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Doctors in Gaza are treating children who may never recover from malnutrition

Doctors in Gaza are treating children who may never recover from malnutrition

RNZ Newsa day ago
By ABC News Middle East correspondent Eric Tlozek, Chérine Yazbeck and ABC staff in Gaza
Yazan, a malnourished 2-year-old Palestinian boy, sit with his brothers at their family's damaged home in the Al-Shati refugee camp, west of Gaza City.
Photo:
AFP / OMAR AL-QATTAA
CONTENT WARNING: This story contains images of sick children that may be distressing.
In clinics across Gaza, starving children are getting treatment, but they probably can't be saved.
They lie on hospital beds, skeletal, wasted, many barely making a sound.
Medical workers say that's what scares them most.
"They're so exhausted, they're so sick, they're no longer able to cry," said Rachel Cummings, the humanitarian director for Save the Children in Gaza, describing a visit to one of the organisation's clinics last week.
"It was nearly silent."
Many of those children who can still speak are saying they want to die.
Doctors say many of the children in specialised malnutrition treatment centres may not recover. (ABC News)
Photo:
ABC News
"We have many children now in our child protection services saying that they wish to die [because] in heaven, in paradise, there is food, there is water," Cummings said.
The horrifying truth, according to doctors in Gaza, is that many will soon get their wish.
"All of the children who are currently malnourished will die," said Canadian doctor Tarek Loubani, the medical director of the healthcare organisation Glia, who is working in Gaza at the moment.
"That is, unless there is an absolutely rapid and consistent reversal of what is happening.
"However, let's be very realistic. Anybody who is malnourished right now will die."
The number of malnutrition deaths in Gaza could be vastly under-reported, said Dr Loubani, who spoke at a recent press conference alongside multiple aid workers, including Cummings.
They don't include children with pre-existing medical conditions, even if those conditions are also exacerbated by the war, he said.
"The figures are very, very conservative," he said.
"The directive that we receive in the emergency [ward] is that we do not report any death that has a substantial - even primary - malnutrition component if there is any other comorbidity.
"That is to say, the only deaths that are marked as malnutrition deaths are the ones where there is really well and truly nothing else going on but the malnutrition."
He believes the official malnutrition death numbers could be just 10 percent of the reality.
Six-month-old Jouri Abu Hajar lies in the nutrition ward at Al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat, central Gaza.
Photo:
AFP / MOIZ SALHI
The medical term "malnutrition" masks the harshness of the situation.
What's occurring in Gaza now - say doctors, aid workers and the people themselves - is starvation.
In the Patient Friends Hospital, which hosts the main specialised malnutrition treatment centre in Gaza City, doctors can't do much to help.
"Although a nutritional plan is attempted, there are no adequate supplies - there's simply nothing available to nourish the children," said Dr Fawaz Al Husseini, a paediatrician specialising in malnutrition.
"In normal circumstances, infants might consume butter and milk at home. But here, even hospitalised children with severe malnutrition gain little weight due to the limited food available.
"What little aid enters Gaza is grossly insufficient; it doesn't even begin to meet the children's needs."
Even for moderately malnourished Gazan children, the prospects are grim.
The use of a simple, yet specialised, measuring device called a MUAC (Mid-Upper Arm Circumference) tape determines whether a child is healthy (green), moderately malnourished (orange) or suffering from acute malnutrition (red).
The orange and red cases are given a paste from peanut, sugar and milk powder called "Plumpy'Nut" - a Nutella-inspired health supplement designed to treat malnutrition.
Children being treated at the Patient Friends Hospital, a specialist malnutrition treatment centre in Gaza.(ABC News)
Photo:
ABC News
But it's not enough to save them.
"The treatment for moderate, the orange, is inadequate because there are no complementary foods. You can't survive on Plumpy'Nut alone," Cummings said.
"Children are just getting sicker and sicker, even though they're in a treatment program for malnutrition.
"This is why we see this downward trajectory of child outcomes and that's why my team were so upset… because they know they're sending the children home [and] they will bounce back to the clinic in a worse state."
Najah, a 35-year-old Palestinian mother, sits next to her malnourished 11-months-old daughter Sila as they await treatment at the Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip.
Photo:
AFP
Israel blocked all food from entering Gaza from 2 March to 21 May, saying it was trying to pressure the militant group Hamas to accept its ceasefire terms.
It also tried to replace the comprehensive and extensive UN-led aid distribution system with a newly formed American contractor, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which had never before delivered humanitarian relief.
Israel argued these changes were to stop Hamas diverting aid, something the UN and international relief agencies denied was occurring and for which a US government analysis found no evidence.
