Tag: Gaza

  • 17 dead as Israel presses new Gaza offensive

    17 dead as Israel presses new Gaza offensive

    The Palestinian city of Khan Younis was targeted by intensive airstrikes overnight, as Israel pursued its ramped-up offensive across the Gaza Strip.

    According to Palestinian news agency WAFA on Monday, 17 people were killed in the coastal territory during the night.

    WAFA did not initially provide details on the identity of the victims.

    According to medics in Gaza, at least six people were killed and dozens injured in airstrikes on Khan Younis.

    Witnesses told dpa that there were about 30 airstrikes on the area.

    The internet connection failed in large parts of the city.

    Palestinian media reports by WAFA and others said that a special unit of the Israeli army had killed a commander of the al-Nasser Salah al-Din Brigades, which is allied with the Islamist movement Hamas.

    Read Also: Hamas seeks global resistance against Trump’s plan in Gaza

    The information could not initially be independently verified.

    The Israeli military emphasised that it did all it can to avoid civilian casualties when attacking targets belonging to Hamas or other terrorist organizations.

    This cannot be verified either as reporters has very limited access to the area.

    The Israeli Air Force has been carrying out massive aerial attacks on targets in the Gaza Strip in recent days, and Israel announced an “extensive’’ new ground operation across the territory on Sunday.

    Dozens of Palestinian deaths are being reported daily from the Gaza Strip.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Cultural awakening & leadership integrity in troubled times

    Cultural awakening & leadership integrity in troubled times

    • By John Amabolou  Elekun

    Sir: Across the world, the spirit of nations is being tested. Gaza lies in ruins. Turkey, once a proud seat of early Christianity, has undergone a cultural shift so profound that many forget its past. Nigeria, too—our homeland—stands on uncertain ground, threatened not just by insecurity or economic hardship but by the erosion of cultural consciousness and leadership integrity.

    As Ijaw people, we cannot afford to ignore these warning signs. We must reflect: Who are we becoming—and what have we already lost?

    Once upon a time, our warlords were more than just fighters—they were symbols of resistance, dignity, and hope. Today, many of them have compromised, choosing personal gain over collective purpose. Even the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), once a bold voice of the people, now stands divided. One faction walks with us; the other has surrendered to the same forces we once stood against.

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    This is not unique to us. Around the globe, cultures are vanishing, replaced by convenience and submission. Gaza’s story is one of overwhelming resistance. Turkey’s transformation reminds us how history can be rewritten when identity is not defended. We are not exempt. The same fate awaits us unless we act.

    Cultural consciousness is more than tradition. It is the soul of a people. It’s in the songs we sing, the stories we pass down, and the values we live by. Without it, we are nothing more than shadows wearing borrowed names.

    Leadership integrity is our moral compass. When leaders lose their way, they lead the people astray. When integrity fades, compromise becomes currency, and the future is sold piece by piece.

    However, there is hope—if we are willing to fight, not with weapons, but with awareness, education, and unity. We must reawaken our cultural pride, hold fast to our identity, and demand more from those who lead us.

    Our youth must not be raised on forgotten stories and broken promises. They must be taught to walk in truth. Writers, artists, thinkers—this is your time. Use your voice to revive our heritage and challenge the decay. Let every pen be a spear of memory. Let every word be a call to action.

    We are not lost yet. But we are close. Let us remember who we are. Let us rise—not just for ourselves, but for the generations to come.

    Our roots are not weak. They are our strength.

    •John Amabolou  Elekun ,

    Iju-Ajuwon, Lagos State

  • Arab states reject Trump’s plan for Gaza

    Arab states reject Trump’s plan for Gaza

    Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty said Arab states reject U.S. President Donald Trump’s widely condemned plan to displace Palestinians from Gaza and take control of the enclave.

    During a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington, Abdelatty emphasised the need to expedite Gaza’s reconstruction while Palestinians remained there.

    A statement from the U.S. State Department following the meeting did not directly address Trump’s plan but emphasised the importance of close cooperation for Gaza’s governance and security, stating that Hamas should never again govern Gaza or threaten Israel.

    According to Egypt’s foreign ministry, Abdelatty expressed hope for working with the new U.S. administration to achieve “comprehensive and just peace and stability” in the region.

    He also met with U.S. Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff, where he reiterated similar points.

    The Palestinian leadership, supported by neighbouring Arab states, has rejected any proposal to displace Palestinians from Gaza, a region they see as part of an independent state.

