Israel’s blockade means Gaza’s hospitals cannot provide food to recovering patients

Israel’s blockade means Gaza’s hospitals cannot provide food to recovering patients
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Salwa Faraj cares for her sister, Asmaa Faraj, who was injured in an Israeli army strike, at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, on May 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)
Israel’s blockade means Gaza’s hospitals cannot provide food to recovering patients
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Sobhi al-Bursh, who was injured in a bombing and lost his foot, is fed beans brought from home by his father, Mohamed, at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, on May 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)
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Updated 12 May 2025

Israel’s blockade means Gaza’s hospitals cannot provide food to recovering patients

Israel’s blockade means Gaza’s hospitals cannot provide food to recovering patients
  • Hospital patients are among the most vulnerable as Palestinians across Gaza struggle to feed themselves, with Israel’s blockade on food and other supplies entering the territory now in its third month

KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza Strip: It cost a fortune, she said, but Asmaa Fayez managed to buy a few zucchinis in a Gaza market. She cooked them with rice and brought it to her 4-year-old son, who has been in the hospital for the past week. The soup was his only meal of the day, and he asked for more.
“It’s all finished, darling,” Fayez replied softly. Still, it was an improvement from the canned beans and tuna she brings on other days, she said.
Hospital patients are among the most vulnerable as Palestinians across Gaza struggle to feed themselves, with Israel’s blockade on food and other supplies entering the territory now in its third month.
With hospitals unable to provide food, families must bring whatever they can find for loved ones.
“Most, if not all, wounded patients have lost weight, especially in the past two months,” Dr. Khaled Alserr, a general surgeon at Nasser Hospital in the southern city of Khan Younis, told The Associated Press. Nutritional supplements for intensive care unit patients are lacking, he said.
“Our hands are tied when it comes to making the best choice for patients. Choices are limited,” he said.
Hunger worsens as supplies dwindle
Malnutrition is on the rise across Gaza, aid groups say. Thousands of children have been found with acute malnutrition in the past month, but adults as well are not getting proper nutrients, according to the UN It estimates that 16,000 pregnant women and new mothers this year face acute malnutrition.
Since Israel’s blockade began on March 2, food sources have been drying up. Aid groups have stopped food distribution. Bakeries have closed. Charity kitchens handing out bowls of pasta or lentils remain the last lifeline for most of the population, but they are rapidly closing for lack of supplies, the UN says.
Markets are empty of almost everything but canned goods and small amounts of vegetables, and prices have been rising. Local production of vegetables has plummeted because Israeli forces have damaged 80 percent of Gaza’s farmlands, the UN says, and much of the rest is inaccessible inside newly declared military zones.
Fayez’s son, Ali Al-Dbary, was admitted to Nasser Hospital because of a blocked intestine, suffering from severe cramps and unable to use the bathroom. Fayez believes it’s because he has been eating little but canned goods. She splurged on the zucchini, which now costs around $10 a kilogram (2.2 pounds). Before the war it was less than a dollar.
Doctors said the hospital doesn’t have a functioning scanner to diagnose her son and decide whether he needs surgery.
Israel says it imposed the blockade and resumed its military campaign in March to pressure Hamas to release its remaining hostages and disarm.
Hamas ignited the war with its Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, in which militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took 251 hostage, most of whom have been released in ceasefire agreements or other deals. Israel’s offensive has killed over 52,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not say how many of the dead were civilians or combatants.
Concern over Israeli plans to control aid
Israeli officials have asserted that enough food entered Gaza during a two-month ceasefire earlier this year. Rights groups have disputed that and called the blockade a “starvation tactic” and a potential war crime.
Now Israeli plans to control aid distribution in Gaza, using private contractors to distribute supplies. The UN and aid groups have rejected the idea, saying it could restrict who is eligible to give and receive aid and could force large numbers of Palestinians to move — which would violate international law.

