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54716


Date: June 14, 2024 at 14:56:54
From: chatillon, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Child Dies of Malnutrition in Central Gaza, Death Toll Rises to 40

URL: link


Mustafa Hijazi, 12, succumbed on Friday to severe
malnutrition and dehydration amid a critical shortage of
medical supplies at the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir
al-Balah, central Gaza, the report said.
Another child has died in the besieged Gaza Strip due to
starvation and dehydration, bringing the total number of
malnutrition-related deaths in the enclave to 40,
according to medical sources cited by the official
Palestinian news agency, WAFA.

Mustafa Hijazi, 12, succumbed on Friday to severe
malnutrition and dehydration amid a critical shortage of
medical supplies at the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir
al-Balah, central Gaza, the report said.

Medical sources previously reported that 50 children in
northern Gaza are suffering from malnutrition and
starvation.

According to reports from Kamal Adwan Hospital in
northern Gaza, about 50 children were suffering from
malnutrition due to Israel’s blocking of humanitarian
aid into the region, said WAFA.

Famine Looming
The sources told WAFA that “The specter of famine looms
over Gaza, and signs of malnutrition are evident in some
children. We are attempting to provide minimal medical
services despite the fuel shortages.”

Relief officials and health experts have warned of
famine in Gaza this Summer unless Israel lifts the
restrictions on aid, stops the aggression, and restores
vital services, the report said.

The World Health Organization (WHO) recently warned that
many Gaza residents are facing “catastrophic levels of
hunger and conditions resembling famine.”

Horrific Images
On Tuesday, the UN International Children’s Emergency
Fund (UNICEF) warned that almost 3,000 children have
been cut off from treatment for moderate and severe
acute malnutrition in southern Gaza, putting them at
risk of death.

“Horrific images continue to emerge from Gaza of
children dying before their families’ eyes due to the
continued lack of food, nutrition supplies, and the
destruction of healthcare services,” said Adele Khor,
UNICEF Regional Director for the Middle East and North
Africa in a statement.

“Unless treatment can be quickly resumed for these 3,000
children, they are at immediate and serious risk of
becoming critically ill, acquiring life-threatening
complications, and joining the growing list of boys and
girls who have been killed by this senseless, man-made
deprivation.”

This number, based on reporting from UNICEF’s nutrition
partners, equates to approximately three-quarters of the
3,800 children who were estimated to be receiving life-
saving care in the south ahead of the escalating
conflict in Rafah.

Ongoing Genocide
Currently on trial before the International Court of
Justice for genocide against Palestinians, Israel has
been waging a devastating war on Gaza since October 7.

According to Gaza’s Ministry of Health, 37,232
Palestinians have been killed, and 85,037 wounded.
Moreover, at least 11,000 people are unaccounted for,
presumed dead under the rubble of their homes throughout
the Strip. Palestinian and international organizations
say that the majority of those killed and wounded are
women and children.

The Israeli war has resulted in an acute famine, mostly
in northern Gaza, resulting in the death of many
Palestinians, mostly children.

The Israeli aggression has also resulted in the forceful
displacement of nearly two million people from all over
the Gaza Strip, with the vast majority of the displaced
forced into the densely crowded southern city of Rafah
near the border with Egypt – in what has become
Palestine’s largest mass exodus since the 1948 Nakba.

Israel says that 1,200 soldiers and civilians were
killed during the Al-Aqsa Flood Operation on October 7.
Israeli media published reports suggesting that many
Israelis were killed on that day by ‘friendly fire’.

