Hamas distributed media messages to deter residents from moving south, in order to continue using them as human shields.
The large-scale movement of the population from northern Gaza and Gaza City is expected to begin soon, according to officers in the Southern Command.
Estimates suggest that hundreds of thousands of Palestinians will move to shelter areas in the southern Gaza Strip. The officers said that the transfer will be accompanied by the distribution of leaflets and media announcements to residents of the Strip. The move will also be accompanied by intensified ground and air operations.
Additionally, thousands of tents and shelter equipment entered Gaza on Thursday, COGAT said on X/Twitter, in preparation for the IDF’s plans. Tens of thousands more tents are in the pipeline and are expected to enter Gaza in the coming days.
“COGAT, together with international partners, is working to ensure the population has humanitarian supplies, including food, medical supplies, and shelter equipment,” the agency said.
The defense establishment estimates that between 70,000 and 80,000 residents have left Gaza City for the south over the past two weeks due to fears of an escalation in fighting by Israel.
A Palestinian displaced by the Israeli military offensive walks in a tent camp, as Israeli forces escalate operations around Gaza City, in Gaza City, September 3, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/Mahmoud Issa)
Hamas fears the movement of residents, who are used by the group as human shields, and is therefore trying to prevent it. After IDF Arabic-language spokesperson Avichay Adraee published messages to Gaza residents about designated humanitarian zones in the Strip,
Hamas’s Government Information Office claimed that the Al-Mawasi area and the central camps were not suitable for absorbing evacuees, warning of suffering, overcrowding, and hunger. A channel operated by Hamas’s military wing told residents that the announcement was merely “a deception to force residents to evacuate to areas near our positions, where they continue to be targets for attacks.”
Ahead of the implementation of the plan to capture Gaza City, which is expected to include the evacuation of the city’s population to the south, security officials told Walla that Hamas has launched a new campaign against the movement of Palestinians.
Hamas distributes media messages to deter residents from moving south
As part of the campaign, Hamas distributed media messages to deter residents from moving south, in order to continue using them as human shields.
Hamas also began distributing leaflets forbidding residents from leaving and claimed that prices in Gaza City were being reduced, in an attempt to keep the population in place.
The IDF has received testimonies, including video documentation, showing Palestinians from the Zeitoun neighborhood evacuating south, saying, “There is no other place we want to go.”
Residents expressed concern over their inability to afford rent in a new location if they fail to find tents in the shelter areas in the south.
60,000-80,000 out of one million have left the city, with the majority still staying because of threats from Hamas terrorists.
A senior defense source on Wednesday said that Hamas is working hard to block Palestinian civilians from evacuating from Gaza City in northern Gaza despite the military’s two-week effort to encourage them to leave as the clock ticks down to an expected large-scale invasion.
To date, there are varying estimates between Israel and the UN, but around 60,000-80,000 Palestinians have evacuated southward from Gaza City since the IDF started to press for this.
Those numbers come from a total of around one million Palestinians currently present in the Gaza City area.
According to the defense source, Hamas wants to keep as many civilians as possible in Gaza City, both to serve directly as human shields from IDF attacks and also to place more diplomatic pressure on Israel to end the war in the event that Palestinian civilians are caught up in the crossfire.
In the senior defense official’s view, Hamas views the deaths of its own population as a strategic asset to play against Israel’s reputation globally.
Smoke rises from Gaza following an explosion, as seen from Israel, May 16, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/AMMAR AWAD)
Hamas’s tactics to keep Palestinians from evacuating
Hamas tactics to prevent Palestinians from leaving Gaza City have varied from scaring them by (falsely) claiming that conditions in southern Gaza are worse in terms of insufficient tents, food, and medical care, versus physically shooting or beating those Palestinians who do try to flee.
In addition, Hamas’s public relations units are working to reassure Palestinians in Gaza City with the idea that it is their patriotic duty to stay in Gaza City as Hamas prepares to try to repel the IDF’s invasion.
Questioned about what happened to protests against Hamas from some months ago, the source acknowledged that those had eventually died down.
The senior defense official did add that there are still parts of Gaza over which Hamas has weaker control due to resistance by tribal clans or gangs, but that these are limited problems for Hamas and have not taken a broader toll on its control over Gaza.
Despite Hamas’s efforts, the senior defense source expressed optimism that, closer to the real start of hostilities, most Palestinian civilians will flee.
The source added that possibly around 200,000 civilians might stay longer, and some might only flee as artillery fire and aerial bombs start falling.
Next, the defense official said that there are now 100,000 tents designated to receive the fleeing population.
In addition, the sources said that there are already around one million Palestinians living in other tents throughout the Strip.
COGAT, Israel’s military agency, stated that the PA is responsible for supplying water in the West Bank. Israel transfers 90 million cubic meters annually, blaming shortages on Palestinian theft.
Palestinians in the West Bank are facing severe water shortages that they say are being driven by increasing attacks on scarce water sources by extremist Jewish settlers.
Across the West Bank inPalestinian communities, residents are reporting shortages that have left taps in homes dry and farms without irrigation.
In Ramallah, one of the largest Palestinian cities in the West Bank and the administrative capital of the Palestinian Authority, residents facing water shortages are now relying on public taps.
“We only get water at home twice a week, so people are forced to come here,” said Umm Ziad, as she filled empty plastic bottles with water alongside other Ramallah residents.
The United Nations recorded 62 incidents of Israeli settlers vandalizing water wells, pipelines, irrigation networks, and other water-related infrastructure in the West Bank in the first six months of the year.
A Palestinian boy fills a water bottle from a public water point, in Ramallah in the West Bank, July 22, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/Mohammed Torokman)
The IDF acknowledged it has received multiple reports of Israeli civilians intentionally causing damage to water infrastructure, but that no suspects had been identified.
Among the targets have been a freshwater spring and a water distribution station in Ein Samiya, around 16 km (10 miles) northeast of Ramallah, serving around 20 nearby Palestinian villages and some city neighborhoods.
Settlers have taken over the spring that many Palestinians have used for generations to cool off in the hot summer months.
Palestinian public utility Jerusalem Water Undertaking said the Ein Samiya water distribution station had become a frequent target of settler vandalism.
“Settler violence has escalated dramatically,” Abdullah Bairait, 60, a resident of nearby Kfar Malik, standing on a hilltop overlooking the spring.
“They enter the spring stations, break them, remove cameras, and cut off the water for hours,” he said.
The Ein Samiya spring and Kfar Malik village have been increasingly surrounded by Jewish Israeli settlements. The United Nations and most foreign governments consider settlements in the West Bank to be illegal under international law and an obstacle to the establishment of a future Palestinian state.
According to the United Nations’ humanitarian office, settlers carried out multiple attacks targeting water springs and vital water infrastructure in the Ramallah, Salfit, and Nablus areas between June 1 and July 14. The Ein Samiya water spring had been repeatedly attacked, it said in a July report.
Israeli security forces view any damage to infrastructure as a serious matter and were carrying out covert and overt actions to prevent further harm, the Israeli military said in response to Reuters’ questions for this story. It said the Palestinian Water Authority had been given access to carry out repairs.
Kareem Jubran, director of field research at Israeli rights group B’Tselem, told Reuters that settlers had taken control over most natural springs in the West Bank in recent years and prevented Palestinians from accessing them.
Settler violence
Palestinians have long faced a campaign of intimidation, harassment, and physical violence by extremist settlers, who represent a minority of Israeli settlers living in the West Bank. Most live in settlements for financial or ideological reasons and do not advocate for violence against Palestinians.
Palestinians say the frequency of settler violence in the West Bank has increased since the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel.
