
Starvation attacks the bodies of children in Gaza
Starvation always stalks the most vulnerable first. Kids with preexisting conditions, like cerebral palsy, waste away quickly because the high-calorie foods they need have run out, along with nutritional supplements.
But after months of Israeli blockade and turmoil in the distribution of supplies, children in Gaza with no previous conditions are also starting to die from malnutrition, aid workers and doctors say.
Over the past month, 28 children have died of malnutrition-related causes, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, though it's not known how many had other conditions.
Medical professionals staff the ministry, and the UN and other experts see its figures on war deaths as the most reliable estimate of casualties.
Salem Awad was born in January with no medical problems. He is the youngest of six children, his mother, Hiyam Awad, said. But she was too weak from lack of food to breastfeed him.
For the first two months of Salem's life, a ceasefire was in place in Gaza, and more aid was available, but even then, it was still hard to find milk for him, his mother said. In March, Israel cut off all food from entering the territory for more than 2 ½ months.
Since then, Salem has been wasting away. Now he weighs 4 kg, his mother said.
'He just keeps losing weight. At the hospital, they say if he doesn't get milk, he could die,' she said, speaking in the family's tent in Gaza City.
Israel has been allowing a trickle of aid into Gaza since late May.
Following an international outcry over increasing starvation, it has introduced new measures, which it claims are intended to increase the amount of food reaching the population, including airdrops and pauses in military operations in some areas.
But so far, they have not had a significant effect, aid groups say.
Food experts warned this week that the 'worst-case scenario of famine is playing out in Gaza.'
The UN says the impact of hunger building for months is quickly worsening, especially in Gaza City and other parts of northern Gaza, where it estimates nearly one in five children is now acutely malnourished.
Across Gaza, more than 5,000 children were diagnosed with malnutrition this month, though that is likely an undercount, the UN says. Malnutrition was virtually nonexistent before the war.
Doctors struggle to treat the children because many supplies have run out, the UN says.
Israel denies that a famine is taking place or that children are starving. It says it has supplied enough food throughout the war and accuses Hamas of causing shortages by stealing aid and trying to control food distribution.
Humanitarian groups deny that a significant diversion of food takes place.
Throughout nearly 22 months of war, the number of aid trucks has been far short of the roughly 500 a day the UN says is needed.
The impact is seen most strongly in children with special needs — and those who have been grievously wounded in Israeli bombardment.
Mosab Al-Dibs, 14, suffered a heavy head wound on May 7 when an airstrike hit next to his family's tent. For about two months, he has been at Shifa Hospital, largely paralyzed, only partly conscious, and severely malnourished because the facility no longer has the supplies to feed him, said Dr. Jamal Salha.
Mosab's mother, Shahinaz Al-Dibs, said the boy was healthy before the war, but that since he was wounded, his weight has fallen from 40 kilograms to less than 10 (88 to 22 pounds)
At his bedside, she moves his spindly arms to exercise them. The networks of tiny blue veins are visible through the nearly transparent skin over his protruding ribs. The boy's eyes dart around, but he doesn't respond.
His mother puts some bread soaked in water — the only food she can afford — into a large syringe and squirts it into his mouth in a vain attempt to feed him. Most of it dribbles out from his lips. What he needs is a nutrient formula suitable for tube feeding that the hospital doesn't have, Salha said.
At a school-turned-shelter for displaced people in Gaza City, Samah Matar cradles her son Yousef as his little brother Amir lies on a cushion beside her — both of them emaciated. The two boys have cerebral palsy and also need a special diet.
'Before the war, their health situation was good,' said Matar. They could get the foods they needed, but now 'all those things have disappeared, and their health has declined continually.'
Yousef, 6 years old, has lost 5 kg since the war, dropping from 14 kg to 9 kg. His 4-year-old brother, Amir, has lost weight, shrinking from 9kg to under 6, she said.