(PC, WAFA)


Responses:
[54721]


54721


Date: June 15, 2024 at 03:53:29
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: War Crimes - Gaza: Israel’s Imposed Starvation Deadly for Children

URL: https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/04/09/gaza-israels-imposed-starvation-deadly-children


Gaza: Israel’s Imposed Starvation Deadly for Children

Devastating Accounts from Doctors, Parents; Reports of ‘Imminent’ Famine
Palestinian children suffering from malnutrition receive treatment at a
healthcare center, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, March 4, 2024.Click
to expand Image

Palestinian children suffering from malnutrition receive treatment at a
healthcare center, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, March 4, 2024. ©
2024 Mohammed Salem/Reuters

(Beirut, April 9, 2024) – Children in Gaza have been dying from starvation-
related complications since the Israeli government began using starvation as
a weapon of war, a war crime, Human Rights Watch said today. Doctors and
families in Gaza described children, as well as pregnant and breastfeeding
mothers, suffering from severe malnutrition and dehydration, and hospitals
ill-equipped to treat them.

Concerned governments should impose targeted sanctions and suspend
arms transfers to press the Israeli government to ensure access to
humanitarian aid and basic services in Gaza, in accordance with Israel’s
obligations under international law and the recent International Court of
Justice order in South Africa’s genocide case.

“The Israeli government’s use of starvation as a weapon of war has proven
deadly for children in Gaza,” said Omar Shakir, Israel and Palestine director at
Human Rights Watch. “Israel needs to end this war crime, stop this suffering,
and allow humanitarian aid to reach all of Gaza unhindered.”

A United Nations-coordinated partnership of 15 international organizations
and UN agencies investigating the hunger crisis in Gaza reported on March
18, 2024, that “all evidence points towards a major acceleration of death and
malnutrition.” The partnership said that in northern Gaza, where 70 percent
of the population is estimated to be experiencing catastrophic hunger,
famine could occur anytime between mid-March and May.

Gaza’s Health Ministry reported as of April 1, that 32 people, including 28
children, had died of malnutrition and dehydration at hospitals in northern
Gaza. Save the Children confirmed on April 2 the deaths from starvation and
disease of 27 children. Earlier in March, World Health Organisation (WHO)
officials found “children dying of starvation” in northern Gaza’s Kamal Adwan
and al-Awda hospitals. In southern Gaza, where aid is more accessible but
still grossly inadequate, UN agencies in mid-February said that 5 percent of
children under age 2 were found to be acutely malnourished.

Human Rights Watch in March interviewed a doctor in northern Gaza, a
volunteer doctor who has since left Gaza, the parents of two infants who
doctors said died of starvation-related complications in both mother and
child, and the parents of four other children suffering from malnutrition and
dehydration.

Human Rights Watch reviewed the death certificate for one of the children,
and photos of two of the children in critical condition that showed signs of
emaciation. All had been treated at Kamal Adwan hospital in Beit Lahia,
northern Gaza.

Human Rights Watch health advisers also reviewed verified pictures and
videos online of three other evidently emaciated children who died and four
others in critical condition who also showed signs of emaciation.

Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, who heads Kamal Adwan hospital’s pediatrics unit,
told Human Rights Watch on April 4 that 26 children had died after
experiencing starvation-related complications in his hospital alone. He said
that at least 16 of the children who died were under 5 months old, at least 10
were between 1 and 8 years old, and that a 73-year-old man suffering from
malnutrition had also died.

Dr. Safiya said one of the infants died at just two days old after being born
severely dehydrated, apparently exacerbated by his mother’s poor health:
“[She] had no milk to give him.”

N. age 11, is being treated for malnutrition and severe dehydration at Kamal
Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahia, Gaza, March 25, 2024.Click to expand Image
N. age 11, is being treated for malnutrition and severe dehydration at Kamal
Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahia, Gaza, March 25, 2024. © 2024 Mousa
Salem/Anadolu via Getty Images
Nour al-Huda, an 11-year-old girl with cystic fibrosis, was admitted to Kamal
Adwan hospital on March 15. Doctors there told her mother that Nour was
suffering from malnutrition, dehydration, and an infection in her lungs, and
administered her oxygen and a saline solution. “Nour al-Huda now weighs 18
kilograms [about 40 pounds],” her mother told Human Rights Watch. “I can
see her chest bones sticking out.”