Those under care at hospitals, and their families who scrounge to feed them, would face further challenges under Israel’s proposal. Moving to reach aid could be out of the question.
Another patient at Nasser Hospital, 19-year-old Asmaa Faraj, had shrapnel in her chest from an airstrike that hit close to her tent and a nearby charity kitchen in camps for displaced people outside Khan Younis.
When the AP visited, the only food she had was a small bag of dates, a date cookie and some water bottles. Her sister brought her some pickles.
“People used to bring fruits as a gift when they visited sick people in hospitals,” said the sister, Salwa Faraj. “Today, we have bottles of water.”
She said her sister needs protein, fruits and vegetables but none are available.
Mohammed Al-Bursh managed to find a few cans of tuna and beans to bring for his 30-year-old son, Sobhi, who was wounded in an airstrike three months ago. Sobhi’s left foot was amputated, and he has two shattered vertebrae in his neck.
Al-Bursh gently gave his son spoonfuls of beans as he lay still in the hospital bed, a brace on his neck.
“Everything is expensive,” Sobhi Al-Bursh said, gritting with pain that he says is constant. He said he limits what he eats to help save his father money.
He believes that his body needs meat to heal. “It has been three months, and nothing heals,” he said.


Always a showman, Netanyahu again turns to props and visual aids as he fends off critics at the UN

Always a showman, Netanyahu again turns to props and visual aids as he fends off critics at the UN
Updated 4 sec ago

Always a showman, Netanyahu again turns to props and visual aids as he fends off critics at the UN

Always a showman, Netanyahu again turns to props and visual aids as he fends off critics at the UN
Moments into the speech Friday morning, Netanyahu unfurled a map – titled “THE CURSE“
He then addressed the audience with a pair of multiple-choice questions, depicted on a large card

JERUSALEM: In his speeches to the United Nations when world leaders gather, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has quite the history of turning to props and visual aids to hammer his points home.
But even by the Israeli leader’s elevated standards of showmanship, this year’s address took things to a new level.
Moments into the speech Friday morning, Netanyahu unfurled a map – titled “THE CURSE” (the all-caps were his) – in which he methodically used a fat marker to check off the countries where Israel has killed its enemies during a nearly two-year regionwide war.
He then addressed the audience with a pair of multiple-choice questions, depicted on a large card. “Who shouts ‘Death to America’?” he asked as he read off the names of Iran, Hamas, Hezbollah and Yemen’s Houthi militia. The answer, familiar to anyone who has taken a standardized test: “All of the above.”
It was vintage Netanyahu, who over the years has shared maps, photos and, in one instance, a crude cartoon of an atomic bomb as he railed against Iran’s nuclear program.
Then there was the QR code. He showed up wearing a huge button bearing one of the codes often used by advertisers and popularized by restaurants who used them during the COVID pandemic era to avoid asking contagion-fearing customers to touch menus. The code linked to a website about the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks by Hamas, the hostages they took and Israel’s point of view about it all.
Even before he took to the podium, Netanyahu’s office said it had set up massive loudspeakers on trucks along the Gaza border to blare the speech to the people inside. He said his intended audience included the Israeli hostages held captive in Gaza. “We have not forgotten you,” he said.
His office later claimed the Israeli army had hacked the phones of people of Gaza, including Hamas operatives, to make sure they heard his words. Inside Gaza, Palestinians said they could not hear the speech, and there were no immediate reports of phones being hacked.
And at the UN General Assembly, it is doubtful that many minds were changed. Dozens of diplomats walked out of the hall before his speech to protest the Gaza war, leaving the hall largely empty, save for a small but loud group of aides and supporters to cheer him on.
But Netanyahu had other audiences on his mind — namely his base of supporters in a deeply divided Israel and President Donald Trump, whom he is to meet on Monday at the White House.
With a colorful and defiant speech rejecting international criticism of Israeli policies, Netanyahu portrayed himself to his supporters as a master showman, communicator and statesman at a time that the country is increasingly seen as a pariah. And a long list of compliments for Trump could help clear the way for a smooth meeting on Monday.
By those measures, for Netanyahu, the speech was a success.