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Arab News
7 hours ago
- Arab News
How the UK's ‘apartheid apologists' use ‘disingenuous' antisemitism claims to suppress Israel's critics
LONDON: In the initial weeks of the war in Gaza, Ghassan Abu-Sitta, a British-Palestinian plastic and reconstructive surgeon, worked day and night at Al-Shifa Hospital as part of a team from the medical charity Medecins sans Frontieres. During that time, Abu-Sitta regularly posted updates on X about the injuries he was treating. On returning to London, he held a press conference at which journalists were shown some of the footage he had deemed too distressing to post online. He also shared photographs of some of the children he had treated who had been left with life-changing injuries. Underscoring the scale of suffering, Abu-Sitta said he had performed six amputations on child patients in one night alone. Israel mounted its military campaign in Gaza in retaliation for the Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel, which saw 1,200 killed — the majority of them civilians — and 250 taken hostage. Twenty-two months later, Israeli operations have destroyed much of Gaza's infrastructure, created famine conditions, and left about 60,000 Palestinians dead, according to Gazan health authorities. After returning to the UK, Abu-Sitta gave evidence to London's Metropolitan Police Service, which had appealed for anyone who had been to Israel or Palestine to come forward if they had 'witnessed or been a victim of terrorism, war crimes, or crimes against humanity.' That was the cue for an organization called UK Lawyers for Israel, or UKLFI, to act. It reported Abu-Sitta to the UK health care regulator, the General Medical Council, seeking to have him suspended. At the same time, according to a new report from CAGE International exposing the activities of two influential pro-Israel lobby groups in the UK, Abu-Sitta 'became the target of an online campaign to malign his work, resulting in his entry to France, Germany, and the Netherlands being barred when invited to deliver lectures.' The GMC tribunal threw out the complaint, finding there was 'no evidence that there was any potential risk to patients … arising from the concerns about Dr. Abu-Sitta's social media posts.' It also rejected the submission that he would discriminate against Jewish or Israeli patients 'because the only evidence before the Tribunal on this point suggested the contrary — that Dr. Abu-Sitta did not discriminate against any particular group of patients.' The tribunal acknowledged 'the long history of humanitarian overseas work by Dr. Abu-Sitta,' adding 'it was not in the public interest to be deprived of a competent doctor.' But the campaign against Abu-Sitta is just one of dozens of examples of what CAGE International called a flood of 'disingenuous and dishonest complaints of antisemitism, seeking to suppress and criminalize support for Palestine in the UK,' perpetuated by UKLFI and the Campaign Against Antisemitism, or CAA. In a new report, 'Britain's Apartheid Apologists,' CAGE focuses on the organizations as just two among 'the constellation of efforts to provide cover to Zionism' which, it says, 'regularly support the apartheid state of Israel.' UKLFI is a limited company with a separate charitable wing. The CAA, a registered charity, 'ostensibly seeks to highlight acts of antisemitism in the UK, but much of its activities are geared toward reporting on those who criticize or oppose Israel.' CAGE has reported both organizations to the UK's Charity Commission for allegedly breaching the commission's code of conduct, 'which prohibits support for policies that violate fundamental human rights, and have misused their platforms to shield Israel from accountability.' Both groups, it says, 'regularly instrumentalize regulatory authorities to attack and harass those who criticize and protest against Zionist apartheid and its settler colonial and genocidal activity. 'Through the conflation of anti-Zionism with antisemitism, they seek to inhibit and disrupt genuine criticism of Israeli crimes under international law.' A spokesperson for the Charity Commission confirmed it had 'ongoing compliance cases into Campaign Against Antisemitism and UK Lawyers for Israel Charitable Trust. We will assess any issues raised to determine what, if any, role there is for us as regulator.' The CAGE report accuses UKLFI of 'bad-faith lawfare, opacity of finances and governance, and institutional racism.' The organization, it says, 'has become adept at weaponizing professional regulation, bombarding regulators like the General Medical Council, Solicitors' Regulation Authority, Bar Standards Board, and Charity Commission with vexatious complaints designed to harass and silence Palestinian rights advocates.' CAGE also questions the source of UKLFI's funding. 'Despite clear evidence of coordination with the Israeli state and its objectives, UKLFI continues to conceal its funding sources, refusing to disclose the financial backers driving its campaign of professional harassment.' The report labels the CAA as 'UKLFI's less respectable twin, exploiting legitimate concerns about antisemitism to silence criticism of Israel and Zionism through strategic deployment of the dysfunctional, and arguably now totally broken, IHRA working definition.' The definition of antisemitism framed by the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, widely adopted by global organizations, has been criticized as a shield to protect Israel. The report says the CAA's 'relentless pressure on universities, local councils, and public bodies has created a climate of fear in British public life and particularly in academia, where scholars now routinely self-censor Palestine-related research to avoid being smeared as antisemites.' Like UKLFI, 'CAA maintains close ties to both Labour and