They say they fear the rise in settler violence is part of a campaign to drive them from the land. The United Nations has registered 925 such incidents in the first seven months of this year, a 16% year-on-year increase.
Since the Hamas terrorist attacks, which sparked the war in Gaza, several Israeli politicians have advocated for Israel to annex the West Bank, which it has occupied since 1967.
Reuters reported on Sunday that Israeli officials said the government is now considering annexing the territory after France and other Western nations said they would recognize a Palestinian state this month. The Palestinian Authority wants a future Palestinian state to encompass the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip.
Palestinians in the West Bank have long struggled to access water. The Western-backed Palestinian Authority exercises limited civic rule in parts of the territory and relies on Israeli approvals to develop and expand water infrastructure. Palestinian officials and rights groups say that’s rarely given.
B’Tselem said in an April 2023 report that Palestinians were facing a chronic water crisis, while settlers have an abundance of water.
“The water shortage in the West Bank is the intentional outcome of Israel’s deliberately discriminatory policy, which views water as another means for controlling the Palestinians,” B’Tselem wrote in the report.
Costly deliveries
Across the West Bank, water tanks are common in Palestinian homes, storing rainwater or water delivered by trucks due to an already unreliable piped water network that has been exacerbated by the settler attacks.
COGAT, the Israeli military agency that oversees policy in the West Bank and Gaza, said in response to Reuters questions that the Palestinian Authority was responsible for supplying water to Palestinians in the West Bank. Israel transferred 90 million cubic meters of water to the Palestinian Authority each year, it said, blaming any shortages on water theft by Palestinians.
Along with traveling long distances to collect water, Palestinians have become reliant on costly water deliveries to manage the chronic water crisis that they fear will only grow.
“If the settlers continue their attacks, we will have conflict over water,” said Wafeeq Saleem, who was collecting water from a public tap outside Ramallah.
Thousands of people gathered in Frankfurt to protest against the Gaza war on Saturday after courts overruled the western German city’s ban on the demonstration.
Police reported approximately 11,000 attendees at the starting point in Hafenpark, surpassing the 5,000 originally registered.
The demonstrators, carrying Palestinian flags and protest posters, chanted slogans such as “Freedom for Palestine” and “From the River to the Sea – Palestine will be free.”
The latter phrase has been the source of legal disputes in Germany, with some cities prosecuting activists for using it, while some courts have overturned convictions.
The march, held under the banner “United4Gaza – Stop the Genocide Now!” was due to proceed from the east of Frankfurt to the Rossmarkt square in the city centre.
Police reported no major incidents or riots by the afternoon.
However, one speaker at the demonstration was detained after making comments trivializing the Holocaust and the October 7, 2023, attacks by Hamas on Israel, police said.
Officers arrested the man after he refused to comply with their order for him to end his speech.
According to the police, some people were also made aware of the ban on wearing masks. A small number of criminal offences were identified, including suspected incitement to hatred.
City authorities had previously attempted to ban the demonstration, citing it as a “potentially anti-Semitic gathering.”
The city said it was concerned about escalating tensions between pro-Palestinian and pro-Israeli activists.
However, the organizer challenged the ban and won the case at the Frankfurt Administrative Court on Thursday.
The court ruled that the ban was unjustified based on the current police risk assessment, stating that a ban requires an immediate danger to public safety.
The Administrative Court in Kassel also reviewed the demonstration and decided on Friday that it could proceed. The court noted that police could focus on individual troublemakers to uphold the fundamental right to freedom of assembly for other participants.
Thousands take part in the “United 4 Gaza” demonstration in solidarity with Palestinians in downtown Frankfurt. Boris Roessler/dpa
Thousands take part in the “United 4 Gaza” demonstration in solidarity with Palestinians in downtown Frankfurt. Boris Roessler/dpa
Far-right Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has called for Israel to annex the Gaza Strip if Hamas refuses to disarm, the latest push by an Israeli official to forcibly displace Palestinians and take complete control of the coastal enclave.
During a news conference on Thursday, Smotrich said if Hamas does not agree to surrender, disarm and release Israeli captives, Israel should annex a section of Gaza each week for four weeks.
He said Palestinians would first be told to move south in Gaza, followed by Israel imposing a siege on the territory’s north and centre regions, and ending with annexation.
“This can be achieved in three to four months,” said Smotrich, describing the measures as part of a plan to “win in Gaza by the end of the year”.
The far-right minister’s annexation push comes as the Israeli army has advanced deeper into Gaza City in an effort to seize the city and forcibly displace about one million Palestinians living there.
Israel’s intensified attacks on Gaza City have been widely condemned, with United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warning last week that the campaign would cause “massive death and destruction”.
Meanwhile, Gaza City and the surrounding areas continue to experience famine as Israel continues to block food, water and other humanitarian aid from entering the Strip.
“Famine is no longer a looming possibility; it’s a present-day catastrophe,” Guterres said on Thursday.
“People are dying of hunger. Families are being torn apart by displacement and despair. Pregnant women are facing unimaginable risks, and the systems that sustain life – food, water, healthcare – have been systematically dismantled.”
Israel and its Western allies have long been pushing for Hamas to lay down its weapons, insisting that the Palestinian group cannot be involved in any future governance of Gaza.
Hamas rejected Smotrich’s remarks on Thursday, saying they represent “an official call to exterminate our people” as well as “an official admission of the use of starvation and siege against innocent civilians as a weapon”.
“Smotrich’s statement is not an isolated extremist opinion, but rather a declared government policy that has been implemented for nearly 23 months” of Israel’s war on Palestinians in the enclave, Hamas said in a statement.
“These statements expose the reality of the occupation to the world and confirm that what is happening in Gaza is not a ‘military battle’ but rather a project of genocide and mass displacement,” the group added, urging the international community to hold Israeli leaders accountable.
During his news conference, Smotrich called on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to adopt his annexation plan “in full immediately”.
Netanyahu did not comment publicly on Smotrich’s remarks. But the Israeli leader has alluded to a plan for Israel to “take control of all Gaza” and send troops to reoccupy the entire enclave.
Israel’s military has for weeks been issuing forcible evacuation notices to Palestinians in so-called “combat zones” to relocate to southern Gaza.
Smotrich, a major backer of Israel’s settler movement who himself lives in an illegal settlement in the occupied West Bank, has expressed support for re-establishing illegal settlements in the Gaza Strip that were dismantled in 2005.
He and other far-right members of Netanyahu’s governing coalition also have voiced staunch opposition to efforts to reach a deal to end Israel’s war on Gaza, threatening to topple the government if an agreement is reached.
During the war in Gaza, there have been two major stages of aid delivery to Palestinians: the original effort led largely by the United Nations, which involved hundreds of facilities, and the current system run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, an American nonprofit set up with Israeli backing. Last March, after Israel ended a ceasefire with Hamas, Benjamin Netanyahu’s government imposed a near-total aid cutoff to the territory until well into May, at which point the G.H.F. took over. The U.N.’s food deliveries had not been able to meet the overwhelming need in Gaza, but at least they had taken place all over the territory. The G.H.F. opened only four sites. Hundreds of Palestinians have been shot amid the chaos there. Since July 1st, two hundred and four people have died of malnutrition. (The total Palestinian death toll for the war is now more than sixty-two thousand.) Even President Donald Trump acknowledged the starvation. In response, Netanyahu allowed more aid into the territory, and Mike Huckabee, Trump’s Ambassador to Israel, announced that the G.H.F. would create more aid-distribution sites. But Gazans continue to starve, and Netanyahu has said that he plans to expand the war and occupy Gaza City. In Israel, this has spurred protests against his government, and families of the remaining hostages held by Hamas—there are believed to be about twenty still alive—argue that he is continuing the war for political reasons.