International humanitarian law prohibits the starvation of civilians as a
method of warfare. The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court
provides that intentionally starving civilians by “depriving them of objects
indispensable to their survival, including willfully impeding relief supplies,” is
a war crime.

Since the Hamas-led October 7, 2023, attacks in Israel, the Israeli
government has deliberately blocked the delivery of aid, food, and fuel into
Gaza, while impeding humanitarian assistance and depriving civilians of the
means to survive. Israeli officials ordering or carrying out these actions are
committing collective punishment against the civilian population and the
starvation of civilians as a method of warfare, both of which are war crimes.

Israeli government actions that undermine the ability of the UN Relief and
Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) to carry out
its recognized role in distributing aid in Gaza have exacerbated the effects of
the restrictions.

A doctor who volunteered at the European hospital in Khan Younis in
southern Gaza for two weeks in late January said that medical staff were
forced to treat patients with limited medical supplies. He described the
difficulty of treating malnutrition and dehydration, lacking essential items
such as glucose, electrolytes, and feeding tubes. He said that one patient’s
mother, desperate for solutions, resorted to crushing potatoes to create a
makeshift liquid for tube feeding. Despite its nutritional inadequacy, the
doctor said, “I ended up telling my other patients to find potatoes and do the
same.”

On January 26, the International Court of Justice, in a case brought by South
Africa, ordered provisional measures, including requiring Israel to “take
immediate and effective measures to enable the provision of urgently
needed basic services and humanitarian aid” and other actions to comply
with the 1948 Genocide Convention. On March 28, the court indicated that
Israel had not complied with this order and imposed a more detailed
provisional measure requiring the government to ensure the unimpeded
provision of basic services and aid in full cooperation with the UN, while
noting that “famine is setting in.”

Governments should impose targeted sanctions, including travel bans and
asset freezes, against officials and individuals responsible for the continued
commission of the war crimes of collective punishment, deliberate
obstruction of humanitarian aid and using starvation of civilians as a weapon
of war.

Several countries have responded to the Israeli government’s unlawful
restrictions on assistance by airdropping aid. The United States also pledged
to build a temporary seaport in Gaza. However, aid groups and UN officials
have said such efforts are inadequate to prevent a famine. Another attempt
to deliver aid by sea was halted after an Israeli attack on aid workers on April
1.

On April 4, the Israeli cabinet agreed to several measures to increase the
amount of aid entering Gaza, apparently following pressure from the US
government.

“Governments outraged by the Israeli government starving civilians in Gaza
should not be looking for band-aid solutions to this humanitarian crisis,”
Shakir said. “Israel’s announcement that it will increase aid shows that
outside pressure works. Israel’s allies like the US, UK, France, and Germany
need to press for full-throttle aid delivery by immediately suspending their
arms transfers.”

Starvation in Gaza

Prior to the current hostilities, 1.2 million of Gaza’s then-2.2 million people
were estimated to be facing acute food insecurity, and over 80 percent were
reliant on humanitarian aid. Israel maintains overarching control over Gaza,
including over the movement of people and goods, territorial waters,
airspace, the infrastructure upon which Gaza relies, and the population
registry. This leaves Gaza’s population, whom Israel has subjected to an
unlawful closure for more than 16 years, almost entirely dependent on Israel
for access to fuel, electricity, medicine, food, and other essential
commodities.

Nonetheless, before October 7, large amounts of humanitarian assistance
reached the population. “Before this crisis, there was enough food in Gaza to
feed the population,” said WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus. “Malnutrition was a rare occurrence. Now, people are dying,
and many more are sick.”

The WHO reported that the number of children under age 5 who are acutely
malnourished has jumped from 0.8 percent before the hostilities in Gaza to
between 12.4 and 16.5 percent in northern Gaza. Oxfam said on April 3 that
since January, people in northern Gaza have been forced to survive on an
average of 245 calories a day, “less than a can of fava beans.”