The result of Israel's policy was widespread deprivation and desperation, culminating in an urgent declaration by the UN's Integrated Food Security Phase Classification group that most of Gaza had crossed famine thresholds.
Hundreds of people were killed - likely by Israeli tank and gunfire - trying to get food from the limited aid points set up by the private contractor, which, by its own numbers, has never distributed enough food to come close to feeding Gaza's population.
The few aid trucks that came through have been swarmed by desperate people, as seen in recent satellite vision.
It was only when faced with global condemnation and pressure from its closest ally, the United States, that Israel allowed more trucks into Gaza.
Over the past week, the UN said Israel also granted an increased number of requests from its agencies to pick up aid already sitting under Israeli military guard inside the strip.
Israel also announced "tactical pauses" - basically agreeing not to bomb or attack certain areas with ground troops - so drivers can take goods to stricken populations.
It allowed several countries to parachute food into Gaza by plane, a practice condemned by many aid agencies as ineffective, dangerous and expensive.
The United Nations said those measures have made little difference to the overall situation, with most of the trucks that did bring aid into the strip this week being looted.
This picture taken from Israel's southern border with the Gaza Strip shows parachutes of humanitarian aid dropping over the besieged Palestinian territory on 26 March 26, 2024.
Photo:
JACK GUEZJACK GUEZ / AFP
Palestinians seeking aid allege Israeli soldiers continue to shoot at and kill them and vulnerable people continue to miss out.
Aid workers say the situation has devolved into a "survival of the fittest" and is failing to deliver food to people like Mohassen Shaaban, who is nursing her one-month-old daughter Rahaf in a tent in a camp in Gaza.
"They keep promising aid but we haven't seen anything," she told the ABC.
Because most of the increased aid over the past week has been looted before making it to the agencies' warehouses, there has been no distribution to people like her.
"We adults have nothing to eat - no food at all. So how can I feed her [baby Rahaf]? I can't find anything for her or for us," she said.
"The situation is terrible for us - imagine what it's like for the children."
Shaaban said she often boiled mint leaves in water to give to her daughter, in an attempt to stop her crying.
"She needs milk. She needs a clean place to live. We all need milk and a clean, safe space," she said.
"We need food - not just for the children, but for ourselves too, so we can breastfeed them. There are no nutrients.
"This situation is driving me crazy. It's unbearable not being able to find anything to feed her."
Six-month-old Jouri Abu Hajar lies 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 AFP
Even if Gaza's malnourished children survive this cruel phase in the war, they will be forever marked by it.
"Child malnutrition causes cognitive impairment, memory loss, and inflammation; impacting the child's developmental potential," said Fawaz Al Husseini, the paediatric malnutrition specialist.
"It affects walking, memory, and vision - it impacts the entire body. In some cases, it even affects the kidneys; some children suffer kidney failure due to malnutrition."
Many adults in Gaza are malnourished too, but the impact on children is worse. The developmental damage is irreversible, said Rob Williams, the chief executive of the War Child Alliance.
"The process of development stops, the process of building a brain, of creating neurons that will establish cognitive ability, will stop," he said.
"If you're a child at a vulnerable age for brain development… if that development stops, that is not reversible.
"The trucks coming in now will do nothing to restore the injury that's been done to the brains and the physical development of children who have been acutely malnourished.
"It's also true to say that hundreds of thousands of children have permanent damage - permanent physical and cognitive damage - from a deliberate policy of restricting the supply of food in Gaza."
The UN and other agencies say only a ceasefire and the unrestricted opening of Gaza's crossings to aid and commercial goods will solve the hunger crisis.
"It's not just about how many trucks get to the barrier, it's how effectively they get to the population, and especially the vulnerable ones who can't fight for food as the trucks enter and who can't risk their lives going to the GHF," Williams said.
"The question that policymakers seem to be asking themselves is not 'How do you stop mass starvation in Gaza?' - the question they seem to be asking is 'How do we do something that will make it look like we're doing something?'
"We are at the point in Gaza where anything that doesn't include a complete ceasefire, a complete opening of those walls, a complete opening of the perfectly competent aid system that was there before … anything less than is policymakers condemning tens of thousands of people to death."
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Doctors in Gaza are treating children who may never recover from malnutrition
Doctors in Gaza are treating children who may never recover from malnutrition