In a recent piece in Foreign Affairs, titled “How to Stop a Humanitarian Catastrophe,” the former Biden Administration officials Jacob J. Lew and David Satterfield explain why they believe that the Trump Administration is failing where theirs succeeded. Lew became Ambassador to Israel less than a month after October 7th, and Satterfield was Biden’s special envoy for humanitarian issues in the region. In the piece, they write, “Although the results of our work never satisfied us, much less our critics, in reality the efforts we led in the Biden administration to keep Gaza open for humanitarian relief prevented famine. The fact remains that through the first year and a half of relentless war, Gazans did not face mass starvation because humanitarian assistance was reaching them.”
I recently spoke by phone with Lew, who served in the second Obama Administration as Treasury Secretary, and is currently a professor of international public affairs at Columbia University, about the piece, as well as the broader American-Israeli relationship. During our conversation, which has been edited for length and clarity, we also discussed whether the Biden Administration was trying to keep Netanyahu in power, how much it shaped Israeli conduct, and what Lew learned on late-night phone calls with Israeli officials.
You write in the piece that the Biden Administration prevented mass starvation in Gaza while it remained in office. What did you do to prevent mass starvation?
From the very beginning of the war, President Biden was unequivocal in saying he had Israel’s back, and he would continue to support Israel and its legitimate effort to defeat Hamas. But there had to be a very serious effort to deal with the civilian issues of a war in Gaza. So we engaged literally every day and night on the questions of how you have an effective strategy of providing aid in a war zone. And we worked very hard to bring the attention of Israeli leaders to the urgency of opening aid crossings. So it was not a one-day event. Literally the entire time I was there, it was a very substantial part of the work that we were doing.
During your tenure, humanitarian groups, the United Nations, and even people in the Biden Administration were constantly saying that there was not enough aid getting into Gaza. The death toll climbed to more than forty-six thousand before you left office. I know you’re not saying that the aid-delivery system was sufficient, but how would you characterize it?
At every point, we said more needed to be done. I’m not saying that we achieved the goal of getting enough food in to meet all needs. But that’s a very, very different reality than mass malnutrition and famine. And every time there were reports of famine that were not accurate, it made it harder to do the job of getting more aid in. We were trying to make the critique in a balanced way to keep pressure on Hamas—and to not abandon Israel’s just effort to defeat an enemy that attacked it on October 7th, killing twelve hundred people—while still saying that you have an obligation every day, even if it’s at some risk, to keep the aid crossings open to Gaza. It was arduous work.
The risk of strengthening Hamas, if Hamas got hold of the fuel or the food, was a serious question. It wasn’t a made-up concern. We never saw it going directly from what the United States was providing. So I want to be clear on that. But they undoubtedly were trying to control the administration of aid because it was a way of holding on to governance.
But I just want to be clear: people were starving to death in 2024. I know mass starvation did not happen, but people were dying, correct?
I can tell you that we did not see evidence of mass starvation leading to death. We did see children, and some of them were children with diseases who are particularly susceptible, and it’s tragic. Any civilian, any child dying of malnutrition is tragic. So I’m in no way saying there weren’t problems. Until March of 2025, it wasn’t great, but people were surviving. And it was not an accident. It took constant engagement to keep that flow. I would never say there was no problem. I think the reports of famine were premature and exaggerated. Even in my last month, there was a report that I found extremely troubling where it said there was a serious risk of famine in the north, literally as we were working day and night to open the routes for food to get in to the people who were still in that very northern part of Gaza.
It seems that part of what was going on with what you said were “premature” warnings of famine was that humanitarian groups would warn of famine and then once things got bad enough, Israel would increase the amount of aid coming in. Doesn’t what you are saying suggest that, too? You are saying you would pressure the Israelis and therefore they would open the tap a little bit more and things would get a little bit better. And that’s not happening as much in the Trump Administration, so the starvation has gotten worse.
Well, look, when I got to Israel in November of 2023, the country was shell-shocked. It was in a state of trauma from October 7th that any of us in New York on September 11th would understand in a very visceral way. So people were not making decisions based on long-term thinking. I would say that once we got into November, we had engagement with senior policymakers who understood that there was a need to address humanitarian concerns. The challenge was that it was a country that didn’t understand exactly the scope of the humanitarian needs, and there was a right-wing element of Netanyahu’s coalition government that was opposed and had other views that were threatening to bring down the coalition. How did you get decisions to be taken without causing the government to collapse? Now, people have asked, why did we care about that? Because you work with the government that you have. We don’t vote in the elections in other countries. We don’t choose the leaders.
But supporting the government in power is a little different than saying we’re going to help this government try to survive.
We didn’t do that, Isaac. We never took a position one way or another on what the government should be. There were people in the government who thought we wanted it to fall. There were people outside of the government who thought we weren’t doing enough. We work to make policy with the government that’s in place.
In the essay, you write, “Given the tensions within the government, it took active and consistent U.S. engagement to manage the internal Israeli political dynamics and maintain the adequate flow of assistance. The message to our interlocutors in the Israeli government was in essence, ‘If the politics are hard, blame the United States.’ Allowing Netanyahu to cite a need to satisfy U.S. demands was crucial then—and remains crucial today.” That makes it seem like you were trying to help the current government stay in power.
No, I think you’re missing the point. The point I’m making is if your goal is to keep humanitarian aid flowing and you see obstacles that have to be overcome, you have to be realistic about what it takes to achieve the goal that you have. Our goal was to get the aid in. We wanted Israel to prevail in the war. What we’re saying in the essay is realistically there were limitations on how decisions would be taken and the coalition was concerned about not falling. It was their concern, not ours. I take issue with the characterization of our position being that we were trying to defend the coalition when we were trying to solve the immediate, urgent issue, which was getting humanitarian assistance in.
So when you say that, “Allowing Netanyahu to cite a need to satisfy U.S. demands was crucial then—and remains crucial today,” what do you mean? Netanyahu doesn’t want to piss off the super far-right ministers in his government by having it seem that Israel is delivering aid. So you’re saying that allowing Netanyahu to cite the need to satisfy U.S. demands is crucial to him remaining in power, correct?
The Gaza Strip’s largest city is now gripped by famine, according to the world’s leading authority on food crises. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC, said Friday that famine was occurring in Gaza City and that this was likely to spread to the southern cities of Khan Younis and Deir al-Balah without a ceasefire and an end to restrictions on humanitarian aid.
Aid groups and food security experts have warned for months that Gaza was on the brink of famine, but the IPC report is the first official declaration that the situation has reached this level. Israel immediately rejected the IPC’s assessment, with the foreign ministry repeating bluntly a claim it has made for months, that “there is no famine in Gaza.”
But the IPC — which is comprised of more than a dozen U.N. agencies, aid groups, governments and other bodies and was first set up in 2004 during the famine in Somalia — said it had concluded based on “reasonable evidence” that famine “is confirmed in Gaza Governorate.”
Palestinians struggle to get donated food at a community kitchen in Gaza City, northern Gaza Strip, Aug. 16, 2025.
Jehad Alshrafi/AP
“After 22 months of relentless conflict, over half a million people in the Gaza Strip are facing catastrophic conditions characterized by starvation, destitution and death,” the group said, warning that 1.07 million more people in Gaza were currently in a slightly lower starvation risk category, and that the circumstances were likely to expand within the densely populated Palestinian territory.
“Between mid-August and the end of September 2025, conditions are expected to further worsen with Famine projected to expand to Deir al-Balah and Khan Younis. Nearly a third of the population (641,000 people) are expected to face catastrophic conditions (IPC Phase 5), while those in Emergency (IPC Phase 4) will likely rise to 1.14 million (58 percent). Acute malnutrition is projected to continue worsening rapidly.”