According to a nutrition vulnerability analysis conducted in March by the
Global Nutrition Cluster, a network of humanitarian organizations chaired by
UNICEF, 90 percent of children ages 6-23 months and pregnant and
breastfeeding women across Gaza faced “severe food poverty,” eating two or
fewer food groups each day.

Children with preexisting health conditions are particularly vulnerable to the
devastating effects of malnutrition, which significantly weakens immunity.
And starvation, even for survivors, leads to lasting harm, especially in
children, causing stunted growth, cognitive issues, and developmental
delays.

Gaza’s Health Ministry announced on March 8 that about 60,000 pregnant
women in Gaza suffered from malnutrition, dehydration and inadequate
health care. Poor nutrition during pregnancy harms both the baby and the
mother, increasing the risk of miscarriages, fetal deaths, compromised
immune system development, growth impacts, and maternal mortality.

Older people are also at particular risk of malnutrition, which increases
mortality among those with acute or chronic illnesses. HelpAge International
reported that even before October, 45 percent of older people in Gaza were
going to bed hungry at least once a week, with 6 percent hungry every night.

The impact on Gaza’s population of the Israeli government’s use of starvation
as a weapon of war is compounded by the near-total collapse of the
healthcare system. Out of Gaza’s 36 hospitals, according to the UN Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), only 10 are operational,
none of them fully, both as a result of the Israeli military’s repeated,
apparently unlawful attacks on medical facilities, personnel, and transport, as
well as the severe restrictions on the entry of fuel and other supplies.

Accounts from Gaza

On March 19, Andrea De Domenico, head of OCHA in the occupied
Palestinian territory, visited Kamal Adwan hospital, where he said about 15
malnourished children arrive daily due to shortages in food, water, and
proper sanitation. He described dire conditions at the hospital, noting
damage to certain areas and its reliance on a single generator.

F., age 6, experiencing malnutrition, receives treatment after being
evacuated from the northern Gaza Strip to the IMC field hospital in Rafah,
Gaza, March 24, 2024.Click to expand Image
F., age 6, experiencing malnutrition, receives treatment after being evacuated
from the northern Gaza Strip to the IMC field hospital in Rafah, Gaza, March
24, 2024. © 2024 Ali Jadallah/Anadolu via Getty Images
Among the cases that Human Rights Watch investigated:

A man from Beit Lahia said his infant son, Abdelaziz, died just hours after his
severely malnourished mother gave birth to him in Kamal Adwan hospital on
February 24. He shared Abdelaziz’s death certificate with Human Rights
Watch, which said that Abdelaziz was born premature. His father said that
the hospital staff hooked Abdelaziz up to a ventilator because he was having
trouble breathing, but that the ventilator stopped working after the hospital
ran out of the necessary fuel a few hours later. “Abdelaziz died immediately,”
he said. He expressed concern for his wife, who had been surviving on
legumes and canned food, emphasizing their ongoing struggle to access
adequate nourishment.
The father of newborn twin girls said that one of his babies, Joud, died at
Kamal Adwan hospital on March 2 after suffering from malnutrition, eight
days after she was born. He said that he struggled to feed his family prior to
the girls’ birth, but that they only had bread to eat, without meat or protein.
He said that after the twins’ birth, his wife could not produce milk to
breastfeed the girls and that store-bought milk was scarce. He described
Joud’s deteriorating condition, saying that her “limbs became very cold, and
she was breathing very slowly.” His mother-in-law accompanied Joud to the
hospital, where she later passed away. The father expressed concern for the
health of the surviving twin.
Fadi, a 6-year-old boy from al-Nasser neighborhood in Gaza City, has cystic
fibrosis, a genetic disorder that causes damage to the lungs. Fadi’s mother
said that because of the Israeli blockade, she struggled to obtain the
necessary medication and provide adequate nourishment. By mid-January,
Fadi’s health had deteriorated to the point where he could no longer walk,
prompting his hospitalization. “Fadi weighed 30 kilograms [about 66 pounds]
before the war, now he is 12 [about 26 pounds],” she said. Fadi was
evacuated from Kamal Adwan hospital on March 23 and was receiving
treatment at a hospital in Cairo, a relative said on March 28.
Wissam Hammad, the uncle of 5-year-old Muhammad, who has cerebral
palsy and is lactose and gluten-intolerant and can only eat blended food, had
great difficulties in securing food for him:
Most of his food should be fruit and vegetables, which is what I try to buy.
But all I can find and afford are oranges. The problem is that he cannot chew,
so we need to break down the food for him. Everything is very expensive.

