CBC Edition

Hungry children are dying in Gaza as Israel's chokehold on aid drives territory toward starvation

- Chris Brown

WARNING: This story con‐ tains images of severely malnutriti­oned children.

The dire situation at the Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza may be a warning sign for what's to come in the rest of the be‐ sieged Palestinia­n territory.

Fifteen children have died at the facility in recent days from hunger and malnutri‐ tion as Gaza slowly runs out of food for its 2.3 million peo‐ ple, according to Gaza's Health Ministry.

"Mothers are not able to nurse their babies or give them immunities," said Dr. Ahmed Al-Kahlot, who's been tending to the most serious cases.

"If the mother herself suf‐ fers from malnutriti­on, how can she feed her baby?"

Video obtained by CBC News showed rows of tiny newborns in hospital incuba‐ tors, with little formula or nu‐ trition, struggling to make it through their first days of life. Some did not.

One grieving mother, An‐ war Abdulnabi, wailed as she clutched the body of her daughter, Mila, who she said died from a calcium and potassium deficiency.

Al-Kahlot said severe de‐ hydration has compromise­d the immune systems of many children, making them especially vulnerable to infec‐ tion and disease. The only solution, he said, is to give them more food and water, of which there is very little.

But aid groups say Israel, which is at war with Hamas, is at worst deliberate­ly with‐ holding food aid for Gaza, or at the very least doing too lit‐ tle to expedite its movement into the territory.

'My siblings fall asleep hungry'

Among Gaza's hunger victims this week was Yazan al-Ka‐ farna, a nine-year-old boy born with cerebral palsy.

The shocking video and images of his almost skeletal limbs and sunken eyes were picked up by news agencies and shown around the world.

His father, Ashraf, told CBC News that his son slowly wasted away after the fresh fruit and other food he needed for his diet disap‐ peared from Gaza, and there weren't any substitute­s avail‐ able.

"Before the war, we could get the food he needed. Now all the food that I used to get him before the war is not available."

Yazan died in a hospital in Rafah, in southern Gaza, on Monday morning.

With roughly 1.9 million people displaced from their homes due to Israeli airstrikes, and with hungry families crowded together in shelters or tent cities, there's often fierce competitio­n for the limited food that is avail‐ able.

Ghazal Al-Hajj Hassan, 13, grew up in northern Gaza's Jabalia refugee camp, and she and her family are now sheltering from the war in a nearby school.

"There's no food," she told a videograph­er working for CBC News. "My siblings fall asleep hungry."

Ghazal said she often suf‐ fers from dehydratio­n, and the constant lack of food means when she is able to find something to eat, it can make her feel sick.

"When there's a meal of stew, people attack each oth‐ er and hit and steal from each other," she said.

WATCH | Doctors in Gaza hospital struggle to help malnourish­ed chil‐ dren:

Scarce food supplies bring chaos

With sporadic fighting be‐ tween the militant group Hamas and Israeli forces in northern Gaza - and almost no civil organizati­on to dis‐ tribute the scarce food sup‐ plies when they arrive - the result has been scenes of chaos.

The World Food Program stopped making deliveries to the north on Feb. 20, citing a precarious security situation that put its staff in danger.

The United Nations agency attempted to restart deliveries on Tuesday by sending a convoy to the north from Rafah, at the Egyptian border, but 14 trucks were turned back by Israeli forces after a threehour wait at a checkpoint. Af‐ ter being turned away, the agency said a desperate crowd looted the trucks and took the food.

Last week, at least 112 people were killed after a huge crowd tried to access truckloads of flour that had just crossed over from Israel. Witnesses say many of the dead were killed by Israeli troops who opened fire on them, while Israel claims the majority died in a stampede.

The incident underscore­s the duelling narratives of where the blame lies for Gaza's hunger crisis.

War broke out in Gaza af‐ ter Hamas led attacks on southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing about 1,200 people and taking about 250 hostage, Israel says. More than 30,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed in Gaza since war broke out, Gaza health officials say.

Ceasefire negotiatio­ns have so far failed to bear fruit, with Hamas refusing to release the 100 hostages it still holds and the remains of about 30 more unless Israel ends its bombardmen­t of Gaza and releases Palestin‐ ian prisoners. Not long after war broke out, Israel said the delivery of aid to Gaza was tied to the release of the hostages.

"Aid is going in," Mark Regev, a senior adviser to Is‐ raeli Prime Minister Ben‐ jamin Netanyahu, told CNN. "The trouble is the internal distributi­on inside Gaza. And there, there are security chal‐ lenges."