    Read Also: Palestinians have no right of return under Gaza plan, says Trump

    This has been a long-standing concern since the Israel-Gaza conflict intensified in October 2023.

    Trump’s initial suggestion on Jan. 25 that Egypt and Jordan should accept Palestinians from Gaza sparked significant backlash.

    His later proposals for a U.S. takeover of Gaza and the potential permanent displacement of Palestinians have been widely criticised, with rights advocates and the United Nations calling it ethnic cleansing.

    The ongoing Israeli military assault, which has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians in the past 16 months, has caused immense suffering, displacement, and a hunger crisis in Gaza. (Reuters/NAN) 

  • Netanyahu praises Trump plan to move Palestinians out of Gaza

    Netanyahu praises Trump plan to move Palestinians out of Gaza

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday there was nothing wrong in Donald Trump’s idea of displacing Palestinians from Gaza after the U.S. president’s proposal drew international criticism.

    Rights groups have condemned as ethnic cleansing Trump’s suggestion the previous day that Palestinians in the enclave should be permanently displaced, while also proposing a U.S. takeover of Gaza.

    In an interview with Fox News, Netanyahu did not explicitly talk about Trump’s idea of the United States taking over the Gaza Strip but backed the idea of “allowing Gazans who want to leave to leave.”

    He added, “I mean, what’s wrong with that? They can leave, they can then come back, they can relocate and come back. But you have to rebuild Gaza.”

    Netanyahu said he did not believe Trump suggested sending U.S. troops to fight Hamas in Gaza or that Washington would finance rebuilding efforts.

    “This is the first good idea that I’ve heard,” he added. “It’s a remarkable idea, and I think it should be really pursued, examined, pursued and done, because I think it will create a different future for everyone.”

    Since Jan. 25, Trump has repeatedly suggested that Palestinians in Gaza should be taken in by regional Arab nations such as Egypt and Jordan, an idea rejected by both the Arab states and Palestinian leaders.

    Read Also: Netanyahu, Trump and Palestine

    Trump’s aides defended his proposal but backed away from elements of it after international condemnation.

    U.S. ally Israel’s military assault on Gaza, now paused by a fragile ceasefire, has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians in the last 16 months, the Gaza health ministry says, and provoked accusations of genocide and war crimes that Israel denies.

    The assault internally displaced nearly all of Gaza’s population and caused a hunger crisis.
    The latest bloodshed in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict was triggered on October 7, 2023, when Palestinian Hamas militants attacked Israel, killing 1,200 and taking some 250 hostages, Israeli tallies show.

    REUTERS

  • Gaza can never be defeated and her people can never be moved to Egypt and Jordan!

    Gaza can never be defeated and her people can never be moved to Egypt and Jordan!

    A friend sent the following to me last night. He wrote,

    “No to the evacuation of Palestinians. They will never be allowed to return once they vacate Gaza. That’s what happened to their grandparents, expelled forcibly from Jaffa, Tel Aviv and over 700 other Palestinian towns, villages and settlements. Any Palestinian leader who even thinks in this manner of collaboration with the United States, the greatest facilitator of Israeli atrocities, would need to have his head examined. Yahya Sinwar, Ismail Haniye and other martyrs didn’t give their lives for the Palestinians to be evacuated to Egypt or Jordan”.​

    My friend got it right. 

    The suggestion that the people of Gaza should be relocated to Jordan and Egypt in order to “clean the place up” is asinine, absurd and unacceptable and thankfully both the Egyptians and the Jordanians have formally rejected it.

    The Lord did not save Trump’s life and make him President of the most powerful nation on earth for him to indulge in ethnic cleansing and take the lives of others.

    As Believers in God we are called to help and support the persecuted, the poor, the weak, the vulnerable and the brokenhearted.

    Read Also; How to unlock untapped potential in oil industry, by Tinubu

    We are not called to kill and displace them or to join hands with their violent and savage oppressors.

    Biden and Harris have suffered humiliation and the judgement of God due to the shedding of the blood of the women and children of Gaza.

    President Donald Trump, a man who I have tremendous respect and affection for and who I believe was called by God, should not make the same mistake lest he suffers an even worse fate.

    He was lifted by God to bring peace, liberty, light and justice to the world and not to bring war, destruction, bloodshed, misery, injustice and darkness.

    He was lifted to save lives and not to destroy them.