Conservative Party figures and pro-Israel lobby groups while refusing to come clean about its funding — a glaring lack of transparency for an organization that demands accountability from others.' The report includes a long list of organizations and individuals targeted by both groups, and that in many cases, 'the reactions of the organizations concerned has highlighted the pervasive fear of being labelled antisemitic.' In February 2023, UKLFI claimed Jewish patients visiting Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in London had been left feeling 'vulnerable, harassed and victimized' by an exhibition of artwork made by Palestinian children in Gaza. The decorated plates, part of a collaborative project with the hospital's community school, were removed after UKLFI wrote to the hospital trust. Later, a freedom of information request by Jewish Voice for Labour found that the hospital had received no complaints from patients about the artwork. The CAA, says the report, operates in much the same way as UKLFI, 'regularly … complaining to public and private bodies with claims of antisemitism — complaints which quite frequently amount to a criticism of Israel.' This 'conflation of antisemitism with criticism of Zionism has not only produced a chilling effect on freedom of speech, but in many cases has had devastating consequences on the lives of those who have been impacted by such spurious complaints.' The CAA made unfavorable headlines in the UK in August 2024 when its chair, Gideon Falter, confronted police officers marshalling a pro-Palestine demonstration and released a video in which an officer described him as 'openly Jewish.' The meaning of the exchange became clear when an edited version of the video revealed the officer was simply trying to prevent Falter provoking marchers, for his own safety. 'The stunt,' says CAGE, was 'an attempt to bring down (Metropolitan Police chief Mark) Rowley, following his failure to rein in and/or ban the national Palestine demonstrations, as Falter and the CAA had been calling for since at least November 2023.' CAGE says the evidence in its report 'underscores the profound and systemic role played by UK Lawyers for Israel and the Campaign Against Antisemitism in perpetuating a climate of censorship and institutional complicity with Israel's apartheid regime.' London-based CAGE International was founded during Ramadan 2003 as CagePrisoners, highlighting 'the status and whereabouts of prisoners seized under the war on terror.' It describes itself as 'an independent advocacy organization that aspires to a just world.' Chris Doyle, director of the Council for Arab-British Understanding, said 'there is a coordinated, long-term campaign to prevent proper and free discussion of the situation facing Palestinians so that it becomes harder to discuss and stand up for Palestinian rights, to talk about the crimes committed against them, the violations of international law, and even the genocide. 'Even carrying a Palestinian flag or expressing solidarity with Palestinians becomes subject to attack.' Groups such as UKLFI, he said, were 'trying to shut down the debate' and there were 'widespread false accusations of antisemitism, whether it's calling the UN antisemitic, the pope antisemitic, or the BBC antisemitic — that is all part of this campaign of intimidation.' It was, he added, 'thoroughly scurrilous, but it also undermines the very legitimate campaign against actual antisemitism.' Caroline Turner, director of UKLFI, told Arab News the organization received messages from 'hundreds of worried and frightened informants in many fields including education, local government, medical, legal, the arts, travel, sport and retail, who are intimidated and distressed by various antisemitic or anti-Israel actions.' UKLFI, she added, 'do not make frivolous or malicious complaints to suppress pro-Palestine voices. We believe in freedom of speech if it is lawful and avoids antisemitism and harassment. 'Unfortunately, there have been many examples of professionals who have potentially committed criminal offenses by expressing views supportive of proscribed terrorist organizations like Hamas and Hezbollah, or expressed antisemitic views on social media.' The CAA did not respond to a request for comment.

Al Arabiya
14 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
More Gazans die seeking aid and from hunger, as burial shrouds in short supply
At least 40 Palestinians were killed by Israeli gunfire and airstrikes on Gaza on Monday, including 10 seeking aid, health authorities said, adding another five had died of starvation in what humanitarian agencies warn may be an unfolding famine. The 10 died in two separate incidents near aid sites belonging to the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, in central and southern Gaza, local medics said. The United Nations says more than 1,000 people have been killed trying to receive aid in the enclave since the GHF began operating in May 2025, most of them shot by Israeli forces operating near GHF sites. 'Everyone who goes there, comes back either with a bag of flour or carried back (on a wooden stretcher) as a martyr, or injured. No one comes back safe,' said 40-year-old Palestinian Bilal Thari. He was among mourners at Gaza City's Al Shifa hospital on Monday who had gathered to collect the bodies of their loved ones killed a day earlier by Israeli fire as they sought aid, according to Gaza's health officials. At least 13 Palestinians were killed on Sunday while waiting for the arrival of UN aid trucks at the Zikim crossing on the Israeli border with the northern Gaza Strip, the officials added. At the hospital, some bodies were wrapped in thick patterned blankets because white shrouds, which hold special significance in Islamic burials, were in short supply due to continued Israeli border restrictions and the mounting number of daily deaths, Palestinians said. 