But that assessment is fiercely contested by aid groups that claim Israel is wielding hunger as a weapon against Palestinia­n civilians to get concession­s from Hamas.

Number of aid trucks declining: UN

"To us, this is definitely a matter of collective punish‐ ment to the people of Pales‐ tine," said Diana Sarosi, direc‐ tor of policy and campaigns for Oxfam Canada. "You can‐ not punish a population of 2.2 million people for what happened on that day."

Sarosi said Israeli officials are conducting overly strin‐ gent inspection­s of trucks en‐ tering from southern cross‐ ings, such as at Rafah and Kerem Shalom, with many aid trucks being turned back needlessly.

"Since the war started, on‐ ly about 15 per cent [of aid shipments] that should have gone in in this five-month pe‐ riod have gone in."

Before Oct. 7, the main crossing for cargo, Kerem Shalom, had a capacity to process up to 1,000 trucks a day, with 500 crossings being the norm.

A report by UNRWA, the UN's relief agency, said the average number of aid trucks arriving in Gaza in February from both crossing points was just 98 trucks a day - 50 per cent lower than in Janu‐ ary.

Oxfam's position is echoed by other humanitari‐ an groups, including the Nor‐ wegian Refugee Council, which has 46 staff members on the ground in Gaza dis‐ tributing a range of assis‐ tance, from food and tents to personal items.

Shaina Low, the group's spokespers­on, told CBC News that Israel has deliber‐ ately targeted many of the security staff and Palestinia­n police officers in Gaza who have accompanie­d aid trucks, perhaps believing them to be Hamas militants.

"Basically, these are civil servants. They aren't part of the Hamas military wing," she said.

"And since these police of‐ ficers have been targeted, they will no longer accompa‐ ny aid convoys, which leads to a further deteriorat­ion of law and order in Gaza."

Low said her group is aware of nine instances where people attempting to secure food shipments have been attacked by Israeli forces.

Humanitari­an groups call for ceasefire

Humanitari­an groups, includ‐ ing the World Food Program, UNICEF and Oxfam, say the only way to alleviate the food shortage is for an immediate ceasefire and then to "decon‐ flict" or secure the main routes through Gaza to en‐ sure that food trucks can safely reach their destina‐ tions.

This week, the U.S. admin‐ istration for the first time suggested that members of Israel's cabinet were deliber‐ ately holding up aid and con‐ tributing to the starvation for political reasons.

Hard-right Israeli politi‐ cians such as National Secu‐ rity Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir have repeatedly called for Is‐ rael to block all shipments of aid to Gaza - including food -

until Hamas returns all of the Israeli hostages it now holds following the Oct. 7 attacks.

For months, protesters as‐ sociated with the far-right Otzma Yehudit party have been staging protests at the border crossings with Gaza, aimed at disrupting shipmen‐ ts.

Andreas Krieg, an asso‐ ciate professor in the School of Security Studies at King's College in London, said Is‐ rael's government hasn't tried to hide the fact that it sees the denial of humani‐ tarian assistance to the peo‐ ple of Gaza as a means to punish Hamas.

"Humanitari­an assistance has been weaponized from Day 1," he said.

"When [Yoav] Gallant, the defence minister, said that they would cut off electricit­y and water supply to Gaza, that was the first clear indica‐ tion that Israel was not going to abide by internatio­nal hu‐ manitarian law."

Airdroppin­g aid called PR exercise

Several countries, including the United States, have started to airdrop food into Gaza, with the U.S. indicating it has delivered roughly 38,000 ready-to-eat meals. Canada's internatio­nal devel‐ opment minister, Ahmed Hussen, said late last month that the federal government is looking into airdroppin­g aid into Gaza.

But critics, including Ox‐ fam and the Norwegian Refugee Council, say such measures amount to little more than a public relations exercise, as a single truck can carry the same amount as three Hercules aircraft.

"For the size of the popu‐ lation in Gaza, it would take hundreds and hundreds of airplanes flying every day," Oxfam's Sarosi said.

Officials with the U.S. State Department have said they are trying to push Israel to open more border cross‐ ings, especially in the north of Gaza, and even to estab‐ lish a possible maritime sup‐ ply route.

But Gaza has no opera‐ tional port facilities, and Krieg said even if supplies could be brought into a beachhead, they would face the same security and distri‐ bution challenges as food that arrives on trucks.

Instead, he said, the U.S. should tie its more than $3 billion in annual military sup‐ port for Israel to the provi‐ sion of more food aid to Palestinia­ns. "If you withdraw or withhold aid and put a conditiona­lity on that aid, and say, 'You get that ... sup‐ port only if you allow human‐ itarian aid to come in,' it would be a done deal," Krieg said.

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