    He was lifted to crush the genocidal maniacs and barbarians that call themselves Zionists and not to assist them.

    He was lifted to deliver and liberate nations and not to conquer and divide them.

    He was lifted to save the women and children of Gaza and not to eat their flesh and drink their blood.

    (FFK)

  • Gaza ceasefire: Too little too late

    Gaza ceasefire: Too little too late

    • By Mike Kebonkwu

    The war in Gaza signifies abysmal failure of human heritage and global peace-making. There is recession in global political leadership across countries of the world with right wing supremacists and maniacs taking over power in leading economies of the world today. The world has watched in helplessness the horrendous carnage in Gaza with brutal savagery.  The people of Palestine are entitled to heritage of their land as a free people with dignity, not living in apartheid and depending on food aids from donor agencies.  There have been sustained liberation struggles by the Palestinians led by Hamas. Hamas is an idea; you cannot kill an idea!  Hamas militants are not villains; they are freedom fighters and heroes to the people of Palestine and the Arab world.   They represent the core resistance against the State of Israel imposed apartheid system in the Middle East and the occupation of Palestinian land in Gaza.  The State of Israel also reserves the right to live in safety in the midst of hostile neighbours.  However, Israel was dead wrong to think that it can destroy Hamas and its capacity to make wars for the liberation of Palestinian people. 

    Hamas goes beyond the fighting force in Gaza and the entire land of Palestine; it includes the Islamic Jihad and their affiliates in Syria and Yemen.  It has common brotherhood with the Iranian Revolutionary Guard that provides it with training, armaments and logistics support.  It has sympathy with the entire Arab world and regional powers in the Middle East.  Israel is therefore unquestionably up against a very formidable foe and therefore must be eternally vigilant. 

    With the ceasefire, there were no victory songs in Israel.  It was a pyrrhic victory for the Palestine whose entire land has been laid waste.  With ceasefire, where do the people return to pick up their pieces again; with homes, farms and infrastructure having been turned to rubble?  The war interrogates the continuous relevance of the United Nations systems and its agencies that lack consensus in dealing with increasingly rising global crises. 

    Read Also: Nigeria will drive Africa’s growth with education, innovation — Shettima

    The international media remained complicit in the escalation of the conflict because of partisanship, praising the action of Hamas to high heavens after the October 7, 2023 invasion of Israel.  It was a delusion to assume that there was not going to be repercussion or consequences for that audacious attack.  After all, the hostages taken from Israel where hidden in tunnels in Gaza, not in Egypt. Hamas was alleged to have used civilians as human shields, and protected objects and infrastructure as command centres to launch attacks on Israel.  The violence was set in motion by Hamas invasion of Israelis villages.  It is not sensible to start a war and complain that your adversary is using excessive force. Notwithstanding, the horrendous carnage remains unacceptable and can never be justified.

    There is no doubt that what happened in Gaza qualifies as genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity; but again, it is an act of war. The atrocious war in Gaza was provoked by the invasion of Israeli villages by Hamas militants.  It was an audacious attack well planned and ruthlessly executed.   It exposed massive intelligence and security failures that caught the Israeli Defence Forces napping.  Hundreds of hostages were taken, women, children and even soldiers, including foreign nationals.  It all happened also during a festival when the people of Israel were revelling and making merry; partying away. 

    It was a huge miscalculation by Hamas to take on a known foe whose behaviour is predictable, not given to sentiment and without the grace of turning the other cheek.

    The war led to unimaginable proportion of destruction of lives and properties leading to almost a scotched earth in the entire Gaza Strip with little or no respect for customary laws of war, or international humanitarian laws.  In active war and combat, there is a limit to the expectation of application of the rule of international law of arm conflict which is left virtually in the hands of combatants and troops’ commanders to determine legitimate military objectives and targets notwithstanding the set textbook limits. The world should have expected the ruthlessness with which this war was fought and the consequences.  Hamas militias were probably misled by sentiments of public perception and opinion of their right to self-determination and freedom of its people, but ignored the knowledge that Israel is also not known to run away with tails between its thighs to lick its wounds. 

    Hamas started a needless war and therefore does not lie in its mouth or  anybody else for that matter to raise alarm that the  adversary and enemy is using excessive force. Textbook theory for combat does not work in active conflict; it is not a simulation exercise or computer war game.  

