Israel’s continued military assault on Gaza kills scores of Palestinians across the enclave on a daily basis. At least 89 were killed over the past 24 hours, according to the ministry of health. This follows 89 killed on Thursday. 113 on Wednesday. 77 on Tuesday. 134 on Monday.
“Isn’t it enough that they’ve starved us to death? Isn’t it enough that they’ve slaughtered us?” Zainab Adwan, who was displaced from Beit Hanoun and sheltering at the school, said. “The Israelis can’t confront the resistance. If they were real men, they would go face the resistance fighters at the borders. There are no fighters here. Where are the resistance fighters? These are just civilians.”
Friday’s attack came as Israel’s campaign of forced starvation in Gaza has reached a tipping point into rapidly increasing cases of death. Over the past five days alone, at least 54 Palestinians have died, including over 20 children, as a result of starvation and malnutrition, according to the Ministry of Health. The widening famine is affecting the entire population in Gaza. People are arriving at emergency rooms in a state of exhaustion, hunger and dehydration. Doctors and journalists who care and report on the famine are themselves weakened and struggling to work. Hospitals have run out of key treatments and medicines to urgently treat the ballooning cases of malnutrition.
Starting on March 2, Israel cut off all supplies of food, fuel, medicine, and other aid to Gaza. In late May, it allowed in a trickle of aid through a system largely overseen by the US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. The meager amount of food allowed in was only accessible at four distribution hubs located in militarized zones where Israeli soldiers and American mercenaries have shot and shelled at starving crowds killing over a thousand aid seekers in less than two months. In the face of increasing criticism, Israel is now trying to pin the blame for the spreading famine on the United Nations, claiming it is refusing to distribute aid even though Israel has actively prevented it from doing so.
On Friday, Israel said it would soon allow other countries to drop aid from the air into the Gaza Strip. Jordan and the United Arab Emirates are expected to begin airdrops in the coming days. Aid drops have taken place a number of times in Gaza over the past 21 months, and have not resulted in sufficient amounts of aid reaching Palestinians, and have also led to death and injuries multiple times.
“Airdrops are the most expensive & inefficient way to deliver aid. It is a distraction to the inaction,” Philippe Lazzarini, the Commissioner-General of UNRWA, said in a social media post. “Today, more children died, their bodies emaciated by hunger. The flawed distribution system (GHF) is not designed to address the humanitarian crisis. It’s serving military & political objectives. It’s cruel as it takes more lives than it saves lives. Israel controls all aspects of humanitarian access, whether outside or within Gaza.”