The IPC said for the next year at least, “at least 132,000 children under five are expected to suffer from acute malnutrition — double the IPC estimates from May 2025. This includes over 41,000 severe cases of children at heightened risk of death.”
In a separate statement, Tom Fletcher, who heads the U.N.’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said Israel’s “systematic obstruction” of aid had caused the famine in Gaza.
“It is a famine that we could have prevented if we had been allowed. Yet food stacks up at borders because of systematic obstruction by Israel,” Fletcher told reporters in Geneva, calling it “a famine that will and must haunt us all.”
Israel insists “there is no famine in Gaza”
In a statement, the Israeli foreign ministry categorically rejected the findings of the UN-backed report.
“There is no famine in Gaza,” the ministry said, accusing the IPC of presenting a report “based on Hamas lies laundered through organizations with vested interests.”
“Over 100,000 trucks of aid have entered Gaza since the start of the war, and in recent weeks a massive influx of aid has flooded the Strip with staple foods and caused a sharp decline in food prices, which have plummeted in the markets,” the ministry said.
While more humanitarian aid has been allowed into Gaza in recent weeks, as Israel has come under intense international pressure, aid organizations say it is nowhere near the amount required. A controversial new U.S.- and Israeli-backed aid distribution group has also come under sharp criticism over the killing of numerous civilians near its four distribution hubs in Gaza.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has also repeatedly denied that there is widespread hunger in Gaza, calling reports of starvation “lies” promoted by Hamas.
COGAT, the Israeli military agency in charge of transferring aid to Gaza, said the report was “false and biased.” It said that in recent weeks significant steps had been taken to expand the amount of aid entering the strip.
What does a famine classification mean?
Famine can appear in pockets, sometimes small ones, and so a formal classification requires caution, food security experts say. The IPC has only confirmed famine a few times — in Somalia in 2011, and South Sudan in 2017 and 2020, and last year in parts of Sudan’s western Darfur region. This is the first confirmed famine in the Middle East.
The IPC rates an area as in famine when all three of these conditions are confirmed:
20% of households have an extreme lack of food, or are essentially starving.
At least 30% of children 6 months to 5 years old suffer from acute malnutrition, based on a weight-to-height measurement; or 15% of that age group suffer from acute malnutrition based on the circumference of their upper arm.
At least two people, or four children under 5, per 10,000 are dying daily due to starvation or the interaction of malnutrition and disease.
Gaza has posed a major challenge for experts because Israel severely limits access to the territory, making it difficult to gather and confirm data.
In a separate report Friday, the Famine Review Committee, or FRC, said it, too, had concluded there was famine in part of Gaza. The FRC is a group of independent international food security experts regularly consulted by the IPC.
The group acts as an added layer of verification when the data shows there could be famine.
The data analyzed between July 1 and August 15 showed clear evidence that thresholds for starvation and acute malnutrition have been reached, according to the IPC. Gathering data for mortality has been harder, but the IPC said it is reasonable to conclude from the evidence that the necessary threshold has likely been reached.
Most cases of severe malnutrition in children arise through a combination of lack of nutrients along with an infection, leading to diarrhea and other symptoms that cause dehydration, said Alex de Waal, author of “Mass Starvation: The History and Future of Famine” and executive director of the World Peace Foundation.
“There are no standard guidelines for physicians to classify cause of death as ‘malnutrition’ as opposed to infection,” he said.
The war will end. The leaders will shake hands. The old woman will keep waiting for her martyred son. That girl will wait for her beloved husband. And those children will wait for their heroic father. I don’t know who sold our homeland. But I saw who paid the price.
The war that has engulfed Israel, the Gaza Strip, and well beyond since October 7, 2023, has confronted the world with much on which it had never set eyes before. In scope and brutality, Hamas’s assault on Israelis exceeded any prior Palestinian act. Israel’s military attacks and forced starvation in Gaza are an onslaught governed by unusual rules, in which the death of Palestinian fighters seems like collateral damage, while the widespread, indiscriminate slaughter of tens of thousands of civilians, many of them women and children, appears the main event. Killing is the purpose. Death is everywhere, its victims uncertain when or where it will strike next. Horror also has come at the hands of the West’s collusion and Arab governments’ indifference, which is no different from complicity.
October 7th turned relations between Israelis and Palestinians upside down. How much of this matched Hamas’s planning and calculation, how much the chaotic, bottled-up frustrations and furies of fighters and civilians of all stripes, is debatable. Confined to the Strip, captives for years, often from birth, because of the Israeli blockade, Gazans could set eyes but not feet on lands from which parents and grandparents had been forced to flee. When Hamas breached the fence that separated Israel from Gaza, many followed the organization’s deadly script; others seized the opportunity to flood into what they considered stolen territory, to brutally lash out at those they deemed their captors, and to kidnap those they could hold as prisoners. In the short distance from Gaza to southern Israel, they were transformed in little time from conquered to conqueror, victim to perpetrator, detainee to abductor.
Yet for all that it changed, the war was neither new, anomalous, nor aberrant. Not an abnormal deviation from traditional Israeli-Palestinian dynamics but their culmination. Not the wave of the future but the past’s formidable revenge. Amid the vagaries of the decades-old clash between two nations vying for the same plot of land, one constant has been violence, perpetrated and endured, on minor and colossal scales. If Palestinian attacks against Israelis never before reached the recent toll, it has not been for lack of trying but for lack of success. If Israeli military operations against Palestinians have fallen short of this ferocity, it has not been for lack of desire so much as for lack of opportunity.
For a while, Israeli and Palestinian leaders invested in diplomacy, gambled on its effectiveness, and trusted in its primacy over force, out of political calculation, tactical considerations, or both. A majority of Israelis and Palestinians have at times favored a negotiated resolution and resigned themselves to necessary compromises. Each diplomatic venture ended in failure. Each failure rekindled the gravitational pull of an existential, pitiless struggle. In the end, what mattered was the balance of power and brute force. Those who mattered most knew it best.
October 7th and its aftermath provide the starkest of reminders. Gaza played host to the conflict’s multiple historical layers of enmity, rage, and revenge. Strip away the occasional ceasefires and peace deals that turn out to be neither; what remains is a naked contest that originated long ago and stubbornly refuses to go.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his allies may have been more vocal about their determination to crush Gaza; with time, internal cracks have begun to appear in Israel, as many of its citizens wish for a ceasefire to bring the remaining hostages home, or as images of starving Gazans shock even the most hardened. But the forcible dispossession and displacement of Palestinians, the deprivation of their basic rights, has been a hallmark of the Zionist movement and of Israeli governments. There were differences among them, some of which mattered deeply to Israelis. None fundamentally affected the condition of being Palestinian. Many outsiders openly dream of an Israeli government without Netanyahu and his partners, one led by those they hope would replace them. That dream was not of an imaginary future; it had often been yesterday’s reality. It did not bring Palestinians any closer to fulfilling their aspirations, nor did it truly soften the blows they endured. It is convenient to personalize this affair, to turn it into the story of a single individual and his loathsome associates. Netanyahu is the ideal offender, one whose ouster would set things right. He makes it so much easier to exonerate previous Israeli governments that also sought to liquidate the Palestinian cause, eliminate its leaders, and deepen Israeli dominion; to absolve his political rivals who seldom challenged those actions; and to clear the United States, which most of the time obediently abetted them throughout. He makes it easier to look away.
