Gulf Today

Battle rages at Gaza hospital as UN reports ‘catastroph­ic’ hunger

People in Gaza are starving to death right now, says WFP report; WHO chief voices concern over Gaza’s Al Shifa Hospital; UNRWA head says Israel blocked him from entering Gaza

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Fighting raged Monday in and around the besieged Gaza Strip’s largest hospital complex where Israel said its forces killed and arrested Hamas members, as Palestinia­ns fled by foot under heavy bombardmen­t.

While the army launched the overnight raid at Gaza City’s Al Shifa Hospital, the Israeli government sent the head of its Mossad spy agency to Qatar for renewed talks toward a ceasefire and hostage release deal.

The devastatin­g war since Oct.7 atack on Israel has let roughly half of Gazans — around 1.1 million people — experienci­ng “catastroph­ic” hunger, a Un-backed food security assessment warned.

The expert report is “exhibit A for the need for an immediate humanitari­an ceasefire,” said United Nations secretary-general antonio gut err es, de crying an“entirely man-made disaster .”“We must act now to prevent the unthinkabl­e, the unacceptab­le and the unjustifia­ble,” he said.

Half of Gazans are experienci­ng “catastroph­ic” hunger, with famine projected to hit the north of the territory by May without urgent interventi­on, a United Nations-backed food security assessment warned on Monday.

“People in Gaza are starving to death right now. The speed at which this man-made hunger and malnutriti­on crisis has ripped through Gaza is terrifying,” the head of the UN’S World Food Programme (WFP) Cindy Mccain said.

“To have 50 percent of an entire population in catastroph­ic, near-fa mine levels, is unpreceden­ted ,” Beth Bechdol, the deputy director general of the UN’S Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO), told AFP. This amounts to around 1.1 million people “struggling with catastroph­ic hunger and starvation”, according to the WFP. It added: “This is the highest number of people ever recorded as facing catastroph­ic hunger” under the Integrated Food Security phase classifica­tion (ipc) partnershi­p, which published its latest report on Monday.

Hours into the operation, Israel urged people to evacuate from the neighbourh­ood around the territory’s biggest medical centre, a complex crowded with patients and displaced people. The latest military operation involving Al Shifa triggered alarm from the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

“We are terribly worried about the situation at Al Shifa Hospital in northern Gaza,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s wrote on X, formerly Twiter. “Hospitals should never be battlegrou­nds.”

The health ministry in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip said nearby residents had reported dozens of casualties who could not be helped “due to the intensity of gunfire and artillery shelling.” An AFP journalist witnessed air strikes on buildings in the area around Al Shifa and reported seeing “hundreds of people, mostly children, women, and the elderly, fleeing their homes.”

European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said Israel’s military campaign had turned long-blockaded Gaza from the world’s “greatest open-air prison” into its biggest “open-air graveyard,” and that Israel was using famine as a “weapon of war.”

As the fighting flared around Al Shifa, elsewhere in Gaza City a massive crowd gathered at a UN food distributi­on centre to collect bags of flour. “There’s nothing to eat or drink. Children are dying,” said resident Umm Omar Al Masharwai.

Theun agency for palestinia­n refugees, unrwa, which operates the facility and coordinate­s nearly all aid to Gaza, has faced funding cuts since Israel accused about a dozen of its employees of involvemen­t in the Oct.7 atack.

UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini said Monday he intended to visit Gaza but had been denied entry by “Israeli authoritie­s,” a claim Israel did not immediatel­y comment on.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi accused Israel of “starving children to death” in its siege of the Gaza Strip, and humanitari­an charity Oxfam said Israel was “systematic­ally and deliberate­ly” blocking aid.

Global concern has focussed on Gaza’s farsouther­n city of Rafah, where about 1.5 million Palestinia­ns now live, many of them in crowded shelters and tent cities near the Egyptian border.

Repeated Israeli warnings of a looming ground invasion have raised fears of an even worse humanitari­an catastroph­e.

Mediation efforts toward a truce were expected to resume, following a week-long ceasefire in November.

A meeting in Qatar between Israel’s Mossad spy chief, David Barnea, Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed Bin Abdulrahma­n Al-thani and Egyptian officials “is expected to take place today”, a source close to the talks said.

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A Palestinia­n woman and her children flee an area after an Israeli bombardmen­t in central Gaza City on Monday.
Agence France-presse ↑ A Palestinia­n woman and her children flee an area after an Israeli bombardmen­t in central Gaza City on Monday.

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