Dr. Ahmed Shahin, a pediatrician, said that before he could leave Gaza on
November 16, Osman, his 14-year-old son with cerebral palsy, who uses a
gastrostomy feeding tube, had lost seven kilograms (about 15 pounds) since
the beginning of the hostilities because they lacked access to both the
specific food he needed—such as vegetables—and electricity to blend his
food.
Obstacles to Aid Delivery

Ongoing Israeli bombardment and ground operations, lack of security
assurances from Israel, widespread infrastructure damage, and
communications disruptions make it difficult to distribute the little aid that
does get into Gaza. Humanitarian organizations have reported that Israeli
forces have attacked their aid convoys and workers. Israeli forces have also
shot at and shelled people congregating to collect aid, killing and injuring
hundreds.

An Israeli government spokesperson stated on March 18 that aid entering
Gaza faced no limits apart from security concerns. Other officials have
blamed the UN for distribution delays and accused Hamas of aid diversion or
the Gaza police of failing to secure convoys. On March 29, the Israeli Defense
Ministry’s body governing civilian affairs in the Palestinian territories, COGAT,
disputed the March 18 UN-supported humanitarian report warning of an
imminent famine, and said that it “does not reflect the full situation.” COGAT
denied that the Israeli government was purposely starving Gaza’s civilian
population. Human Rights Watch wrote to COGAT on April 2 seeking
comment on our findings, but did not receive a response as of the time of
publication.

However, OCHA reported on April 8 that only one of four food aid missions
that require coordination in Gaza were facilitated by Israeli authorities in
March. Only nine World Food Programme aid shipments have made it to the
north since January 1, the most recent of which was 18 truckloads on March
17. The World Food Programme said at least 300 trucks are needed every
day for the north alone.

The United States has resorted to airdropping food into Gaza and plans to
build a floating pier at sea to deliver aid, a proposal criticized by 26
nongovernmental organizations, including Human Rights Watch, as “risky,
expensive, and ineffective.” UN Humanitarian Coordinator Jamie McGoldrick
has stressed that road transport is the only viable solution for increasing aid
flow.

The restrictions on aid delivery make accessing food for people requiring a
specific diet particularly difficult. Several representatives of humanitarian
organizations said that they have been unable to provide food for children on
special diets or to reach them. A Palestine Children’s Relief Fund staff
member said they could only provide baby formula and could not respond to
the needs of children with specific diet requirements. Medical Aid for
Palestine said the special food items they had in storage ran out quickly, and
since then, they have been unable to find and provide those in need with
specialized food items:

Assistance is barely coming in: a quarter of the population is at risk of famine.
Under these circumstances, people with disabilities and [people in
vulnerable situations] suffer the most. When you speak about food, it’s hard
to support people who need a specific diet and medical assistance.

Following an Israeli airstrike in central Gaza on April 1, 2024, which hit three
marked vehicles from the international food organization World Central
Kitchen and killed seven aid workers from several countries, Cyprus
announced that ships carrying around 240 tons of aid for Gaza would turn
back. World Central Kitchen, Project Hope, and ANERA, all providers of food
aid, suspended their Gaza operations in light of the attack, and the United
Arab Emirates paused its involvement in a maritime aid corridor.


Responses:
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