There is convenience, too, in conscious efforts to single out Hamas. October 7th was neither uniquely Hamas nor distinctively Islamist. It was Palestinian through and through, so much so that even Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian President, so critical of violence, so convinced of its futility, took a long time before he could bring himself to utter a single negative word about it, and then primarily for other political motives. Hamas’s religious doctrine, not its resort to violence, is what sets it apart from Fatah, its chief rival for leadership of the Palestinian national movement. From the start, Fatah’s defining trait was armed struggle, often with scant heed to whether its victims were civilian or military. Both Fatah and Hamas are sprouts of the Muslim Brotherhood, a transnational organization dedicated to the Islamization of Arab societies. But whereas Fatah’s founders broke ranks with the Brotherhood in the nineteen-fifties when they decided to engage in guerrilla warfare, Hamas’s future leaders at first concentrated on domestic matters, prioritizing the religious transformation of Palestinian society over an armed confrontation with Israel. Of the two, paradoxically, Fatah has the more militaristic pedigree, and Hamas was the latecomer to violent struggle. Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader who designed the October 7th operations, in this sense bore more in common with the Fatah of old than with the Muslim Brotherhood of today.
October 7th was entirely unforeseen and wholly unsurprising. Little about it was original: not the violence or thirst for revenge; not the focus on Gaza; not the attempt to kidnap Israelis; not the goal of releasing Palestinian prisoners; not the aspiration that it might trigger more sweeping regional change; not the overwhelming Israeli response much of the world views as disproportionate and most Israelis perceive as necessary; not Israel’s methodical, systematic assassination of any Palestinian it deems complicit; not the labelling of Israel as a colonial state, of Zionism as racism, of Palestinians as modern-day Nazis; not America’s collusion, confusion, and impotence. This latest iteration of the conflict was also among its most primitive. Now shorn of the pretense of a hollow peace process, it could revert to its original form.
Hamas’s onslaught and Israel’s war of destruction were not one-offs or historical exceptions. They were reënactments. They made quick work of years of a peace process that had become a sore farce. They reached deep into each side’s collective memories and then let loose their most abiding emotions. Hamas did not invent anything; it reclaimed a Palestinian past. Israel’s reaction was not unusual either, but a concentrated, magnified version of a long Zionist tradition of how to deal with the land’s Arab inhabitants. Palestinians and Israeli Jews also came to regard the other side’s actions as fulfillments of their own national nightmares, ethnic cleansing for one and extermination for the other. It is no surprise that they both so freely bandied about historical metaphors of yesteryear: a reprise of the 1948 Nakba for Palestinians; another Holocaust for Israelis. Residents of southern Israel paid for all the pain and humiliation Palestinians had suffered at Israeli hands. The people of Gaza paid not only for Hamas’s actions but for Nazi crimes as well. History does not move forward. It slips sideways. And, in the darkest of ways, repeats itself.
The Gaza war shattered notions that, for years, have been activated on behalf of a peace-process mythology. They exposed myths that surrounded the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: about the role of history and violence; the nature of Israeli and Palestinian sentiments; the promise of bilateral negotiations; the realism of partition between two states; the motivation and efficacy of American policy. This was not the first time that they had been exposed, and being exposed in no way guaranteed that they would be dismissed once and for all. But surely it should have proved harder after Hamas’s lethal operation and the Israeli government’s cataclysmic response; in light of sweeping Palestinian support for the former and overwhelming Israeli backing for the latter; in the wake of violent settler activity in the West Bank that conjures up prospects of ethnic cleansing and displacement, and of the nascent resumption of Palestinian attacks after a two-decade lull; against the backdrop of America’s unwillingness or helplessness to do much of anything about any of it, of European spinelessness and uselessness, of the gap between the indignation and the apathy of Arab governments—surely, it should have proved harder after all that, to blithely repeat bromides about the peace process, the two-state solution, or the central role of U.S. diplomacy. Whatever certainties had taken refuge in American minds, now would come time for their retirement. It was not to be. The world after October 7th was built on lies.
Some were expected, as when Israelis described how humanely they treat Palestinians, spoke of their Army as the world’s most moral, and claimed that military pressure would get the hostages out, or when Hamas denied the horrors that happened on that day. America’s falsehoods were most startling because they were least necessary. Joe Biden’s Administration presented Hamas’s attack as disconnected from history, the expression of “unadulterated evil,” the work of “animals;” praised Netanyahu for holding back unhinged extremists in his Cabinet, resisting their “enormous political pressure;” claimed that America was determined to stop the killing and was doing all in its might to that end; made repeated announcements of imminent deals for a ceasefire that left Israel, Hamas, and even its two co-mediators, Egypt and Qatar, baffled by the groundless optimism; placed the entirety of the blame for the failure of those ceasefire and hostage negotiations on Hamas even as Israeli officials, some in boast, others in lament, ascribed copious responsibility to the Israeli government, and even as several American officials privately blasted U.S. tactics. Eventually, in a gutsy historical rewrite, some U.S. officials sought to portray its post-October 7th policies as resounding successes. The failure to achieve a lasting ceasefire, release the hostages, prevent a humanitarian catastrophe, and avoid the war’s regional expansion—all of which the Biden Administration had identified as core goals—was a necessary precursor to Hamas’s and Hezbollah’s downfalls, Iran’s defanging, and the Syrian regime’s collapse. Warts and all, the outcome was according to plan.
These assertions go beyond guile, opportunism, cruelty, despair, or self-preservation. No one believes them. Those who utter them must know that no one believes them. They make little sense, their objective hard to discern. Yet they inevitably have a cost. The earnestness with which they are spoken is not redemptive. It is confounding, which makes them the more destructive. They breed cynicism. They are the kind of falsehoods that erode any support for any endeavor undertaken in their name. Words still matter but in unintended ways. The more the falsehood is told, the more it invalidates the point made. Its only lasting impact is to accentuate disbelief. That happens when the universal accountability for which the United States calls exempts Israel, pretending it can be counted on to judge its own. It happens when the United States arms the Israeli hand that strikes the victim and then pleads with it to stop. “To kill someone and walk in his funeral” is an old Arabic saying that says it all: America delivers weapons that kill women, children, and the elderly, that destroy homes, schools, and hospitals; it provides meagre humanitarian aid to sustain Palestinians who survived the latest U.S.-enabled attack only to await the next one. It happens when America assumes the maddening pose of moral conscience of the world and helpless bystander to its horrors. The air of anger, grief, and mourning that accompanied every American pronouncement on Gaza’s fate fooled nobody. Actions matter, not words that, in their perversity, made matters worse. Palestinians compared this to the old Mafia tradition of caring for those you are about to liquidate and to Rome’s gladiators saluting Caesar before proceeding to be slaughtered. Avē Imperātor, moritūrī tē salūtant.
Of all the falsehoods dispensed during the war, one of the more perplexing was the Biden Administration’s repeated homage to the two-state solution. The malady is not America’s alone; in recent weeks, President Emmanuel Macron announced France’s decision to recognize a Palestinian state, a step toward a putative two-state solution that he describes as the “only” path to peace. He was followed in short order by the U.K., Canada, Australia, and others. This is where the story passes beyond demagoguery and deceit and heads for the absurd. The two-state solution is dead, has been for some time prior to October 7th, and has been made all the more illusory in its aftermath. It is not about to be revived by virtue of another collective incantation or recitation of the mantra. The idea of partition has been around for more than eighty years. In terms of longevity, creativity, and the rotating cast of characters involved, it would be hard to fault the quest for its achievement. Yet regardless of setup, content, personality, or style, the result did not vary. Plans were met with questions, reservations, rejection, bewilderment, violence, and, more recently, a yawn.