Tony Blair could lead transitional authority in Gaza: reports

Tony Blair could lead transitional authority in Gaza: reports
Updated 27 min 13 sec ago

Tony Blair could lead transitional authority in Gaza: reports

Tony Blair could lead transitional authority in Gaza: reports
  • Reports in by BBC, Economist say the former UK prime minister could lead the body with support of the UN
  • Blair joined a White House meeting with Trump in August to discuss plans for post-war Gaza

LONDON: Former UK prime minister Tony Blair could take a leading role in a transitional authority for Gaza under US-led peace plans, various British media reported on Friday.
It follows Blair’s involvement in discussions with the administration of US President Donald Trump and others over the post-war transitional body for the Palestinian territory.
The plan could involve Blair leading the authority with the support of the UN and Gulf nations, according to the BBC and The Economist magazine.
The Financial Times reported that the former UK leader, who worked as a Middle East peace mediator formally from 2007 to 2015, had asked to be on its supervisory board.
The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change, a non-profit organization, declined to comment to AFP on the stories.
Israeli media reports last week about his involvement in the US-led peace plan prompted sources close to Blair to confirm that he has been working on a scheme to halt the conflict alongside other parties.
However, they noted he would not support any proposal to permanently displace Gazans, and that any transitional governing body for the territory would ultimately hand power back to the Palestinian Authority, based in Ramallah in the West Bank.
In its report, The Economist said that a body to be known as the “Gaza International Transitional Authority” would seek a UN mandate to be the “supreme political and legal authority” for five years, before handing control to Palestinians.
The authority would have a secretariat of up to 25 people and a seven-person board, it added.
It would initially be based in Egypt, near Gaza’s southern border, before transferring to Gaza once it is secure, the BBC said.
Former Mossad chief Yossi Cohen told BBC Radio on Friday that “I love” the idea, calling Blair a “wonderful person.”
“If he is willing to take this responsibility, which is huge, I think... there is a hope” for Gaza, he added.
“I think that he can bear that burden strongly.”
Blair’s involvement would inevitably raise eyebrows given his involvement in the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.
An official UK inquiry into the conflict found he had acted on flawed intelligence when deciding to join the war.
Blair reportedly joined a White House meeting with Trump in August to discuss plans for post-war Gaza.
Trump has floated plans to make Gaza the “Riviera of the Middle East,” involving the forced displacement of Palestinians in the territory.


Aid route closure worsens shortages in famine-struck northern Gaza

Aid route closure worsens shortages in famine-struck northern Gaza
Updated 44 min 57 sec ago

Aid route closure worsens shortages in famine-struck northern Gaza

Aid route closure worsens shortages in famine-struck northern Gaza
  • Residents say food is scarcer and more expensive since the Zikim Crossing was shut on September 12
  • Treatment options for malnourished are shrinking with health facilities shutting down