'We don't want war, we want peace, we want this misery to end. We are out on the streets, we all are hungry, we are all in bad shape, women are out there on the streets, we have nothing available for us to live a normal life like all human beings, there's no life,' Thari told Reuters. There was no immediate comment by Israel on the incidents of shootings on Sunday and Monday. Israel blames Hamas for the suffering in Gaza and says it is taking steps for more aid to reach its population, including pausing fighting for part of the day in some areas, air drops, and announcing protected routes for aid convoys. Deaths from hunger Meanwhile, five more people died of starvation or malnutrition over the past 24 hours, Gaza's health ministry said on Monday. The new deaths raised the toll of those dying from hunger to 180, including 93 children, since the war began. UN agencies have said that airdrops of food are insufficient and that Israel must let in far more aid by land and quickly ease access to it. COGAT, the Israeli military agency that coordinates aid, said that during the past week, over 23,000 tons of humanitarian aid in 1,200 trucks had entered Gaza but that hundreds of the trucks had yet to be driven to aid distribution hubs by U.N. and other international organizations. The Gaza government media office said on Sunday that more than 600 aid trucks had arrived since Israel eased restrictions late in July. However, witnesses and Hamas sources said many of those trucks have been looted by desperate displaced people and armed gangs. Palestinian and UN officials said Gaza needs around 600 aid trucks to enter per day to meet the humanitarian requirements -the number Israel used to allow into Gaza before the war. The Gaza war began when Hamas killed 1,200 people and took 251 hostage in an attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, according to Israeli figures. Israel's offensive has since killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health officials. According to Israeli officials, 50 hostages now remain in Gaza, only 20 of whom are believed to be alive.


Arab News
14 hours ago
- Arab News
More Gazans die seeking aid and from hunger, as burial shrouds in short supply
CAIRO/GAZA: At least 40 Palestinians were killed by Israeli gunfire and airstrikes on Gaza on Monday, including 10 seeking aid, health authorities said, adding another five had died of starvation in what humanitarian agencies warn may be an unfolding famine. The 10 died in two separate incidents near aid sites belonging to the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, in central and southern Gaza, local medics said. The United Nations says more than 1,000 people have been killed trying to receive aid in the enclave since the GHF began operating in May 2025, most of them shot by Israeli forces operating near GHF sites. 'Everyone who goes there, comes back either with a bag of flour or carried back (on a wooden stretcher) as a martyr, or injured. No one comes back safe,' said 40-year-old Palestinian Bilal Thari. He was among mourners at Gaza City's Al Shifa hospital on Monday who had gathered to collect the bodies of their loved ones killed a day earlier by Israeli fire as they sought aid, according to Gaza's health officials. At least 13 Palestinians were killed on Sunday while waiting for the arrival of UN aid trucks at the Zikim crossing on the Israeli border with the northern Gaza Strip, the officials added. At the hospital, some bodies were wrapped in thick patterned blankets because white shrouds, which hold special significance in Islamic burials, were in short supply due to continued Israeli border restrictions and the mounting number of daily deaths, Palestinians said. 'We don't want war, we want peace, we want this misery to end. We are out on the streets, we all are hungry, we are all in bad shape, women are out there on the streets, we have nothing available for us to live a normal life like all human beings, there's no life,' Thari told Reuters. There was no immediate comment by Israel on the incidents of shootings on Sunday and Monday. Israel blames Hamas for the suffering in Gaza and says it is taking steps for more aid to reach its population, including pausing fighting for part of the day in some areas, air drops, and announcing protected routes for aid convoys. Deaths from hunger Meanwhile, five more people died of starvation or malnutrition over the past 24 hours, Gaza's health ministry said on Monday. The new deaths raised the toll of those dying from hunger to 180, including 93 children, since the war began. UN agencies have said that airdrops of food are insufficient and that Israel must let in far more aid by land and quickly ease access to it. COGAT, the Israeli military agency that coordinates aid, said that during the past week, over 23,000 tons of humanitarian aid in 1,200 trucks had entered Gaza but that hundreds of the trucks had yet to be driven to aid distribution hubs by UN and other international organizations. The Hamas-run Gaza government media office said on Sunday that more than 600 aid trucks had arrived since Israel eased restrictions late in July. However, witnesses and Hamas sources said many of those trucks have been looted by desperate displaced people and armed gangs. Palestinian and UN officials said Gaza needs around 600 aid trucks to enter per day to meet the humanitarian requirements -the number Israel used to allow into Gaza before the war. The Gaza war began when Hamas killed 1,200 people and took 251 hostage in an attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, according to Israeli figures. Israel's offensive has since killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health officials. According to Israeli officials, 50 hostages now remain in Gaza, only 20 of whom are believed to be alive.