Efforts to achieve two states failed under far more auspicious circumstances. They failed when the Palestinians were still unified; Israeli public opinion, by and large, could live with the outcome; settlements were a fraction of what they are today; and the two peoples could imagine some form of peaceful coexistence. At the height of America’s post-Cold War power, with leverage to spare, a phalanx of U.S. Presidents designated Israeli-Palestinian peace a priority but proved incapable of bringing a two-state solution any closer. When, under Barack Obama’s Administration—which included officials more understanding of the Palestinian cause than ever before—the effort sputtered and stalled, President Abbas seemed to lose faith. In a caustic remark to one of us, he suggested that even were America’s team to one day become staunchly pro-Palestinian and the Israeli government to be led by Meretz, the country’s most left-wing Zionist party, still, there would be no Palestinian state.
Yet the two-state solution enjoys persistent, international backing that nothing—not the years of trying and failing; not mounting Israeli rejection nor growing Palestinian indifference; not developments on the ground that stubbornly move in opposite directions and leave the idea of partition ever further behind—has been able to challenge. Proponents grasp for reasons to still believe in its possible realization. Today, they might look to dramatically altered local and regional circumstances—Israel victorious and self-confident; Arab states forced to reassess their stance; an unpredictable and atypical American President who can turn on allies and warm up to foes; a battered, isolated Palestinian leadership. They cling to the hope that, combined, these circumstances may lend life to the idea of two states on terms that Palestinians previously would not have countenanced and that Israelis currently see no reason to endorse. They cling to it even as they are incapable of describing a realistic pathway to its achievement. Queried for a road map to two states, Martin Indyk, the late American diplomat, veteran peace processor, and a staunch advocate of its inescapability, told one of us a few weeks before his passing, “I don’t have one, but we should persist.”
BOSTON — U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton is leading a group of House Democrats and veterans calling on Israel to allow more food and other aid to enter Gaza amid increasing warnings of a humanitarian disaster in the region.
In a letter to Israeli ambassador to the U.S. Yechiel Leiter, the lawmakers expressed “serious concern with the dire humanitarian aid situation in Gaza” and called on Israel to “flood Gaza with humanitarian aid” which they said would also help Israel deprive the terrorist group Hamas of the “leverage” it has gained in restricted aid to the region.
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YARMOUK, Syria — On a ferociously hot summer morning, the inspectors stepped gingerly through an alley and cast a critical eye at the war-withered buildings in this sprawling Palestinian refugee camp on the edge of Damascus.
The alley was typical of what Yarmouk had become after 14 years of Syria’s grinding civil war, which had cut the camp’s population from 1.2 million people — 160,000 of them Palestinian refugees — to fewer than several hundred and turned what had been the de facto capital of the Palestinian diaspora and resistance movements into a wasteland.
The ramshackle structures that survive — often with missing roofs and walls, and stairs leading nowhere — have little in common, save for their shambolic, ad hoc construction designed less for permanence than speed and low price. Most have a sprinkling of holes picked out by bullets or shrapnel.
“Nothing to repair here. This one we have to remove completely,” said one of the inspectors, Mohammad Ali, his eyes on a pile of indeterminate gray rubble with an orphaned staircase coming out of its side.
He pressed a tablet to record his assessment and sighed as his partner, Jaber Al-Khatib, hoisted himself up on a wall and examined the skeletal remains of a bombed-out, three-story building.
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1.A mother and her child walk down one of the destroyed streets in Yarmouk, the once vibrant Palestinian camp outside Damascus. 2.A pile of rubble reflects the damage to the Yarmouk headquarters of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General Command.
“The columns seem OK,” Al-Khatib called out.
Ali raised the iPad and snapped a picture he would later upload to a central database. It was a bit after 9 a.m. and the heat was already creeping past 96 degrees. And they still had plenty of buildings to assess.
“All right. Let’s move on,” he said.
Mapping the damage in Yarmouk would require several weeks more for the volunteer engineers in the Yarmouk Committee for Community Development. But the work is seen as vital in reviving a once thriving community.
Successive waves of fighting and airstrikes, not to mention the looting that inevitably followed, had left around 40% of the camp’s 520 acres damaged or destroyed. Vital services like electricity, water and especially sewage are at best intermittent or unavailable. Even now, mountains of rubble — enough to fill 40 Olympic-sized swimming pools, the committee estimates — line almost every street.
Jamal Al-Khatib, an engineer, takes photographs as he conducts a survey of damaged buildings in Yarmouk, Syria.
(Hasan Belal/For The Times)
“Compared to its size and population, Yarmouk paid the highest price across Syria in terms of damage and hardship,” said Omar Ayoub, 54, who heads the committee and was coordinating with Al-Khatib, Ali and other engineers on the assessment. Though large swaths of Yarmouk are still in ruins, conditions are now “five stars” compared with nine months ago when then-President Bashar Assad fled the country, Ayoub said.
Still, people have been slow to return. Only 28,000 people have come back, 8,000 of them Palestinians, according to Ayoub and aid agencies. For them and the tens of thousands still hoping to come back to Yarmouk, the concept of “home” — whether here or in places their families left behind after the 1948 war and Israel’s founding — has never seemed so far away.
“It used to feel like a mini-Palestine here. Streets, alleyways, shops and cafes — everything was named after places back home,” Ayoub said.
“Will it come back? Life has changed, and the war changed people’s convictions on the issue of Palestine.”
That image of how life in Yarmouk once was drew Muhyee Al-Deen Ghannam, a 48-year-old electrician who left the camp in 2013 for Sweden, to visit last month. He was exploring the idea of bringing his family back, but the landmarks he once used to locate his apartment were all gone. He eventually found it, still standing, but stripped of anything of value.
“Living here, you had such a strong connection to Palestine, and yet we never felt like foreigners in Syria,” Ghannam said.
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1.Years of warfare have devastated most streets in Yarmouk, Syria. 2.A construction worker labors in Yarmouk. Few of the former residents have returned to the camp. 3.A girl and her mother visit the grave of a relative in the Yarmouk cemetery amid the devastation caused during the Syrian civil war.
He won’t be leaving Sweden. “I was planning on staying [here]. But with kids, it would be very difficult.” His 16-year-old, he added, hoped to study aeronautics — an impossibility in Syria.
Many others were forced back to Yarmouk by sheer economics, including Wael Oweymar, a 50-year-old interior contractor who returned in 2021 because he could no longer afford rent in other Damascene suburbs. He spent the last four years fixing up not only what remained of his apartment, but its surroundings.
“What could I do? Just give up and have a heart attack?” he said, cracking an easy smile.
“You see this street?” he said. “I swept this whole area myself. There was no one here but me — me and the street dogs. But when people saw things improving, it encouraged them to return.”
Oweymar counted that a victory.
“It was systematic, all this destruction. The intention was to make sure Palestinians don’t return,” he said, echoing a common suspicion among Yarmouk’s residents, who believe the Assad-era government planned to use the fighting to displace Palestinians and redevelop the area for its own use.
“But they destroyed and we rebuild,” Oweymar said. “We Palestinians, we’re a people who rebuild.”
Oweymar’s words were a measure of the uneasy relationship the Assad family maintained with Palestinians. Compared with Palestinian refugees in Jordan and Lebanon, those in Syria — now estimated to number 450,000 — were treated well. Though never granted citizenship, they could work in any profession and own property. Under the rule of Assad’s father, Hafez, Palestinians enlisted in a special corps in the military called “The Liberation Army.”
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1.In Yarmouk, it’s common to see buildings missing walls or roofs. Many are pockmarked by bullets or scrapnel. 2.Yarmouk once had 1.2 million residents. Estimates say about 28,000 people live there now, 8,000 of them Palestinians. 3.Amid some rubble lies the burnt and torn image of Ahmed Jibril, the onetime secretary general of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General Command.
