WORLD
WORLD, 10. September 2025.
ISRAELI-INDUCED STARVATION IN GAZA KILLS 185 IN AUGUST
More than 360 people, including 130 children, have died from hunger since the start of Israelís genocidal war on Gaza.
A total of 185 people in Gaza died “due to malnutrition” in August,
according to Gaza’s Ministry of Health, as an additional 13 people,
including three children, have died in 24 hours since then as the
catastrophic effects of Israeli-induced famine in the enclave worsen.
The statement issued on Tuesday said more than 83 people, including 15
children, had died since the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC),
a United Nations-backed global hunger-monitoring system, declared last month
that parts of Gaza were undergoing a full-blown famine.
The Health Ministry also said
43,000 children below the age of five were suffering from malnutrition along
with more than 55,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women. Two-thirds of
pregnant women were suffering from anaemia, the highest rate in years, it
added. Mothers and newborns are the most at risk from malnutrition.
The total number of hunger-related deaths in the besieged enclave now stands
at 361, including 130 children, since the start of Israel’s genocidal war on
Gaza on October 7, 2023.
Israel has killed at least 63,633 people in Gaza and wounded 160,914 during
the war, according to the Ministry of Health.
The IPC declared on August 22 that 514,000 people in the Gaza Strip, close
to a quarter of the enclave’s population, are experiencing famine. It
expected the number to rise to 641,000 by the end of September.
The IPC made its declaration after more than 22 months of war, during which
Israeli forces have destroyed medical facilities, schools, infrastructure
and bakeries; blocked the entry of aid into the besieged Strip; and targeted
and killed Palestinians seeking food aid.
This is the first time the IPC
has recorded famine outside Africa, and the global group predicted that
famine conditions would spread to Deir el-Balah in central Gaza and Khan
Younis in the south by the end of this month.
After the IPC’s declaration, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called
the famine a “man-made disaster, a moral indictment and a failure of
humanity itself”.
Guterres said Israel had “unequivocal obligations” under international law
as an occupying power to ensure food and medical supplies enter Gaza.
Humanitarian organisations have
demanded action. For its part, Israel rejected the findings, saying there
was no famine in Gaza despite the IPC’s overwhelming evidence.
At least 78 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli attacks across Gaza
since dawn on Tuesday, among them 42 in Gaza City alone, medical sources
told Al Jazeera. Among the killed, 20 were aid seekers situated in central
and southern Gaza.
Israeli attacks are mainly, but not solely, now focused on Gaza City, the
territory’s largest urban centre, as the Israeli army relentlessly bombards
it and tries to forcibly displace its residents to the southern part of the
enclave.
“Civilians on the ground are bearing the brunt. There are still hundreds of
thousands of families in Gaza City,” reported Al Jazeera correspondent Tareq
Abu Azzoum at midday from Deir el-Balah. “They refuse to leave because they
know that there are no safe spaces in central and southern Gaza and they
would rather stay close to their communities and what’s left of their
houses.”
Once teeming and crowded with residential buildings, Gaza City has been home
to one million Palestinians, nearly half of Gaza’s population, but it is now
a landscape of rubble.
The world’s top genocide scholars formally declared that Israel’s war on
Gaza meets the legal definition of genocide, marking a landmark intervention
from leading experts in the field of international law.
The International Association of Genocide Scholars, a 500-member body of
academics founded in 1994, passed a resolution on Monday stating that
Israel’s policies and actions in Gaza fulfil the definition of genocide set
out in the 1948 UN Convention for the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime
of Genocide.