
Nour and Remas escaped Israel's bombs – then its starvation policy killed them
But there was one thing he couldn't protect her from: hunger. Nour died of starvation caused by a brutal Israeli siege. Her father couldn't find food, and the lentils they were given weren't enough to keep her alive.
In a Gaza morgue, frail and hollow-eyed, he appeared consumed by guilt, though none of this was his doing. He didn't cry, but his despair and anger were raw as he wrapped Nour's skeletal body, her ribs and wrists clearly visible, in a blue sheet. Her clothes were still on: dirty jeans and a worn black blouse she seemed to have lived and died in.
'They trick us with a handful of lentils, but children need bread too. They need milk,' he told The National, in reference to the aid being distributed, which is given under the constant threat of being killed, by an Israel-US backed foundation. 'She survived on the community kitchens, but those are gone now,' he added, standing in front of a cracked wall where a corner had been broken to make space for black plastic body bags.
More than 60,000 Palestinians, among them tens of thousands of children, have been killed by Israeli fire since the start of the war. Despite global outrage, Israel has refused to halt its bombardment, claiming it is targeting Hamas, but in the process it is destroying the lives and futures of hundreds of thousands of people.
Starvation is increasingly being used as a weapon of war, according to the UN. In recent weeks, dozens have died of hunger in the besieged coastal enclave, where even fishing is banned. A trickle of aid trucks has entered Gaza in the last few days, but the famine is spreading, and children like Nour are dying every day.
Cold marble table
Images emerging from Gaza show clinics crowded with starving people. Residents have begun posting their daily struggles on social media: a piece of bread shaped like a fish to trick children into believing it's a real fish; a single piece of fruit shared by a family of six; fava beans eaten like snacks.
'They just see us as images,' said the aunt of 13-year-old Remas Al Burdeene, speaking from a small clinic in Gaza. Remas's life had been hard long before the famine. She lived with a disability in her legs and had endured war after wa r. This week, she died of hunger, too.
On a dark, cold marble table, her tiny legs peeked out from under a brown blanket. Nurses arrived to wrap her body in a white burial shroud. Before that, Dalia, her aunt, had covered her with her own blanket and held her one last time. The blanket had a drawing of a dark blue sky. 'No one is doing anything to help us,' the aunt said, her body as thin as Remas's.
On Tuesday, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) issued an alert over the rise in hunger-related deaths in Gaza, warning that access to food and other essentials has plummeted to unprecedented levels. 'Famine thresholds have been reached for food consumption in most of the Gaza Strip,' the IPC said in a report.
For Dr Khalil Al Dajran, of Al Aqsa Hospital, the worst is yet to come, despite international outrage and even US President Donald Trump acknowledging the starvation crisis and calling for Gaza's children to be fed.
'Today we announced 14 more deaths due to malnutrition, raising the number of starvation deaths to 147, of which 88 are children,' he told The National. 'We fear the number will increase in the coming days,' warned the doctor, who was speaking outside the hospital near a field clinic, as people waited on the pavement for news of loved ones.
Meanwhile, the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has refused to acknowledge the consequences of his decisions and his army's siege policy. 'There is no starvation in Gaza,' he claimed in a speech.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The National
22 minutes ago
- The National
German Foreign Minister in Israel as EU pressure grows on Gaza
Germany's Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul is due to arrive in Israel on Thursday evening on a high-stakes trip to try to convince Israeli counterparts to allow more aid into Gaza. The measure comes among growing pressure from European allies to take concrete retaliatory measures over Israel's role in the ongoing crisis. During almost 22 months of war, in which more than 60,000 Palestinian people have been killed, Germany's firm support of Israel has blocked co-ordinated EU action against its ally. Now, Gaza's population is facing widespread famine, according to the UN. Germany may now be re-considering its position. Earlier this week, the European Commission suggested to partially suspend Israel from a flagship EU-funded research programme. The proposal came after the EU conducted an internal review and found that Israel's conduct in Gaza had breached a human rights clause embedded in EU-Israel relations. It would block Israeli start-ups with dual-use programmes − with both civilian and military applications − from receiving EU funds. While largely symbolic, the move would represent an unprecedented step for western governments in expressing dissatisfaction with Israel's conduct in Gaza. The commission has never suspended a country's participation in the Horizon Europe programme, according to an EU official. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has signalled that any decision from Berlin will hinge on the outcome of Mr Wadephul's visit. On Monday, Mr Merz said Germany would urge Israel to 'immediately, comprehensively, and sustainably improve' conditions in Gaza. He added that Israel must commit to a 'comprehensive and not merely short-term ceasefire', according to reports in German media. Other big EU powers, including France and Italy, have also yet to make their position clear on the EC's proposal. The proposal needs a qualified majority vote to be adopted. So far, only four countries − Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary and Austria − have expressed opposition, which is not enough to block it. A number of other states, including the Netherlands, Ireland and Spain, support the proposal. They have said they would also be open to backing further measures such as restricting trade preferences. Pressure is building on Israel to find a political solution to the Gaza war, as France has been joined by a number of other western states, including Canada, in stating their intention to recognise a Palestinian state in September. Israeli cabinet members are openly speaking about occupying Gaza and expelling its population. They have also threatened to annex the occupied West Bank, which would in effect rob Palestinians of the land on which they could establish a state. The EU's current stance has created frustration in Brussels, as the situation continues to deteriorate in Gaza. On Thursday, more than 30 people were killed by the Israeli military during the distribution of aid by the Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Fund. In a rare public rebuke, European Commission executive vice-president Teresa Ribera accused the EU's executive body of failing to act. 'We are witnessing one of the worst scandals from a humanitarian perspective,' Ms Ribera told Spanish radio station Cadena Ser. Her country, Spain, has been the most vocal in criticising Israel and has called for a full suspension of the EU-Israel Association Agreement – an unlikely possibility because it needs unanimous support among the bloc's 27 member states. Israel launched strikes and a ground offensive in Gaza after Hamas led attacks on Israeli communities on October 7, 2023, in which about 1,400 people were killed and 240 abducted.