Factions, such as the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and Hamas, opened training bases in the country and administered camps. At the same time, Syrian security services pursued Palestinians with the same diligence they showed toward homegrown dissidents.
Assad continued his father’s policies and aligned Syria with the so-called Axis of Resistance, an Iran-backed network of factions arrayed against the U.S. and Israel that championed the Palestinian cause. Yet more than 3,000 Palestinians were imprisoned during the civil war — only a few dozen emerged alive.
“Assad became the standard bearer for Palestinian resistance, putting it above anything he did for Syrians. But he also slaughtered Palestinians in huge numbers. We never knew where we stood with him because of that duality,” Ayoub said.
When the civil war began, a miniature version played out in Yarmouk. Some factions insisted on neutrality, while others sided with Assad or the rebels against him. The Syrian military laid siege while the factions duked it out inside Yarmouk.
Neighborhoods became run-and-gun front lines; fighters punched holes through buildings’ walls to avoid ubiquitous sniper fire. In 2015, jihadists from the Islamic State seized the camp. As the battle stretched on, so did the siege, with rights groups estimating at least 128 people died of starvation. Ayoub, now a portly scriptwriter with an avuncular smile, weighed a mere 66 pounds during the siege.
“We had more people die here because of hunger than Gaza,” Ayoub said, referring to the enclave where Israel has mounted a blockade that aid groups warn has resulted in famine.
“Our ultimate dream was to eat our favorite food before we died. One neighbor, I remember, he was craving a French fry — just one,” Ayoub said, a wan smile on his face at the memory.
Mohammad Ali, 63, is one of the engineers working to survey the damaged buildings and assess their needs for future reconstruction in Yarmouk.
Islamic State was finally pushed out in 2018, but Assad’s forces, including regular military units and allied factions, pillaged whatever hadn’t been destroyed, even setting fires inside homes to pop tiles off of walls. They ripped out toilets, window frames and light switches and sold the copper wiring.
Eight months since Assad’s ouster, there is little clarity on what stance Syria’s new authorities will take regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Many officials say Syria is in no condition to engage in a fight with Israel, and that it has already paid enough for its advocacy for Palestinians. The U.S., meanwhile, has brokered high-level contacts between Israeli and Syrian officials, and conditioned assistance on the new government suppressing what the U.S. classifies as “terrorist organizations,” including a number of Palestinian factions.
There are already signs Damascus has moved to fulfill those demands.
Abu Bilal, a member of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine who gave his nom de guerre because he was not allowed to speak to the media, still minds the party headquarters in Yarmouk. Though the group remained resolutely neutral during the civil war, after Assad fled, gunmen affiliated with the new authorities confiscated the group’s weaponry and training camps.
“Their message was clear: No political activity or military displays. We can only engage in social work or academic research,” he said.
Palestinian factions aligned with Assad came for harsher treatment, he added. Many of their leaders have left the country, and institutions linked to the groups — such as hospitals, newspapers and radio stations — have been seized.
A building damaged during the 14-year Syrian civil war forms a backdrop for a cemetery in Yarmouk, once a thriving Palestinian camp.
None of that elicits sympathy from Al-Khatib and Ali, both of whom served in their younger days in the Liberation Army.
“All the [Palestinian] factions should have stayed neutral and blocked any side, Assad or the rebels, from entering. Had they stayed united, they would have protected the camp,” Al-Khatib said.
He waved at the landscape of destruction before him.
“Now Palestinians are more impoverished than ever. All the factions did was destroy the economic infrastructure in Yarmouk,” he said.
He paused before the fire-scorched carcass of what appeared to have once been a furniture shop.
“See the burns here?” Ali said. “You can tell they’re from looting, not war damage. But since we don’t know how long it burned, we don’t know if the concrete is affected.”
Al-Khatib looked at the scorch marks on the ceiling then shook his head at the ruins before him.
In recent weeks, more nations have said they would recognize a Palestinian state, but here there are more immediate worries.
“What time do we have now to think about or fight for a state?” Al-Khatib asked. “Our only concern is securing our homes.”
The Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza said dozens of civilians were killed in an Israeli airstrike. CBS News senior foreign correspondent Holly Williams reports on the U.S. response and de-escalation efforts in the Middle East.
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An Israeli strike on a five-story building where displaced Palestinians were sheltering in northern Gaza killed at least 34 people early Tuesday, more than half of them women and children, Gaza’s Hamas-run Health Ministry said.
The ministry’s emergency service said another 20 people were wounded in the strike in the northern town of Beit Lahiya, near the Israeli border.
The Reuters news agency, citing the Palestinian Civil Emergency Service, put the number of dead at 55 or higher, with dozens more wounded. The emergency service added that many people were believed to still be trapped under rubble.
Palestinians gather at the site of Israeli strikes on houses and residential buildings, amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas conflict, in Beit Lahiya, in the northern Gaza Strip October 20, 2024.
Abdul Karim Farid / REUTERS
There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military, which has been waging a large-scale operation in northern Gaza for more than three weeks, targeting what it says are pockets of Hamas militants who have regrouped there.
The dead included a mother and her five children, some of them adults, and a second mother with her six children, according to an initial casualty list provided by the emergency service.
Dr. Hossam Abu Safiya, the director of the nearby Kamal Adwan Hospital, said it was overwhelmed by the wave of wounded people from the strike.
Israeli forces raided the medical facility over the weekend, detaining dozens of medics, the latest in a series of raids on hospitals since the start of the war. The military said it detained scores of Hamas militants in the raid on Kamal Adwan.
The Israeli military has repeatedly struck shelters for displaced people in recent months, saying it carried out precise strikes targeting Palestinian militants and tried to avoid harming civilians. The strikes have often killed women and children.
The Reuters news agency put the number of dead in the strike 55 or more, with dozens injured at At least 55 Palestinians were killed and dozens others wounded in an Israeli strike on a residential building in the northern Gaza town of Beit Lahiya on Tuesday, the Palestinian Civil Emergency Service said.
It added that many victims were believed to still be trapped under the rubble.
Israel’s latest major operation in northern Gaza, focused on the Jabaliya refugee camp, has killed hundreds of people and driven tens of thousands from their homes in another wave of mass displacement more than a year into the war in the tiny coastal territory.
Israel has also sharply restricted aid to the north this month, prompting a warning from the United States that failure to facilitate greater aid efforts could lead to a reduction in military aid.
Palestinians fear Israel is enacting a plan proposed by a group of former generals who suggested the civilian population of the north should be ordered to evacuate, aid supplies should be cut off, and anyone remaining there should be considered a militant.
The military has denied it’s carrying out such a plan, while the government hasn’t said clearly whether it’s conducting all or part of it.
On Monday, Israel’s parliament passed two laws that could prevent the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees – the largest aid provider in Gaza – from operating in the Palestinian territories. It was the culmination of a long-running campaign against UNRWA, which Israel contends has been infiltrated by Hamas, allegations denied by the agency.
The move prompted a growing international outcry, according to Agence France-Presse, with even such staunch supporters of Israel as Britain and Germany voicing displeasure.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Britain was “gravely concerned.” Germany said it would “effectively make UNRWA’s work in Gaza, the West Bank and east Jerusalem impossible … jeopardizing vital humanitarian aid for millions of people.”
Hamas said it was an act of “Zionist aggression” while its ally Islamic Jihad depicted it as “an escalation in the genocide.”
The U.N. and UNRWA also voiced strong objections.