RNZ News

timea day ago

  • RNZ News

Doctors in Gaza are treating children who may never recover from malnutrition

By ABC News Middle East correspondent Eric Tlozek, Chérine Yazbeck and ABC staff in Gaza Yazan, a malnourished 2-year-old Palestinian boy, sit with his brothers at their family's damaged home in the Al-Shati refugee camp, west of Gaza City. Photo: AFP / OMAR AL-QATTAA CONTENT WARNING: This story contains images of sick children that may be distressing. In clinics across Gaza, starving children are getting treatment, but they probably can't be saved. They lie on hospital beds, skeletal, wasted, many barely making a sound. Medical workers say that's what scares them most. "They're so exhausted, they're so sick, they're no longer able to cry," said Rachel Cummings, the humanitarian director for Save the Children in Gaza, describing a visit to one of the organisation's clinics last week. "It was nearly silent." Many of those children who can still speak are saying they want to die. Doctors say many of the children in specialised malnutrition treatment centres may not recover. (ABC News) Photo: ABC News "We have many children now in our child protection services saying that they wish to die [because] in heaven, in paradise, there is food, there is water," Cummings said. The horrifying truth, according to doctors in Gaza, is that many will soon get their wish. "All of the children who are currently malnourished will die," said Canadian doctor Tarek Loubani, the medical director of the healthcare organisation Glia, who is working in Gaza at the moment. "That is, unless there is an absolutely rapid and consistent reversal of what is happening. "However, let's be very realistic. Anybody who is malnourished right now will die." The number of malnutrition deaths in Gaza could be vastly under-reported, said Dr Loubani, who spoke at a recent press conference alongside multiple aid workers, including Cummings. They don't include children with pre-existing medical conditions, even if those conditions are also exacerbated by the war, he said. "The figures are very, very conservative," he said. "The directive that we receive in the emergency [ward] is that we do not report any death that has a substantial - even primary - malnutrition component if there is any other comorbidity. "That is to say, the only deaths that are marked as malnutrition deaths are the ones where there is really well and truly nothing else going on but the malnutrition." He believes the official malnutrition death numbers could be just 10 percent of the reality. Six-month-old Jouri Abu Hajar lies in the nutrition ward at Al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat, central Gaza. Photo: AFP / MOIZ SALHI The medical term "malnutrition" masks the harshness of the situation. What's occurring in Gaza now - say doctors, aid workers and the people themselves - is starvation. In the Patient Friends Hospital, which hosts the main specialised malnutrition treatment centre in Gaza City, doctors can't do much to help. "Although a nutritional plan is attempted, there are no adequate supplies - there's simply nothing available to nourish the children," said Dr Fawaz Al Husseini, a paediatrician specialising in malnutrition. "In normal circumstances, infants might consume butter and milk at home. But here, even hospitalised children with severe malnutrition gain little weight due to the limited food available. "What little aid enters Gaza is grossly insufficient; it doesn't even begin to meet the children's needs." Even for moderately malnourished Gazan children, the prospects are grim. The use of a simple, yet specialised, measuring device called a MUAC (Mid-Upper Arm Circumference) tape determines whether a child is healthy (green), moderately malnourished (orange) or suffering from acute malnutrition (red). The orange and red cases are given a paste from peanut, sugar and milk powder called "Plumpy'Nut" - a Nutella-inspired health supplement designed to treat malnutrition. Children being treated at the Patient Friends Hospital, a specialist malnutrition treatment centre in Gaza.(ABC News) Photo: ABC News But it's not enough to save them. "The treatment for moderate, the orange, is inadequate because there are no complementary foods. You can't survive on Plumpy'Nut alone," Cummings said. "Children are just getting sicker and sicker, even though they're in a treatment program for malnutrition. "This is why we see this downward trajectory of child outcomes and that's why my team were so upset… because they know they're sending the children home [and] they will bounce back to the clinic in a worse state." Najah, a 35-year-old Palestinian mother, sits next to her malnourished 11-months-old daughter Sila as they await treatment at the Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip. Photo: AFP Israel blocked all food from entering Gaza from 2 March to 21 May, saying it was trying to pressure the militant group Hamas to accept its ceasefire terms. It also tried to replace the comprehensive and extensive UN-led aid distribution system with a newly formed American contractor, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which had never before delivered humanitarian relief. Israel argued these changes were to stop Hamas