by Israeli government restrictions.

    Israel, though, says the system – run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) since May – prevents supplies being stolen by Hamas.

    On Tuesday evening, Israeli Army Radio quoted Cogat as saying Hamas was “conducting a false campaign regarding the humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip, as a pressure tool within the negotiations”.

  • ‘Those we serve are wasting away’published at 07:11 British Summer Time

    Palestinians carry aidImage source, Reuters

    As we just reported, more than 100 international aid organisations and human rights groups are warning of mass starvation in Gaza – while pressing for governments to take action.

    The letter says aid distributions in Gaza “average just 28 trucks a day”; the UN has previously suggested that a minimum of 600 lorries a day are required to feed the population of two million people.

    “As mass starvation spreads across Gaza, our colleagues and those we serve are wasting away,” the groups say, before calling for a ceasefire, as well as the opening of crossings and a full flow of food through a “UN-led mechanism”.

    The groups say access has been “denied” to “tons” of crucial supplies, and accuse Israel of false promises around plans to scale up aid “when there is no real change on the ground”.

    Yesterday, the Israeli military body responsible for co-ordinating aid deliveries, Cogat, insisted that Israel acts in accordance with international law.

    It said it facilitates the entry of aid, while ensuring it does not reach Hamas.

  • More than 100 aid agencies say mass starvation spreading across Gazapublished at 07:06 British Summer Time

    Jacqueline Howard
    Live editor

    More than 100 aid agencies, including Save the Children and Médecins Sans Frontières, have released a joint statement “sounding the alarm” over what they say is “mass starvation” across Gaza.

    “Palestinians are trapped in a cycle of hope and heartbreak, waiting for assistance and ceasefires, only to wake up to worsening conditions,” the statement says.

    Israel has acknowledged a significant drop in supplies reaching Gazans. But its officials say the food is there – and instead point to the aid agencies for not getting it to the people.

    For their part, the aid agencies have long reported issues in co-ordinating safe passage with Israel to distribute aid.

    Over recent days, the Hamas-run health ministry has reported dozens of recent deaths from malnutrition, while the agencies say hundreds have been killed while seeking aid in the past two months.

    We’ll have all the latest news and reaction on this page, so stay with us.

  • Leave a Comment

    You must be logged in to post a comment.