    The ceasefire agreement extracted in Doha between Israel and Hamas is not going to signal the end to crises between Palestine and Israel or peace in the Middle East.  It is wishful thinking that Israel and Palestine will be at peace some day; not with that kind of brutal savagery and resentment that they hold one another.  If one man is left standing on each side of the divide in Israel and Palestine, the war will continue; it is a generational war without end. The ingrained animosity is deep-rooted in the gene and bloodstream of these neighbours who have common ancestry by religious account dating back to the time of Abraham.  The Arabs and Jews are progenitors of the two received religions of Islam and Christianity that incidentally preach peace, but ironically never live in peace with one another.

    The face of the war in Gaza is distorted and misrepresented to be between Israel and Hamas. This appears not to the case but a suppression of the texture of the crises; it is a regional crises.  Hamas is the unofficial army and government in Palestine.  They are armed and supported by some regional government in the Middle East.  They also have their affiliates with the Islamic Jihad, the Houthi in Yemen, and the Syrian regime in Damascus. They are trained by the Revolutionary Guards in Iran and given logistic backup by the Iranian regime.  It remains a proxy war of the larger Arab and Israeli question that do not concede to the Israelis the right to live.   

    To many people in the world, it is viewed through the prism of religion, culture and civilization of Islam and Christianity common amongst Africans and Asians with unquestionable religious credo. This is especially so, in Nigeria often divided along  Arab Islam, and Israel, Christianity;  even though the Israelis are predominantly more Judaism than Christianity.  The world is not concerned with common brotherhood of humankind but sectarian considerations.  Where you support ethnic militia to acquire weapons and attack the symbol of states while offering defences to them on the basis of religion and ethnicity, we should be ready for the inevitability of the consequences which will cause suffering to civilians; innocent women and children and displacement of population.  Let your freedom fighters and ethnic militias know their limits and boundaries so that we will not be faced with the situation of asking for investigation and trials of security forces for war crimes and crimes against humanity for collateral damages from the effect of war.  War does not bring cheese and chocolate on the table; it brings human suffering, death, agonies and pains.  After the ceasefire, where are the people of Palestine returning to, debris of fallen edifices?  The world may have failed the Palestinians, but Hamas should also take responsibility while Israel can never be justified for the level of destruction to Gaza.  The ceasefire is too little, too late!

    •Kebonkwu Esq is an Abuja-based attorney.

  • Humanity failed Gaza

    Humanity failed Gaza

    • By Labaran Yusuf

    Sir: As you read this, the last functional hospital in Northern Gaza lies in ruins, destroyed by Israeli forces amidst a deafening silence from the international community. It’s been over a year since Israel, backed by Western powers, unleashed a brutal extermination campaign on Gaza, following the October attacks. The numbers are depressingly staggering: over 46,000 Palestinians killed, including 1,000 healthcare workers, 200 journalists, and nearly 70% women and children, according to the United Nations.

    The devastation is catastrophic. Cities in Gaza have been reduced to rubble, with key infrastructure and necessities of life – schools, universities, hospitals, desalination plants, bakeries, and even mosques – systematically destroyed by Israeli forces. The indictment of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for genocide and war crimes by the International Criminal Court (ICC) has fallen on deaf ears. The United States and Western countries, self-proclaimed champions of human rights, and the rule-based order, continue to support and arm Israel.

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    The world has failed Gaza. We’ve witnessed children brutally killed, entire families erased from the civil registry, and yet, we’ve done nothing to stop it. The phrase “never again” has become a hollow promise, and the West’s claims of championing humanitarian and human rights have been exposed as false.

    It cannot be hidden or dismissed anymore; the international community must wake up to the reality of genocide in Gaza. Time is running out while Palestinians are still being killed en masse and starved. Governments around the world must stop arming Israel and hold its leaders accountable for their crimes. The people of Gaza deserve justice, and it’s our responsibility to ensure they receive it.

    As we stand by and watch the destruction of Gaza, we’re not only failing the Palestinians, but also undermining the very principles of humanity and justice that we claim to uphold. It’s time for us to take a stand and demand an end to the genocidal campaign in Gaza.

    •Labaran Yusuf,

    Jos, Plateau State.

  • ‘Global inaction aids Israeli genocide in Gaza’

    ‘Global inaction aids Israeli genocide in Gaza’

    The Executive Chairman of Muslim Public Affairs Centre (MPAC), Disu Kamor has blamed the international communities for the atrocities Israeli is committing in Gaza, Palestine.