diverting aid, something the UN and international relief agencies denied was occurring and for which a US government analysis found no evidence. The result of Israel's policy was widespread deprivation and desperation, culminating in an urgent declaration by the UN's Integrated Food Security Phase Classification group that most of Gaza had crossed famine thresholds. Hundreds of people were killed - likely by Israeli tank and gunfire - trying to get food from the limited aid points set up by the private contractor, which, by its own numbers, has never distributed enough food to come close to feeding Gaza's population. The few aid trucks that came through have been swarmed by desperate people, as seen in recent satellite vision. It was only when faced with global condemnation and pressure from its closest ally, the United States, that Israel allowed more trucks into Gaza. Over the past week, the UN said Israel also granted an increased number of requests from its agencies to pick up aid already sitting under Israeli military guard inside the strip. Israel also announced "tactical pauses" - basically agreeing not to bomb or attack certain areas with ground troops - so drivers can take goods to stricken populations. It allowed several countries to parachute food into Gaza by plane, a practice condemned by many aid agencies as ineffective, dangerous and expensive. The United Nations said those measures have made little difference to the overall situation, with most of the trucks that did bring aid into the strip this week being looted. This picture taken from Israel's southern border with the Gaza Strip shows parachutes of humanitarian aid dropping over the besieged Palestinian territory on 26 March 26, 2024. Photo: JACK GUEZJACK GUEZ / AFP Palestinians seeking aid allege Israeli soldiers continue to shoot at and kill them and vulnerable people continue to miss out. Aid workers say the situation has devolved into a "survival of the fittest" and is failing to deliver food to people like Mohassen Shaaban, who is nursing her one-month-old daughter Rahaf in a tent in a camp in Gaza. "They keep promising aid but we haven't seen anything," she told the ABC. Because most of the increased aid over the past week has been looted before making it to the agencies' warehouses, there has been no distribution to people like her. "We adults have nothing to eat - no food at all. So how can I feed her [baby Rahaf]? I can't find anything for her or for us," she said. "The situation is terrible for us - imagine what it's like for the children." Shaaban said she often boiled mint leaves in water to give to her daughter, in an attempt to stop her crying. "She needs milk. She needs a clean place to live. We all need milk and a clean, safe space," she said. "We need food - not just for the children, but for ourselves too, so we can breastfeed them. There are no nutrients. "This situation is driving me crazy. It's unbearable not being able to find anything to feed her." Six-month-old Jouri Abu Hajar lies 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 AFP Even if Gaza's malnourished children survive this cruel phase in the war, they will be forever marked by it. "Child malnutrition causes cognitive impairment, memory loss, and inflammation; impacting the child's developmental potential," said Fawaz Al Husseini, the paediatric malnutrition specialist. "It affects walking, memory, and vision - it impacts the entire body. In some cases, it even affects the kidneys; some children suffer kidney failure due to malnutrition." Many adults in Gaza are malnourished too, but the impact on children is worse. The developmental damage is irreversible, said Rob Williams, the chief executive of the War Child Alliance. "The process of development stops, the process of building a brain, of creating neurons that will establish cognitive ability, will stop," he said. "If you're a child at a vulnerable age for brain development… if that development stops, that is not reversible. "The trucks coming in now will do nothing to restore the injury that's been done to the brains and the physical development of children who have been acutely malnourished. "It's also true to say that hundreds of thousands of children have permanent damage - permanent physical and cognitive damage - from a deliberate policy of restricting the supply of food in Gaza." The UN and other agencies say only a ceasefire and the unrestricted opening of Gaza's crossings to aid and commercial goods will solve the hunger crisis. "It's not just about how many trucks get to the barrier, it's how effectively they get to the population, and especially the vulnerable ones who can't fight for food as the trucks enter and who can't risk their lives going to the GHF," Williams said. "The question that policymakers seem to be asking themselves is not 'How do you stop mass starvation in Gaza?' - the question they seem to be asking is 'How do we do something that will make it look like we're doing something?' "We are at the point in Gaza where anything that doesn't include a complete ceasefire, a complete opening of those walls, a complete opening of the perfectly competent aid system that was there before … anything less than is policymakers condemning tens of thousands of people to death." - ABC

