logo
Gaza: MSF Finds 1 In 4 Young Children And Pregnant Women Malnourished As Israel's Policy Of Starvation Continues

Gaza: MSF Finds 1 In 4 Young Children And Pregnant Women Malnourished As Israel's Policy Of Starvation Continues

Scoop5 days ago
Gaza Strip: Israeli authorities' deliberate use of starvation as a weapon in Gaza has reached unprecedented levels, with patients and healthcare workers themselves now fighting to survive, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warns.
MSF staff are receiving an increasing number of malnourished patients at our clinics, while they themselves struggle to find sufficient food. Across screenings of children aged six months to five years old and pregnant and breastfeeding women, at MSF facilities last week, 25 per cent were malnourished. At the MSF clinic in Gaza City, the number of people enrolled for malnutrition has quadrupled since 18 May, while rates of severe malnutrition in children under five have tripled in the last two weeks alone.
This is not just hunger - it's deliberate starvation, manufactured by the Israeli authorities. The weaponisation of food to exert pressure on a civilian population must not be normalised. Israeli authorities must allow food and aid supplies into Gaza at scale.
'We see the dire consequences of these shortages in Gaza on a daily basis in our clinic,' says Caroline Willemen, project coordinator at the MSF clinic in Gaza City. 'We are now enrolling 25 new patients every single day for malnutrition. We see the exhaustion and the hunger in our own colleagues.'
Meanwhile, hundreds of people seeking desperately needed aid continue to be attacked by Israeli forces and private security contractors at food distribution sites run by the Israeli proxy, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).
'What we are seeing is unconscionable; an entire population being deliberately cut off from food and water, all while the Israeli forces commit daily massacres as people scramble for scraps of food at distribution sites. Any shred of humanity in Gaza has been wiped out in the ongoing genocide,' says Amande Bazerolle, MSF head of emergency response in Gaza.
In the last two months, more than 1,000 people have been killed and over 7,200 injured, according to the Ministry of Health, as they attempted to collect aid, including a large proportion at the distribution sites of the GHF, which is backed and funded by the US government. Despite these sites being set up to avoid aid diversion, they have done nothing to reduce the existence of looting.
'These food distributions are not humanitarian aid, they are war crimes committed in broad
daylight and presented to the world with compassionate language. Those who go to the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation's food distributions know that they have the same chance of receiving a sack of flour as they do of leaving with a bullet in their head,' says Dr. Mohammed Abu Mughaisib, MSF deputy medical coordinator in Gaza.
In addition to people wounded at GHF sites, our teams have treated dozens of patients from recurrent massacres by Israeli forces as people wait for flour from trucks that pass by.
'In the emergency room of Sheikh Radwan clinic a few days ago, dozens of patients came in, both dead and wounded,' says Willeman. 'These were people who had approached trucks for flour and were ruthlessly shot by Israeli forces.
That day MSF and Ministry of Health medical teams at the clinic, in north Gaza, treated 122 people with gunshot wounds who had been fired on while waiting for flour and additional 46 people were dead on arrival.
To make matters worse, in the last week, community kitchens who provide food to patients and medical staff in hospitals have struggled to do so, some shutting down for days at a time. Even if they can deliver, it is only one meal a day of plain rice for patients who need nutrient-rich food to heal properly, and often nothing for staff. This is no longer about what people can afford. There is barely any food available in most of the strip.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Worst-case scenario of famine' unfolding in Gaza, UN-backed group says
‘Worst-case scenario of famine' unfolding in Gaza, UN-backed group says