    At a briefing in Lagos tagged #Nigeria4Gaza, Kamor said MPAC and our supporting organizations are committed to amplifying the voices of Palestinians, demanding justice and independence, and imploring governments and citizens worldwide to acknowledge the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

    The briefing was in partnership with over 20 organisations including Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC); Movement for Islamic Culture Awareness (MICA); 3. Hijab Rights Advocacy Initiative (HRAI); The Companion; MSSN Lagos State Area Unit; Nasrul-Lahi-L-Fatih Society (NASFAT); The Academy; Karfycomm Dawah Group; Al-Mu’minaat (The Believing Women) and Guild of Muslim Professionals (GMP).

    According to Kamor, the international community’s inaction has emboldened Israel’s brutal occupation, resulting in unimaginable suffering for the Palestinian people.

    “As Muslims, we are compelled by our faith to stand in solidarity with the oppressed and to advocate for justice and human rights. The numbers are staggering: over 45,000 martyrs in Gaza alone, more than 110,000 injured, thousands more under the rubble, and two million Palestinians forcibly displaced. The West Bank faces daily aggression, with Israel’s relentless expansion of settlements and demolition of Palestinian homes.

    “MPAC and our supporting organizations are committed to amplifying the voices of Palestinians, demanding justice and independence, and imploring governments and citizens worldwide to acknowledge the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.”

    Kamor urged governments to take immediate action by demanding a ceasefire, ensuring the protection of civilians and the facilitation of humanitarian aid.

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    He said: “We stand here today to condemn the heinous genocide unfolding in Gaza, and to denounce the complicity of Western nations in perpetuating this injustice. Their unwavering support for Israel’s occupation is a stark reminder of the hypocrisy that has come to define their foreign policy. While they preach about human rights and democracy, they continue to arm Israel, providing the very tools used to oppress and slaughter Palestinians. The United States alone has vetoed over 53 UN Security Council resolutions against Israel since 1950, shielding Israel from accountability for its war crimes. It is unconscionable that the same nations that claim to champion human rights and freedom are, in fact, driven by the same ideology that has perpetrated some of humanity’s darkest atrocities: trans-Atlantic slavery, colonization, the Holocaust, apartheid, and countless wars and massacres.

    “But we do not stop there. We call on the general public to join us in advocating for justice for the Palestinian people. This is not a Muslim cause, nor is it a Palestinian cause alone. It is a human cause. It is not just a cry for justice. It is a blistering battle for the most fundamental human right- that every living soul on this planet should inherit by birthright. It is an unyielding resistance against the oppressive suffocating grip of occupation and the callous denial of the most basic human dignity. The birth of Israel in 1948 brought forth the mass expulsion and dispossession of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their ancestral homes and land. This is a historic injustice that continues to haunt the lives of Palestinians to this very day. The situation in Palestine serves as a brutal reminder of the consequences of colonialism and the ruthless dispossession of indigenous people. It is an agonizing reminder that the fight against injustice knows no border, no race and no religion.”

  • Starvation in Gaza

    Starvation in Gaza

    • By Hilal Elver

    The tragic effect of the use of starvation as a method of warfare against Gaza’s civilian population is acute, it is visible and it is widely known. And it’s confirmed by multiple witnesses and victims, including local and foreign medical doctors. That starvation has caused and continues to cause deaths, malnutrition, dehydration and profound suffering among the population,” International Criminal Court (ICC) Prosecutor Karim A.A. Khan issued a statement on May 20, 2024, requesting arrest warrants in the situation in Gaza.

    As Israel’s assault on the Gaza Strip enters its second year, 2.3 million Gazans are struggling to survive. On top of the skyrocketing death toll and injuries caused by military attacks, people are starving from the lack of food and children are dying of malnourishment. The cause of this famine is Israeli-imposed blockades on foodstuffs and other forms of humanitarian relief. Yet the UN Famine Review Committee has failed to formally recognize this harrowing reality, which is destined to worsen as long as there is no cease-fire.

    According to the Gaza Ministry of Health, by the end of July 2024, the death toll reached 40,000. The British medical journal Lancet calculated that the true death toll—if the indirect impact of war on life prospects is calculated—could reach over 186,000, a staggering 8% of Gaza’s population. This Lancet number includes more than 20,000 buried under the rubble, including 4,000 children. Additionally, approximately 21,000 children are missing in the chaos of the war. This includes 17,000 unaccompanied and separated or lost children whose parents are detained or buried in unmarked graves.