Food airdropped into Gaza as Israel says opening aid routes
Food airdropped into Gaza as Israel says opening aid routes

RNZ News

time27-07-2025

  • RNZ News

Food airdropped into Gaza as Israel says opening aid routes

Two Jordanian and one Emirati plane on dropped 25 tonnes of humanitarian aid over the Gaza Strip, Jordanian state television reported on 27 July. Israel also parachuted food aid, and trucks of flour were seen arriving in northern Gaza through a crossing from Israel, according to AFP journalists. Photo: AFP / Bashar Taleb Jordanian and Emirati planes dropped food into Gaza as Israel began a limited "tactical pause" in some military operations to allow the UN and aid agencies to tackle a deepening hunger crisis. The Palestinian territory is gripped by dire humanitarian conditions created by 21 months of war and made worse by Israel's total blockade of aid from March to May. Since the easing of the blockade, the levels of aid reaching Gaza have been far below what aid groups say is needed. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted his government was not to blame for the dire situation and lashed out at the UN. The Israeli military dismissed allegations that it had been using starvation as a weapon, saying it had coordinated with the UN and international agencies to "increase the scale of humanitarian aid entering the Gaza Strip". A Palestinian boy reacts as he carries a bag of flour in the al-Mawasi camp in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, that was picked up from the Rafah corridor on 27 July 2025. Photo: AFP The World Health Organisation warned on Sunday that malnutrition was reaching "alarming levels" in Gaza. It said that of the 74 recorded malnutrition-related deaths in 2025, 63 had occurred in July -- including 24 children aged under five, one child older than five, and 38 adults. "Most of these people were declared dead on arrival at health facilities or died shortly after, their bodies showing clear signs of severe wasting," the UN health agency said. "The crisis remains entirely preventable. Deliberate blocking and delay of large-scale food, health and humanitarian aid has cost many lives." The UN's World Food Programme said a third of the population of Gaza had not eaten for days, and 470,000 were "enduring famine-like conditions". UN emergency relief coordinator Tom Fletcher welcomed Israel's tactical pauses, saying his teams "will do all we can to reach as many starving people as we can in this window". People walk with sacks of flour delivered after trucks carrying humanitarian aid entered northern Gaza on 27 July, 2025 coming from the Zikim border crossing. Photo: AFP / Bashar Taleb The Israeli decision came as international pressure mounted on Netanyahu to prevent mass starvation in the territory. Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz joined the chorus of concern on Sunday, urging the Israeli premier "to provide the starving civilian population in Gaza with urgently needed humanitarian aid now". Accusing the UN of fabricating "pretexts and lies about Israel" blocking aid, Netanyahu said in remarks at an airbase that "there are secure routes" for aid. "There have always been, but today it's official. There will be no more excuses," he added. The situation inside the territory deteriorated sharply after Israel imposed its total blockade on aid in March. It later