Wednesday , October 22 2025

One in five children in Gaza is malnourished: UN

26-07-2025

UNITED NATIONS/ GAZA STRIP: One in five children in Gaza City is malnourished and cases are increasing every day, the UN’s Palestinian refugee agency (Unrwa) says.

In a statement issued on Thursday, Unrwa Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini cited a colleague telling him: “People in Gaza are neither dead nor alive, they are walking corpses.”

More than 100 international aid organizations and human rights groups have also warned of mass starvation, pressing for governments to take action.

Israel, which controls the entry of all supplies into Gaza, says there is no siege and blames Hamas for any cases of malnutrition.

The UN, however, has warned that the level of aid getting into Gaza is “a trickle” and the hunger crisis in the territory “has never been so dire”.

In his statement on Thursday, Lazzarini said “more than 100 people, the vast majority of them children, have reportedly died of hunger”.

“Most children our teams are seeing are emaciated, weak and at high risk of dying if they don’t get the treatment they urgently need,” he added, pleading for Israel to “allow humanitarian partners to bring unrestricted and uninterrupted humanitarian assistance to Gaza”.

On Wednesday, the World Health Organization (WHO) said a large proportion of the population of Gaza was “starving”.

“I don’t know what you would call it other than mass starvation and it’s man-made,” the head of the WHO, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said.

In northern Gaza, Hanaa Almadhoun, 40, said local markets are often without food and other supplies.

“If they do exist then they come at exorbitant prices that no ordinary person can afford,” she told media.

She said flour was expensive and difficult to secure, and that people have sold “gold and personal belongings” to afford it.

The mother-of-three said “every new day brings a new challenge” as people search for “something edible”.

“With my own eyes, I’ve seen children rummaging through the garbage in search of food scraps,” she added.

During a visit to Israeli troops in Gaza on Wednesday, Israel’s President Isaac Herzog insisted his country was providing humanitarian aid “according to international law” but Tahani Shehada, an aid worker in Gaza, said people “are just trying to survive hour-by-hour”.

“Even simple things like cooking [and] taking a shower have become luxuries,” she said.

“I have a baby. He’s eight months old. He doesn’t know what fresh fruit tastes like,” she added.

Israel stopped aid deliveries to Gaza in early March following a two-month ceasefire. The blockade was partially eased after nearly two months, but food, fuel and medicine shortages worsened.

Israel, with the US, established a new aid system run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

According to the UN human rights office, more than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed by the Israeli military while trying to get food aid over the past two months.

It says at least 766 of them have been killed in the vicinity of one of the GHF’s four distribution centres, which are operated by US private security contractors and are located inside Israeli military zones. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)

Check Also

New copper demand drivers from US

22-10-2025 LONDON: Copper consumption in the United States and India is set to emerge from …