    In addition to direct casualties of war, the secondary effects of the conflict, such as malnutrition, infectious diseases, and lack of medical care have made the human tragedy in Gaza extremely severe. Starvation is a war crime if food and water are used as a weapon of war. Starvation in Gaza is clearly and intentionally caused by Israel, based on medical evidence, testimonies of humanitarian organizations, and direct statements by Israeli leaders.  

    Background of famine in Gaza

    A famine is defined as the most severe kind of hunger crisis. It is very rare, but when it does occur, it means that there is an extreme shortage of food and several children and adults within a certain area are dying of hunger on a daily basis. Famine never happens overnight. It is a process that results from political decisions and is almost always attributable to human activity. However, each famine has its own story. The origins of the Gaza famine can be traced back to 2006 when an adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert explained: “The idea is to put the Palestinians on a diet, but not to make them die of hunger.” In 2007, the Israeli government implemented the Palestinian “diet” as punishment for the election of Hamas in the 2006 election. Today’s crisis is the culmination of continuous policies to limit access to food based on calculated caloric minimum needs for survival. By the start of Israel’s current war on Gaza, the population had been under siege for 17 years. On Oct. 9, 2023, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant ordered a halt to all human necessities. No food, no fuel, no electricity, no medicines, no vaccination activities, no access to safe water.

    This collective punishment of the civilian population of Gaza is a direct violation of Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention governing belligerent occupation. As basic resources needed to survive were depleted over the following months, humanitarian deprivations quickly reached famine conditions. 

    Uniqueness of Gaza famine

    The Gaza famine is unique among conflict-induced starvation. The current condition in Gaza is far more devastating than other sites of hunger and starvation during conflicts such as Somalia, Afghanistan, Yemen and currently Sudan. In those countries, 40 to 60% of the population is enduring starvation conditions, but in Gaza famine affects 100% of the population. This means that an entire generation—335,000 children under the age of five—are at risk of stunted growth or wasting if they manage to survive. These conditions adversely affect the physical and mental development of generations to come.

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    According to Alex De Waal, a renowned scholar on famine, “the pace and scale of the destruction of objects indispensable to survival in Gaza surpasses any other case of man-made famine in the last 75 years.” He adds: “What’s different about the Gaza case is the speed and the comprehensiveness of that destruction. We have not seen a population reduced from an acute stress to an extreme emergency on this scale in a matter of months.”

    Moreover, Gaza is the first genocidal battleground in which high-level Israeli government officials repeatedly use dehumanizing, exterminationist language in the course of acknowledging tactics obviously intended to induce mass starvation. Legal experts working on the crime of starvation and criminal accountability were surprised, if not shocked, that Israeli senior officials “are very clearly publicizing their intent.”   

    Humanity’s catastrophe

    The massive destruction of basic necessities contributes to an irreversible humanitarian catastrophe. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres calls the situation in Gaza “humanity’s catastrophe, not humanitarian catastrophe,” emphasizing that the international community has failed to discharge its responsibility to do all in its power to stop the war.

    Gazans are living in tents, partly destroyed school buildings, or on streets with no shelter. Nowhere is safe from the incessant Israeli bombing. This destruction has compounded life-threatening conditions, including waterborne infectious diseases, which impact negatively on the health of children and the elderly. Most recently, a polio outbreak is threatening the entire Gaza children, if a successful vaccination campaign is not implemented.

    Anything necessary for human life in Gaza is being destroyed, including food systems; 80 to 96% of agricultural assets, including greenhouses and irrigation systems, have been damaged or demolished, and 81% of the Gaza fishing sector has been permanently destroyed. Waste management facilities have been damaged or destroyed, and power has been cut or interrupted. The UN Environment Programme (UNEP) estimated that at least 100,000 cubic meters of sewage and wastewater are being dumped daily onto land or into the Mediterranean Sea. Deliberate damage to Gaza’s natural resources and environment is considered a “crime of ecocide.” As a result, 100% of the population is reliant on food aid to survive and is subject to acute malnutrition, extreme hunger, and infectious diseases.

    Deeper and longer impacts of severe malnutrition on young children, pregnant women, elderly people, and persons who are already sick or have underlying conditions can make malnutrition lethal. The World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF warn that young children cannot tolerate even short periods of malnutrition. A senior UNICEF advisor bluntly stated, “If a child is malnourished, particularly under two years of age, they are unable to cognitively catch up with other children. The brain is such a big part of caloric and nutrient consumption in a child’s development.”