eased the blockade, but sidelined the UN and major aid agencies and instead relied on a newly created, US-backed private foundation. Aid groups refused to work with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, accusing it of furthering Israel's military goals, while hundreds of people have been killed attempting to reach its sites. The Jordanian military said its planes, working with the United Arab Emirates, had delivered 25 tonnes of aid in three parachute drops over Gaza on Sunday. The Israeli military also said it had conducted a drop, parachuting seven pallets of aid into the territory. Truckloads of flour were also seen arriving in northern Gaza through the Zikim area crossing from Israel, according to AFP journalists. AFP correspondents also saw trucks crossing from Egypt, heading for Israeli inspection before entering Gaza. The charity Oxfam's regional policy chief Bushra Khalidi called Israel's latest moves a "welcome first step" but warned they were insufficient. "Starvation won't be solved by a few trucks or airdrops," she said. "What's needed is a real humanitarian response: ceasefire, full access, all crossings open and a steady, large-scale flow of aid into Gaza. "We need a permanent ceasefire, a complete lifting of the siege." In general, humanitarian officials are deeply sceptical that airdrops can deliver enough food safely to tackle the hunger crisis facing Gaza's more than two million inhabitants. Gazans watch as a military plane flies over during an aid drop in the northern Gaza Strip. Photo: AFP / Bashar Taleb In Gaza City's Tel el-Hawa district, 30-year-old Suad Ishtaywi said her "life's wish" was simply to feed her children. She spoke of her husband returning empty-handed from each day from aid points. There were chaotic scenes at the site where Israel conducted its first food drop, witnesses told AFP. Samih Humeid, a 23-year-old from the Al-Karama neighbourhood of Gaza City, said dozens of people had gathered to rush towards the parachuted supplies. "It felt like a war, everyone trying to grab whatever they could. Hunger is merciless. The quantities were extremely limited, not enough even for a few people, because hunger is everywhere. I only managed to get three cans of fava beans," he said. The Israeli army's daily pause from 10am to 8pm will be limited to areas where its troops are not currently operating -- Al-Mawasi in the south, Deir el-Balah in the centre and Gaza City in the north. Last November, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu and former Israeli defence minister Yoav Gallant, citing "reasonable grounds" to suspect war crimes including starvation - charges Israel vehemently denies. On Sunday, according to the Gaza civil defence agency, Israeli army fire killed 27 Palestinians, 12 of them near aid distribution areas. Media restrictions in Gaza and difficulties in accessing many areas mean AFP is unable to independently verify tolls and details provided by the civil defence agency and other parties. Israel launched its military campaign in Gaza after Hamas's 7 October 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures. The Israeli campaign has killed 59,733 Palestinians, mostly civilians, according to the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory. - AFP

More than 100 killed by strikes, gunfire, starvation
More than 100 killed by strikes, gunfire, starvation