CAIRO/GENEVA: Since Israel shut a vital corridor into famine-stricken northern Gaza before escalating its ground offensive this month, community kitchens and health clinics have closed and vital flows of food have slowed, residents and UN agencies say.
The Zikim Crossing was shut on September 12, days ahead of an Israeli ground offensive on Gaza City in the north of the territory, prompting warnings from aid agencies.
Since then, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) told Reuters it had not managed to bring any supplies through Zikim, previously the route for half its food deliveries into Gaza.
There has been a reduction of about 50,000 daily meals in northern Gaza compared to 109,000 daily meals before Zikim closed, as some kitchens in Gaza City serving free meals shut, according to Amjad Al-Shawa, head of the Palestinian NGOs Network.
Residents say conditions are getting worse. Hundreds of thousands have been displaced by the latest offensive, though others have stayed put despite Israeli evacuation orders, citing fears about security and hunger if they move.
“The situation is becoming more difficult,” said Um Zaki, a mother of five who has stayed in Sabra, Gaza City, describing rising food prices and increasing scarcity. “People who sell things like food...have left to the south,” she said.
Ismail Zayda, a 40-year-old with a week-old baby girl and two young boys displaced from Gaza City to a camp near the coast, said he was making ends meet with canned supplies.
“There are no vegetables at all,” he said.
Gaza City municipality says it also faces a worsening water crisis, with supplies meeting less than 25 percent of daily needs. Fuel shortages and security risks have curtailed water deliveries.
Israel says there is no quantitative limit on food aid entering Gaza and accuses Hamas, which it has been at war with for nearly two years, of stealing aid — accusations the Palestinian militant group denies.
COGAT, the arm of the Israeli military that oversees aid flows into the enclave, said humanitarian aid to the northern Gaza Strip continues and that it seeks to expand the capacity of Kissufim crossing into central Gaza threefold.
COGAT said around 300 aid trucks, mostly carrying food, have entered Gaza daily in recent weeks, and that it was coordinating transfer of fuel for desalination facilities and water wells. When asked if Zikim would open, it said the entry of trucks would be facilitated “subject to operational considerations.”
Israel says responsibility for distributing aid in Gaza lies with international agencies, which COGAT said it was trying to help.
However, the WFP said it faced logistical challenges moving food from southern to northern Gaza due to congestion on the sole access road.
OCHA said Israel had denied 40 percent of requested movements to northern Gaza in the 10 days after Zikim’s closure.
“Zikim being closed makes famine, to those who are left behind, even more deadly,” said Ricardo Pires, spokesperson for UN children’s agency UNICEF in Geneva.
“Children are literally wasting away in front of our eyes while the world normalizes their suffering,” he said.
A global hunger monitor confirmed last month that famine had taken hold in Gaza City and was likely to spread, a finding disputed by Israel.
Those needing treatment for malnutrition have few options.
Four health facilities in Gaza City have shut down so far this month, according to the World Health Organization, and the UN says some malnutrition centers have also closed. Hospitals in southern Gaza cannot absorb more patients fleeing.
A spokesperson at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in central Gaza’s Deir Al-Balah, Khalil Al-Dakran, told Reuters it was at capacity and lacked medicines, supplies, and fuel.
Mass displacement from the north is also straining food stocks in Khan Younis and Deir Al-Balah in southern Gaza — areas at risk of famine, said Antoine Renard, WFP Palestine country director.


UN member states rally support for UNRWA as agency faces crisis

UN member states rally support for UNRWA as agency faces crisis
Updated 26 September 2025

UN member states rally support for UNRWA as agency faces crisis

UN member states rally support for UNRWA as agency faces crisis
  • Commissioner general accuses Israel of waging ‘fierce and well-funded disinformation campaign’
  • Palestinian envoy: ‘UNRWA is indispensable. It’s our obligation to help it in every possible way’

NEW YORK: UN member states, including many that temporarily cut funding for the UN Relief and Works Agency over Israeli claims last year, have rallied support for it as an essential force for Palestinians.

The UNRWA ministerial meeting was held on Thursday during the UN General Assembly, with an appearance from UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who condemned Israel’s killing of the agency’s staff in Gaza.

It came as UNRWA sought urgent funding to address a significant financial shortfall of more than $200 million.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi, who hosted the meeting, said: “I don’t have to make the case for UNRWA. The starving children of Gaza so painfully make that case. The mothers who are watching their infants fade before their eyes make the case for UNRWA.

“The 600,000 or more students in Gaza who haven’t gone to school for two years make the case for UNRWA.

“Hundreds of thousands who depend on UNRWA for the little food that they get, for the little subsidies on which they survive, make the case for UNRWA. People of the West Bank, children who have no hope, make the case for UNRWA.”

But the agency is “collapsing” due to a “political assassination campaign … launched long before Oct. 7,” Safadi added, referring to the Hamas attack on Israel in 2023.