    Even if the war ends in the near future, the destruction of Gaza’s health and food systems will exert serious negative impacts on the human development of the current population and generations to come. The current situation is dire and bloody, making accurate assessments of longer-term effects fundamentally unknowable. 

    No declaration of famine in Gaza

    Famine is a technical term that applies when a population experiences extreme levels of acute malnutrition and mortality due to insufficient supplies and inadequate quality of food. The most authoritative calculations of famine statistics are done by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) that is periodically conducted with the cooperation of several UN organizations. IPC classifies five stages of food insecurity, and each stage requires appropriate action to address its distinctive problems: Phase 1: None/minimal; Phase 2: Stressed; Phase 3: Crisis; Phase 4: Emergency; and Phase 5: Catastrophe/Famine.

    The IPC determines famine exists when a population finds itself entering stage 5 (Catastrophe) after three indicators have reached the following thresholds: Famine is present when at least 20% of the population is affected, with about one out of three children being acutely malnourished and two people dying per day for every 10,000 inhabitants due to outright starvation or to the interaction of malnutrition and disease. All three conditions of famine existed in various pockets of Gaza since the first 100 days of the war. Now it is in the entire Gaza.

    Declaring famine is not only a technical decision but also a political decision. Although IPC experts, the Famine Review Committee (FRC) conduct and review the analysis necessary to classify widespread hunger and serious malnutrition as a famine, only government and top UN officials can make a formal declaration, which requires a complex bureaucratic process. In many cases, countries have hesitated to go through such a process. Therefore, authorization has been usually late to declare famine, and in many cases when famine is finally declared it is too late to save lives.

    Despite all three conditions of famine that existed in parts of Gaza since the first 100 days of the war, in Gaza, a declaration of famine was even more difficult than in other cases due to Israel’s calculated tactics throughout the war to block humanitarian aid, even when conditions of starvation threatened to reach the threshold indicator. Israel is well aware that the crime of starvation is occurring in Gaza. A declaration of famine would provide convincing evidence to justify the pursuit of accountability.

    As of this writing, famine has not yet formally been declared in Gaza. However, according to the most recent analysis of the IPC on June 25, 2024, the FRC stated that the entire Gaza Strip faces a “plausible” risk of famine in the coming months, an assessment driven by new evidence. Now, Gaza is being subjected to a famine diet that helps calculate the durability and resilience of human life without any food! It would have been possible to stop such a human catastrophe if there were a global political will, solidarity to protect vulnerable civilians and a binding convention giving states and the international community clear legal mandates to prevent famine.

    •           This article was first published in www.aa.com.tr
  • Gaza death toll surpasses 38,100 as Israel kills 55 more Palestinians

    Gaza death toll surpasses 38,100 as Israel kills 55 more Palestinians

    No fewer than 55 more Palestinians were killed in Israeli attacks in the Gaza Strip, taking the overall death toll to 38,153 people since last Oct. 7, the Health Ministry in the enclave said yesterday.
    A ministry statement added that 87,828 people have also been injured in the onslaught.
    “Israeli attacks killed 55 people and injured 123 others in the last 24 hours,” the statement said.
    “Many people are still trapped under rubble and on the roads as rescuers are unable to reach them,” it added.
    Flouting a UN Security Council resolution demanding an immediate cease-fire, Israel has faced international condemnation amid its continued brutal offensive on Gaza since an Oct. 7, 2023 attack by Hamas.

    Read Also: Heavy offensive continues in Gaza city


    Nine months into the Israeli war, vast tracts of Gaza lie in ruins amid a crippling blockade of food, clean water and medicine.
    Israel stands accused of genocide at the International Court of Justice, whose latest ruling ordered Tel Aviv to immediately halt its operation in the southern city of Rafah, where over a million Palestinians had sought refuge from the war before it was invaded on May 6.
    Israeli protesters yesterday blocked highways across the country, calling on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to step down and pushing for a cease-fire to bring back scores of hostages held by Hamas.
    The demonstrations come as long-running efforts to broker a truce gained momentum last week when Hamas dropped a key demand for an Israeli commitment to end the war. The militant group is still seeking a permanent cease-fire, while Netanyahu has vowed to keep fighting until Hamas is destroyed.