RNZ News

time23-07-2025

  • RNZ News

More than 100 killed by strikes, gunfire, starvation

By Mahmoud Issa, Ramadan Abed and Nidal al-Mughrabi , Reuters Palestinians mourn loved ones killed in Israeli strikes, at Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City on 23 July, 2025. Photo: AFP / Bashar Taleb The Al-Shaer family went to bed hungry at their home in Gaza City. An Israeli airstrike killed them in their sleep. The family - freelance journalist Wala al-Jaabari, her husband and their five children - were among more than 100 people killed in 24 hours of Israeli strikes or gunfire, according to health officials. Their corpses lay in white shrouds outside their bombed home on Wednesday with their names scribbled in pen. Blood seeped through the shrouds as they lay there, staining them red. "This is my cousin. He was 10. We dug them out of the rubble," Amr al-Shaer, holding one of the bodies after retrieving it. Iman al-Shaer, another relative who lives nearby, said the family hadn't eaten anything before the bombs came down. "The children slept without food," he said. The Israeli military did not immediately comment on the strike at the family's home, but said its air force had struck 120 targets throughout Gaza in the past day, including "terrorist cells, military structures, tunnels, booby-trapped structures, and additional terrorist infrastructure sites". Relatives said some neighbours were spared only because they had been out searching for food at the time of the strike. Ten more Palestinians died overnight from starvation, the Gaza health ministry said, bringing the total number of people who have starved to death to 111, most of them in recent weeks as a wave of hunger crashes on the Palestinian enclave. The World Health Organization said on Wednesday 21 children under the age of five were among those who died of malnutrition so far this year. It said it had been unable to deliver any food for nearly 80 days between March and May and that a resumption of food deliveries was still far below what is needed. In a statement on Wednesday, 111 organisations, including Mercy Corps, the Norwegian Refugee Council and Refugees International, said mass starvation was spreading even as tons of food, clean water and medical supplies sit untouched just outside Gaza, where aid groups are blocked from accessing them. Israel, which cut off all supplies to Gaza from the start of March and reopened it with new restrictions in May, 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. Israel has also accused the United Nations of failing to act in a timely fashion, saying 700 truckloads of aid are idling inside Gaza. "It is time for them to pick it up and stop blaming Israel for the bottlenecks which are occurring," Israeli government spokesman David Mercer said on Wednesday. The United Nations and aid groups trying to deliver food to Gaza say Israel, which controls everything that comes in and out, is choking delivery, and Israeli troops have shot hundreds of Palestinians dead close to aid collection points since May. "We have a minimum set of requirements to be able to operate inside Gaza," Ross Smith, the director of emergencies at the UN World Food Programme, told Reuters. "One of the most important things I want to emphasise is that we need to have no armed actors near our distribution points, near our convoys." Israel's UN Ambassador Danny Danon told the Security Council on Wednesday that Israel will now grant only one-month visas to international staff from the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The war between Israel and Hamas has been raging for nearly two years since Hamas killed some 1200 Israelis and took 251 hostages from southern Israel in the deadliest attack in Israel's history. Israel has since killed nearly 60,000 Palestinians in Gaza, decimated Hamas as a military force, reduced most of the territory to ruins and forced nearly the entire population to flee their homes multiple times. US Middle East peace envoy Steve Witkoff is expected to hold new ceasefire talks, travelling to Europe this week for meetings on the Gaza war and a range of other issues, a US official said on Tuesday. Talks on a proposal for a 60-day ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, which would include the release of more of the 50 hostages still being held in Gaza, are being mediated by Qatar and Egypt with Washington's backing. Successive rounds of negotiations have achieved no breakthrough since the collapse of a ceasefire in March. Israel's President Isaac Herzog told soldiers during a visit to Gaza on Wednesday that "intensive negotiations" about returning the hostages held there were underway and he hoped that they would soon "hear good news", according to a statement. A senior Palestinian official told Reuters Hamas might give mediators a response to the latest proposals in Doha later on Wednesday, on the condition that amendments be made to two major sticking points: details on an Israeli military withdrawal, and on how to distribute aid during a truce. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Cabinet includes far-right parties that oppose any agreement that ends without the total destruction of Hamas. "The second I spot weakness in the prime minister and if I come to think, heaven forbid, that this is about to end with us surrendering instead of with Hamas' absolute surrender, I won't remain [in the government] for even a single day," Finance Minister Belalel Smotrich told Army Radio. - Reuters

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