“By the end of this month, if UNRWA doesn’t get the funds it needs to feed Palestinian children, to rebuild the schools that have been destroyed, UNRWA won’t be able to continue to operate.”

The “genocide is continuing in Gaza,” he said, and it is “incomprehensible” that “one member state of the UN continues to violate its laws and Charter … and the world does nothing.”

When the war ends, “we need UNRWA” because the agency “has been (in Gaza) when others weren’t,” and because it “knows every alley, street, home, school, clinic and family that needs support,” Safadi said, adding that support for the agency among UN member states must be translated into practical action.

“Let’s continue with UNRWA’s noble work. Let’s bridge the financial gap that UNRWA is suffering from.

“We have to save UNRWA because by saving UNRWA, we’re saving a little bit of what’s left of the credibility of our multilateral system and our commitment to international law and international humanitarian law.”

Guterres, speaking at the meeting, said: “Generations of Palestine refugees have counted on UNRWA for education, health care and other essential services.”

But beyond the agency’s humanitarian effects, its “full impact goes far deeper,” he added, describing UNRWA as a “force for stability in the most unstable region of the world.”

Guterres said: “UNRWA’s operational presence contributes to the Palestinian Authority’s governance in the West Bank, to Lebanon’s efforts to fulfill requirements for a ceasefire in refugee camps, to Syria’s efforts to navigate the path to lasting peace, and to Jordan’s role in building regional stability.”

Its work is integral to many of the actions supported by the New York Declaration for the two-state solution, spearheaded by and France, and endorsed by the UNGA this month, he added.

Yet the agency is being forced “to operate under extreme and rising pressure,” he said. “In Gaza, our staff are being killed and our premises destroyed, and everywhere UNRWA faces budget shortfalls and a firehose of disinformation.”

He called on member states to take immediate action in response to a UN report commissioned earlier this year that found the status quo of the agency is untenable.

Countries must “stand in solidarity with UNRWA, by providing political support and by countering the distortions that threaten one of the only lifelines many Palestine refugees have left,” Guterres said.

The agency must also be given the resources to carry out its mandate, and funded “urgently, fully and predictably,” he added.

Guterres honored the agency’s staff who have been killed during Israel’s war on Gaza. “I can’t begin to express the depths of my admiration, respect and gratitude (for the staff). More than 370 of our dear colleagues have been killed. Every single one has endured unimaginable loss,” he said.

Guterres added that UNRWA, if provided with the necessary funding and political support, would “help build peace and stability for Palestinians, for Israel and for the region.”

UNGA President Annalena Baerbock said: “For 76 years, UNRWA has been a lifeline for millions. But as we also know, while the entire UN system is under strain, few agencies have been scrutinized as intensively as UNRWA.”

She cited the agency’s work across the Middle East, including its operation of 183 schools in Gaza before the war, its provision of services to more than 912,000 refugees in the West Bank, the agency’s 25 health centers in Jordan providing 1.6 million consultations annually, and its service as the sole basic services provider across 12 refugee camps in Lebanon, among others.

But the agency is facing “massive financial, political and operational pressure,” said Baerbock, who hit back at Israeli claims that UNRWA has deep-rooted ties to Palestinian militant groups by highlighting the 2024 Colonna review that confirmed its neutrality. “It’s a strength of an organization to reflect on critics and scrutinize their own work,” she added.

The report, which provided recommendations that are under implementation, highlights “why this institution isn’t only needed more than ever, but also that it’s capable of doing the reform the whole UN is doing,” Baerbock said.

“The Israeli-Palestinian conflict can’t be resolved by endless war and permanent occupation and recurrent terror,” she added.

“It will only end when both Israelis and Palestinians are able to live side by side in peace, security, dignity, and their own sovereign and independent states.

“A Palestinian state would mean also that UNRWA wouldn’t be needed any longer, but until that day, we should never stop working for the two-state solution and never stop supporting UNRWA.”

The agency’s head, Philippe Lazzarini, accused Israel of seeking to justify the assassination of Palestinian journalists and deny the reality of famine in Gaza by undermining UNRWA’s reputation.

