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“I am seeing my son dying and I can’t do anything”: Children and Families in Northern Gaza Just Weeks Away from Famine

RAMALLAH (March 18, 2024)—Children and families in northern Gaza are just weeks away from famine, according to by leading experts on food insecurity and malnutrition, with some of the thresholds needed to declare a famine already exceeded.

New from the global initiative of the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC)—the global scale to classify food and nutrition crises—says 1.1 million people across Gaza, or at least half of the population, are facing catastrophic food insecurity (IPC Phase 5). With hunger even more extreme in northern Gaza, the IPC Special Brief projects famine will occur any time between now and May 2024.

Even now, children and families are being forced to live off wheat, hay, and animal food, said Save the Children, with any future famine declaration likely to come after it's too late for too many people. The already accelerating child death rate will reach new extremes without an immediate, definitive ceasefire and unfettered aid access, the child rights organization said.

The report comes just days after the that one in three children under the age of two in northern Gaza are now suffering from acute malnutrition, a rate that has doubled since January.

Nada* is a mother of three boys. She fled northern Gaza to Rafah with her family when the war started. Nada* told ɫƵthis week:

“Our relatives came from the north three days ago. They say people there grind hay, wheat, and cattle food together to have something to eat. That’s not even proper food! They go from where they live to the sea where the aid drops happen, so they can get a can of freekeh [grain made from durum wheat] or mushrooms to eat. They live on weeds.”

With access to, and communications with, communities in northern Gaza interrupted and sometimes completely cut off, ɫƵand other aid groups have struggled to reach people there. Aid groups are relying on testimonies from families who have fled to Rafah—the only place where any infrastructure is barely functioning, and where the population has swollen from 280,000 to 1.5 million in a matter of months. With families crammed in makeshift tents and a near total breakdown in food supply, clean water and sanitation systems, and healthcare, children in Rafah are suffering from starvation and disease.

A ɫƵstaff member in Rafah, Mariam,* said her one-year-old nephew is suffering from severe acute malnutrition (SAM)—a condition that weakens the immune system and exposes children to other diseases, in some cases doing lifelong developmental harm. Now, he has complications and is on a ventilator in an ICU.

Mariam* said:

“He has a swollen belly and irregular breathing due to an upper respiratory tract infection. [...] This ordeal began two months ago when he was forced to relocate to a tent in Rafah. Shortly after, he started experiencing severe vomiting and diarrhea.

“Now, owing to the harsh living conditions in the tents and the dearth of accessible healthcare services, he has been admitted to the ICU and is receiving mechanical ventilation. His mother said: 'I am seeing my son dying and can’t do anything.’ It’s really heartbreaking.”

Already, reports from the Gaza Ministry of Health show at least have died because of malnutrition and dehydration in Gaza—and with services hanging by a thread, fuel scarcity, and roads destroyed, the real number is likely far higher.

Conditions to safely and adequately provide humanitarian assistance to children in Gaza are deteriorating every week, ɫƵsaid. On March 13, in the Gaza strip was hit by Israeli forces, killing one staff member and injuring another 22 civilians.

According to the UN, the daily average number of trucks entering Gaza with food, aid, and medicine dropped by more than a third in the weeks following the International Court of Justice (ICJ) .

Alternative methods of aid delivery such as air drops or a temporary port are no substitute for unimpeded humanitarian assistance via the already established land routes, ɫƵsaid.

Any denial of humanitarian assistance is a against children, according to the UN Security Council’s 1999 Resolution on Children in Armed Conflict. It is also tantamount to collective punishment and illegal under international humanitarian law.

Xavier Joubert, Country Director for ɫƵin the occupied Palestinian territory, said:

“Make no mistake—it is a human-made crisis that has led as many as a third of Gaza’s children into the grips of acute malnutrition. There are trucks of food, water, and medical supplies queuing at one side of a border while children and families starve on the other.

“We have a clear time frame to stave off famine, and it demands urgency. If a famine is declared, it will already be too late for too many people—children are famine’s first victims and are already dying in Gaza because of malnutrition. Every minute counts for them. It should be on the collective conscience of Israeli authorities and the international community that every day without an immediate, definitive ceasefire and unfettered access for and to humanitarian aid is another catastrophic day of starvation and suffering, another step towards famine and another death knell for Gaza’s children.”

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NOTES TO EDITORS
You can find the IPC report.

*Name changed to protect anonymity.

Save the Children believes every child deserves a future. Since our founding more than 100 years ago, we've been advocating for the rights of children worldwide. In the United States and around the world, we give children a healthy start in life, the opportunity to learn and protection from harm. We do whatever it takes for children – every day and in times of crisis – transforming the future we share. Our results, financial statements and charity ratings reaffirm that ɫƵis a charity you can trust. Follow us on , , and .