RNZ News

time3 hours ago

  • RNZ News

‘Worst-case scenario of famine' unfolding in Gaza, UN-backed group says

By Nadeen Ebrahim , CNN Six-month-old Jouri Abu Haja in the nutrition ward at Al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat, central Gaza, on 22 July, 2025, suffering chronic illness and severe malnutrition. Photo: Moiz Salhi / Middle East Images via AF A UN-backed food security agency has warned that "the worst case scenario of famine" is unfolding in Gaza, its starkest alert yet as starvation spreads and Israel faces growing international pressure to allow more food into the territory. "Conflict and displacement have intensified, and access to food and other essential items and services has plummeted to unprecedented levels," the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) said in an alert, adding that "mounting evidence shows that widespread starvation, malnutrition, and disease are driving a rise in hunger-related deaths." The IPC said that the alert is intended to "draw urgent attention to the rapidly deteriorating humanitarian situation" but doesn't constitute a formal classification of famine. "Given the most recent information and data made available, a new IPC analysis is to be conducted without delay," it added. More than 20,000 children were admitted for treatment for acute malnutrition between April and mid-July, the IPC said, with more than 3,000 severely malnourished. "Latest data indicates that famine thresholds have been reached for food consumption in most of the Gaza Strip and for acute malnutrition in Gaza City," the alert said, calling for "immediate action" to end the hostilities and allow for "unimpeded, large-scale, life-saving humanitarian response." In May, the IPC reported that the enclave's entire population was experiencing "high levels of acute food security" and the territory was at "high risk" of famine, the most severe type of hunger crisis. Israel has come under mounting pressure by the international community to break its blockade, allow aid into Gaza and end the war. In some of his strongest remarks on the crisis, US President Donald Trump on Monday said there is "real starvation" in Gaza , contradicting earlier statements by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who insists there is no starvation. "That's real starvation stuff," Trump told reporters in Turnberry, Scotland. "I see it, and you can't fake that. So, we're going to be even more involved." Trump added that the United States will set up "food centers" in Gaza to address the crisis. A Palestinian woman carries a bag of food on her head in the al-Mawasi camp in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. Photo: AFP Vice President JD Vance also lamented images coming out of the besieged territory. "I don't know if you've all seen these images. You have got some really, really heartbreaking cases. You've got little kids who are clearly starving to death," Vance told reporters Monday during a visit to Canton, Ohio. "Israel's got to do more to let that aid in," he said, adding that "we've also got to wage war on Hamas so that those folks stop preventing food from coming into this territory." Over the weekend, Israel announced a daily "tactical pause in military activity" in three areas of Gaza to enable more aid to reach people. The military said the move would "refute the false claim of deliberate starvation in the Gaza Strip." Israel has also allowed foreign countries to airdrop aid into the territory , but the practice has in the past been deemed by the UN and other aid groups as costly, dangerous and insufficient. Meanwhile, the health ministry in Gaza said on Tuesday that more than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed in the territory since Israel's war on Hamas began nearly two years ago. The ministry reported that 113 people were killed in the past 24 hours, bringing the death toll to 60,034. The announcement comes as hopes dim for a ceasefire anytime soon, after talks broke up last week without an agreement. The war began after Hamas' October 7, 2023 attack on Israel killed around 1,200 people and saw another roughly 250 people taken hostage. Authorities in Gaza do not distinguish between civilians and Hamas fighters when reporting casualty figures, but the health ministry and the UN say the majority of deaths are women and children. And the true toll could be much higher, with many thousands still believed to be buried under rubble. Israel does not dispute that a significant number of Palestinian civilians have been killed in its war in Gaza. But it has long argued that figures from the Hamas-controlled health ministry are exaggerated, and that Hamas embeds itself between civilians, using them as "human shields." On Monday, a pair of leading Israeli human rights groups accused Israel of "committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza," becoming the first such organizations to make the claim. B'Tselem said it came to that "unequivocal conclusion" after an "examination of Israel's policy in the Gaza Strip and its horrific outcomes, together with statements by senior Israeli politicians and military commanders about the goals of the attack." A second Israeli group, Physicians for Human Rights Israel (PHRI), announced it was joining B'Tselem in calling Israel's actions in Gaza genocide. It published a separate legal and medical analysis documenting what it called "deliberate and systematic extermination of the health system in Gaza." sraeli government spokesman David Mencer dismissed the report. "We have free speech in this country but we strongly reject this claim," he told reporters, adding that Israel has allowed aid into Gaza. *CNN's Eyad Kourdi, DJ Judd and Ivana Kottasová contributed reporting. - CNN