The National
22 minutes ago
- The National
Arab nations back 2002 peace proposal at UN two-state solution conference
Arab League states issued a unified call backing a peace initiative proposed in 2002 at this week's UN conference on a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine co-chaired by Saudi Arabia and France. The Arab Peace Initiative offers full normalisation of ties between Israel and the Arab world in exchange for a complete withdrawal from territories occupied since 1967, a just solution for Palestinian refugees under UN General Assembly Resolution 194, and the establishment of a sovereign Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as its capital. Israel has long rejected the proposal. 'What we're seeing today in Gaza, the withdrawal of stability and security in the region, is indeed the outcome of the ongoing occupation,' Arab League chief Ahmed Aboul Gheit said in a statement delivered to the conference by a spokesperson. 'This is the price being paid by Palestinians, a price paid in blood.' He added that the Arab League remains committed to the peace initiative proposed by Saudi Arabia and adopted at its summit in Beirut 23 years ago. 'This vision hasn't, however, been reciprocated,' Mr Aboul Gheit said. 'Rather, it has been countered by arrogance and nationalism based on religious sectarian views that will lead the region to an unknown future.' Arab and Muslim countries at the UN conference in New York also joined a growing chorus of states calling on Hamas to disarm and relinquish control in Gaza, signalling rising frustration with the group. 'In the context of ending the war in Gaza, Hamas must end its rule … and hand over its weapons to the Palestinian Authority, with international engagement and support, in line with the objective of a sovereign and independent Palestinian state,' read a joint declaration. Kuwait's Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdullah Ali Al Yahya said that extending the PA's authority over all Palestinian territory was 'a fundamental step in building an independent Palestinian state '. Khalifa Al Marar, UAE Minister of State at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, called for international efforts to stop the war in Gaza and the adoption of a 'clear, binding and irreversible road map' to establish an independent, sovereign Palestinian state. 'Every day that passes without a solution deepens the wounds and distances the chances of peace,' he warned. Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa appealed for the UN conference to be 'a turning point in which positions and declarations are translated into immediate and unprecedented practical steps to stop the genocide and end the Israeli occupation'. 'The world must act to stop the aggression, starvation and displacement, and send a clear message: Enough disregard for the life and dignity of Palestinians – Palestinians are human beings,' he said. Abdoulkader Houssein Omar, Djibouti's Minister for Foreign Affairs and International Co-operation, said any lasting settlement of the Arab-Israeli conflict 'cannot forgo' the foundation laid by the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative, which he described as a 'constructive, balanced framework' and an 'unavoidable model' for a just and comprehensive solution consistent with international law. The UN conference aimed to resurrect long-stalled peace efforts and pave the way towards an independent Palestinian state. Foreign ministers from 15 nations, including Canada, Australia and New Zealand, issued a joint declaration on Tuesday expressing their willingness to recognise a Palestinian state and their commitment to a two-state solution. Out of 193 member states of the UN, 143 already recognise the State of Palestine, which has observer status at the world body.


Middle East Eye
41 minutes ago
- Middle East Eye
Sweden calls on EU to suspend trade pact with Israel
Sweden on Thursday called on the EU to suspend the trade section of its association agreement with Israel over its conduct of the war on Gaza. "The situation in Gaza is absolutely appalling, and Israel is failing to fulfil its most basic obligations and agreements on emergency aid. Sweden therefore demands that the EU freeze the trade section of the association agreement as soon as possible," Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said in a post to X, calling on the Israeli government to allow "unhindered humanitarian aid into Gaza."