“For nearly two years, we’ve witnessed an appalling disregard for life and international law in the Occupied Palestinian Territories,” he said.

“History will forever ask our predecessors why they failed to prevent the genocides perpetrated under their watch.”

Lazzarini said UNRWA “continues to stand by Palestinians … against overwhelming odds,” and it is “enabling Palestinians … to build the best possible lives under a brutal occupation.”

Israeli attacks on the agency — both in Gaza and through rhetoric — seek to “dismantle” it, end the refugee status of Palestinians and undermine prospects for a two-state solution, he added.

“UNRWA has been the subject of a fierce and well-funded disinformation campaign spearheaded by the government of Israel. The campaign has targeted lawmakers in donor countries to tarnish the agency’s reputation, and to strangle both political support and funding for its vital work,” he added.

“Similar campaigns are now being deployed to silence other UN entities, international NGOs and public officials to justify assassinating journalists and to deny the reality of famine and other international crimes.”

The agency’s financial shortfall exceeds $200 million, Lazzarini warned, adding that projected income in the first quarter of next year is “far too low to absorb any deficit.”

The war in Gaza is “reshaping the multilateral system in profound ways,” he said, urging UN member states to “push back against the weaponization of humanitarian assistance” and insist on UNRWA’s presence in the Occupied Territories.

The meeting included remarks from an array of Arab foreign ministers and ambassadors to the UN, including Palestinian envoy Riyad Mansour.

“UNRWA is indispensable. UNRWA is the brilliant, most successful story of multilateralism … It’s our obligation to help it in every possible way, politically and financially,” he said.

The agency is “intertwined with the question of Palestine, and it will continue to exist until we have a just, comprehensive solution to the Palestine question,” he added.

Egypt’s Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty told the meeting that UNRWA is “indispensable in safeguarding the rights and dignity of the Palestinian refugees.”

He added: “Any attempt to undermine UNRWA’s mandate would inflict grave damage on the just cause of Palestine.”

Egypt is continuing “intensive efforts” with US and Qatari mediators to secure a ceasefire in Gaza, Abdelatty said.

“Once a ceasefire is achieved, Egypt will host the international conference for Gaza reconstruction and early recovery to implement the Arab-Islamic Plan for Reconstruction,” he added.

The plan, which lays out a five-year roadmap for Gaza’s reconstruction, was adopted by Arab states earlier this year.

Lebanon’s Foreign Minister Youssef Rajji said his country “expresses its deep concern over the ongoing campaign targeting UNRWA, a campaign that has persisted for over two years.”

UNRWA plays a “central role in safeguarding the rights of Palestinian refugees … and there’s no alternative to the agency,” he added.

UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper paid tribute to the UNRWA staff who “have given their lives while doing their jobs.”

She said: “We must work together to protect this vital mandate, including by supporting necessary reforms to the agency.

“We welcome progress on implementing the recommendations of the Colonna report, and urge UNRWA to continue this effort. UK support for UNRWA remains steadfast.”

Cooper announced an additional $10 million to support the agency, bringing the UK’s total contribution to $37 million this financial year.


Israel claims it broadcast Netanyahu UN speech through Gaza residents' mobile phones

Israel claims it broadcast Netanyahu UN speech through Gaza residents' mobile phones
Updated 26 September 2025

Israel claims it broadcast Netanyahu UN speech through Gaza residents' mobile phones

Israel claims it broadcast Netanyahu UN speech through Gaza residents' mobile phones

JERUSALEM: The Israeli army took over the mobile phones of Gaza residents to broadcast Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's UN speech live, his office said.

In an “unprecedented operation," the prime minister's office said the Israeli army had taken over the mobile phones of Gaza residents and Hamas operatives and his speech would be broadcast live through the mobile devices.

It was not immediately clear if that happened, or to what extent.

The military also set up loudspeakers at the Israel-Gaza border to blast his words into the territory.