Dystopian Killing Fields and Starvation in Gaza
Dystopian Killing Fields and Starvation in Gaza

Scoop

time3 days ago

  • Scoop

Dystopian Killing Fields and Starvation in Gaza

Starvation as a way of life. Starvation as a way of death. Starvation as policy, justification and vengeance. As the state of Israel hums along frittering, scratching and violating international human rights conventions, the chroniclers are kept busy on the morgue's relentlessly growing inventory and peace's loss. Of late, a vast number of humanitarian organisations have decided to express their collective outrage in a statement at what is happening in Gaza. The statement as run by Doctors Without Borders on July 23 is stark: 'As the Israel government's siege starves the people of Gaza, aid workers are now joining the same food lines, risking being shot just to feed their families. With supplies now totally depleted, humanitarian organisations are witnessing their own colleagues and partners waste before their eyes.' Two months after the implementation of the controlled aid scheme by Israel, utilising the grotesquely named Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, over 100 organisations were 'sounding the alarm and urging governments to act: open all land crossings; restore the full flow of food, clean water, medical supplies, shelter items, and fuel through a principled, UN-led mechanism; end the siege; and agree to a ceasefire now.' Outside Gaza, and even within the Strip, abundant supplies of food, clean water, medical supplies, shelter items and fuel sat untouched. Humanitarian organisations had been prevented from accessing them. 'The Government of Israel's restrictions, delays, and fragmentation under its total siege have created chaos, starvation, and death.' A paltry figure of 28 trucks a day were being allowed into the Strip. The relevant gore is recounted: massacres at food sites in the Gaza Strip are impossible to ignore; the figures from the UN suggest that 875 Palestinians had been slaughtered while seeking sustenance as of July 13. The frequency of these 'flour massacres' is also receiving comment from those in the employ of the operation being run by GHF, policed by private contractors and the IDF. Retired US special forces officer Anthony Aguilar, who resigned from working with the GHF, told the BBC that he had 'witnessed the Israeli Defense Forces shooting at crowds of Palestinians.' During his entire career, he had never seen such 'brutality and use of indiscriminate and unnecessary force against a civilian population, an unarmed, starving population.' The NGO statement goes on to note the rise of cases of acute malnutrition, most prevalent among children and the elderly. (The World Food Programme has warned that one in three Gazans do not eat for days at a time, with 90,000 women and children requiring treatment.) 'Illnesses like acute watery diarrhea are spreading, markets are empty, waste is piling up, and adults are collapsing on the streets from hunger and dehydration.' In the face of this, international law's decrees appear like the neglected statues of a distant land. The three sets of Provisional Measures Orders from the International Court of Justice, handed down since 2024, have warned Israel to observe its obligations under the UN Genocide Convention and address the humanitarian crisis in the Strip. In its modifying order of provisional measures handed down on March 28, 2024, the ICJ instructed Israel to 'take immediate and effective measures to enable the provision of urgently needed basic services and humanitarian assistance to address famine and starvation and the adverse conditions of life faced by Palestinians in Gaza'. These include the provision of 'food, water, electricity, fuel, shelter, clothing, hygiene and sanitation requirements, as well as medical supplies and medical care' and 'increasing the capacity of land crossing points and maintaining them open for as long as necessary'. The latest concession from Israel to deal with this engineered humanitarian catastrophe is a promise to open humanitarian corridors to permit UN convoys into the Strip. In addition to that, COGAT, the Israeli military agency overseeing humanitarian affairs in Gaza, has announced that Jordan and the United Arab Emirates will be permitted to parachute humanitarian aid to those in Gaza. UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has made a small team of British military planners and logisticians available to assist Jordan in this endeavour. On July 27, the IDF also released a statement claiming it had made the first airdrop including 'seven packages of aid containing flour, sugar, and canned food'. These efforts, in their practical futility, are a reiteration of the humanitarian airdrops conducted by the US military and Jordan's air force in March last year. These drops will do little to alter the cruel, strangulating model of aid delivery in place, emboldening the fittest recipients capable of outpacing their adversaries. Those recipients will also be fortunate not to be injured or killed by the dropped packages, instances of which were recorded in March last year. 'Why use airdrops,' asks Juliette Touma, chief spokeswoman for the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, 'when you can drive hundreds of trucks through the borders?' Using trucks was 'much easier, more effective, faster, cheaper.' Precisely why using them is so unappealing to the IDF. Instead of focusing on isolating Israel, its allies prefer piecemeal approaches that prolong the suffering of the Palestinians. Measures such as those announced by Starmer to 'evacuate children from Gaza who need medical assistance, bringing them to the UK for specialist and medical treatment' only serve to encourage the Israeli war machine. The aid drops serve to do much the same. The objective is one of inflicting a sufficient degree of harm that will encourage the eventual depopulation of the enclave. Israel's allies, with intentional or unintentional complicity, will clean up.

Gaza running out of specialised food to save malnourished children
Gaza running out of specialised food to save malnourished children

RNZ News

time5 days ago

  • RNZ News

Gaza running out of specialised food to save malnourished children

By Olivia Le Poidevin , Charlotte Greenfield and Jennifer Rigby Maryam, a 26-year-old Palestinian mother, cradles her malnourished 40-day-old son Mahmoud as they await treatment at the Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on 24 July, 2025. Photo: AFP Gaza is on the brink of running out of the specialised therapeutic food needed to save the lives of severely malnourished children, United Nations and humanitarian agencies say. "We are now facing a dire situation, that we are running out of therapeutic supplies," said Salim Oweis, a spokesperson for UNICEF in Amman, Jordan told Reuters on Thursday (local time), saying supplies of Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF), a crucial treatment, would be depleted by mid-August if nothing changed. "That's really dangerous for children as they face hunger and malnutrition at the moment," he added. Oweis said UNICEF had only enough RUTF left to treat 3000 children. In the first two weeks of July alone, UNICEF treated 5000 children facing acute malnutrition in Gaza. Nutrient-dense, high-calorie RUTF supplies, such as high-energy biscuits and peanut paste enriched with milk powder, are critical for treating severe malnutrition. "Most malnutrition treatment supplies have been consumed and what is left at facilities will run out very soon if not replenished," a World Health Organisation spokesperson said on Thursday. The WHO said that a programme in Gaza that was aiming to prevent malnutrition among the most vulnerable, including pregnant women and children under five, may have to stop work as it is running out of the nutritional supplements. Gaza's food stocks have been running out since Israel, at war with Palestinian militant group Hamas since October 2023, cut off all supplies to the territory in March, lifting that blockade in May but with restrictions that it says are needed to prevent aid being diverted to militant groups. As a result, international aid agencies say that only a trickle of what is needed, including medicine, is currently reaching people in Gaza. Israel says it is committed to allowing in aid but must control it to prevent it from being diverted by militants. It says it has let enough food into Gaza during the war and blames Hamas for the suffering of Gaza's 2.2 million people. COGAT, the Israeli military aid coordination agency, in response to emailed questions on RUTF supplies said it was working with international organisations to improve the distribution of aid from the crossings where hundreds of aid trucks were waiting. Save the Children, which runs a clinic that has treated spiking numbers of malnourished children in central Gaza, said it had not been able to bring in its own supplies since February and was relying on United Nations deliveries. "If they're going to run out, that's also going to affect UNICEF partners and other organisations that rely on their supplies to provide that for children," said Alexandra Saieh, Global Head of Humanitarian Policy and Advocacy at Save the Children. UNICEF said that from April to mid-July, 20,504 children were admitted with acute malnutrition. Of those patients, 3247 were suffering from severe acute malnutrition, nearly triple the number in the first three months of the year. Severe acute malnutrition can lead to death, and to long-term physical and mental developmental health problems in children who survive. The WHO said on Wednesday 21 children under the age of five were among those who died of malnutrition so far this year. Two more Palestinians died overnight from starvation, the Gaza health ministry said on Thursday, bringing the total number of people who have starved to death to 113, most of them in recent weeks as a wave of hunger crashes on the Palestinian enclave. - Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store