But Israel lawmaker Yuli Edelstein said in parliament that, “There is a deep connection between the terrorist organization (Hamas) and UNRWA, and Israel cannot put up with it,”
The war began when Hamas-led militants stormed into Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting around 250. Some 100 hostages are still inside Gaza, a third of whom are believed to be dead.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed over 43,000 Palestinians, according to local health authorities. Around 90% of the population of 2.3 million have been displaced from their homes, often multiple times.
A defense official told CBS News that the U.S. was given a heads-up in advance of Israel’s retaliatory attack against Iran. The U.S. is not involved in the strikes, but President Biden has been briefed on the situation. Ed O’Keefe, CBS News senior White House and political correspondent, and Sam Vinograd, CBS News national security contributor, have more.
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One person was arrested at UCLA on Monday night on suspicion of failing to disperse after the university’s Police Department ordered around 40 protesters to leave Dickson Court North, where they had established a “Gaza solidarity Sukkah” and a handful of tents, authorities said.
Student protesters erected the sukkah Monday morning to observe the Jewish holiday of Sukkot and demand the university divest from companies that do business with Israel and call for an end to the war in Palestine. By Monday evening, students had also set up a small number of tents.
At 3:20 p.m., UCPD issued a statement saying that students were assembling in an area not designated for public expression, using unauthorized structures and amplified sound — all of which violate the protest policies enacted in September in response to the massive pro-Palestinian protests that rattled campus in April.
According to reporting from the Daily Bruin, a group of pro-Israel counterprotesters arrived in Dickson Court North around 8 p.m., and pro-Palestinian protesters began dismantling their tents around 8:20 p.m.
The department issued an order to disperse about 10 minutes later, after which most of the protesters left the area, according to UCPD. Hired security guards then removed the sukkah, according to the Bruin.
Sukkot is a weeklong Jewish holiday that celebrates the fall harvest and commemorates the biblical story of the Israelites wandering in the desert for 40 years after escaping slavery in Egypt. During this time, Jews eat, dwell and pray in outdoor structures known as sukkahs to remember the fragile structures their ancestors lived in after fleeing Egypt.
Student protest organizers said they were using the holiday to call attention to the displacement and death inflicted on Palestinians and Lebanese people by Israel.
“I refuse to observe Sukkot as normal when university investments continue to fund the genocide of Palestinians,” said protest organizer Leah Jacobson in a statement. “The principle of pikuach nefesh, or saving a soul, demands we put other laws aside in order to preserve human life. I am here aligning my Jewish practice with my support for Palestinian liberation.”
Protesters are demanding the university divest from weapons and surveillance system manufacturers that do business with Israel such as Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, Northrop Grumman and Boeing.
The UC system has repeatedly opposed calls for divestment saying it impinges on the academic freedom of the university community. The UC system also states that tuition and fees are the primary funding sources for the University’s core operations and that none of these funds are used for investment purposes.
Israeli strikes on multiple homes in northern Gaza overnight and into Sunday left at least 87 people dead or missing, the territory’s Hamas-run Health Ministry said.
It said another 40 people were wounded in the strikes on the town of Beit Lahiya, which was among Israel’s first targets nearly a year ago.
Israel has been carrying out a large-scale operation in northern Gaza for the last two weeks, saying Hamas has regrouped there. Palestinian officials say hundreds of people have been killed and that the health sector in the north is on the verge of collapse.
Palestinians inspect the damage after an Israeli airstrike the previous night in Beit Lahia, in the northern Gaza Strip on October 20, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas militant group.
ISLAM AHMED/AFP via Getty Images
Meanwhile, the U.S. is urging Israel to press for a cease-fire in Gaza following the killing of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar last week. Neither Israel nor Hamas has shown any renewed interest in such a deal. Months of negotiations led by the U.S., Egypt and Qatar sputtered to a halt in August.
Iran supports Hamas and the Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon, where a year of escalating tensions boiled over last month. Israel sent ground troops into Lebanon at the start of October.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin had a call with Israeli Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant on Saturday, the Pentagon said in a statement, during which they discussed “regional security developments” including the recent deployment of a Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense system. During the call, Austin told Gallant that he was “relieved” Netanyahu was safe after the drone attack.
Former President Donald Trump said during a rally on Saturday that he spoke with Netanyahu.
In a statement to CBS News, the prime minister’s office confirmed the conversation took place and said Netanyahu “reiterated what he has also said publicly: Israel takes into account the issues the U.S. administration raises, but in the end, will make its decisions based on its national interests.”
Israel has meanwhile ramped up strikes on southern neighborhoods of Beirut known as the Dahiyeh, a crowded residential area. Hezbollah has a strong presence there, but it is also home to large numbers of civilians and people unaffiliated with the militant group.
Austin has called civilian casualties in Lebanon “far too high” in the Israel-Hezbollah war and urged Israel to scale back some strikes, especially in and around Beirut.
There was no immediate comment on the strikes in Beit Lahiya from the Israeli military, which said it was “continuing to operate across Gaza in both aerial strikes and ground operations.”
Among the dead were two parents and their four children, and a woman, her son and her daughter-in-law and their four children, according to Raheem Kheder, a medic. He said the strike flattened a multi-story building and at least four neighboring houses.
A Palestinian boy receives treatment at the Kamal Adwan Hospital after an Israeli airstrike in Beit Lahia, in the northern Gaza Strip on October 19, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas militant group.
ISLAM AHMED/AFP via Getty Images
Doctors Without Borders, the international charity known by its French acronym MSF, called on Israeli forces “to immediately stop their attacks on hospitals in North Gaza” after the Health Ministry said Israeli troops had fired on two hospitals over the weekend.
The military said it was operating near one of the hospitals but had not fired directly at it, and that it was looking into the other incident.
“The ever-worsening escalation of violence and non-stop Israeli military operations that we have been witnessing over the past two weeks in northern Gaza have horrifying consequences,” said Anna Halford, an emergency coordinator for MSF.
“When hospitals are attacked, their infrastructure destroyed, and the electricity cut off, the lives of patients and medical staff are under threat.”
The north has already suffered the heaviest destruction of the war and has been encircled by Israeli forces since late last year, following the deadly Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Most of the population fled last year, but around 400,000 people are believed to have remained in the north.
Israel’s offensive in Gaza has killed over 42,000 Palestinians, according to local health authorities, who do not distinguish combatants from civilians. The war has destroyed large areas of Gaza and displaced about 90% of its population of 2.3 million people.
Driving in the Israeli-occupied West Bank is an incredibly different experience depending on who you are. Ben Hubbard, international correspondent for The New York Times, rode along on two bus trips, one for Israelis, the other for Palestinians, that tell a story of separate and unequal roadways.
Palestinians in northern Gaza described heavy Israeli bombardment Saturday in the hours after airstrikes killed at least 22 people, as Israel warned people there and in southern Lebanon to get out of the way of offensives against the Hamas and Hezbollah militant groups.
In Lebanon, the U.N. peacekeeping force said its headquarters in Naqoura was hit again, with a peacekeeper struck by gunfire late Friday and in stable condition. It wasn’t clear who fired. It occurred a day after Israel’s military fired on the headquarters for a second straight day, wounding two peacekeepers. Israel, which has warned peacekeepers to leave their positions, didn’t immediately respond to questions.
Palestinian children sit atop their family’s belongings as they flee areas north of Gaza City in the northern Gaza Strip on October 12, 2024.
OMAR AL-QATTAA/AFP via Getty Images
In a statement Saturday night, Pentagon spokesperson Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said that Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin spoke with Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant Saturday and “expressed his deep concern about reports that Israeli forces fired on UN peacekeeping positions in Lebanon as well as by the reported death of two Lebanese soldiers.”
Israel’s military renewed its offensive in northern Gaza almost a week ago while escalating its air and ground campaign against the Iran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon. Amid Israel’s war with Hezbollah, a top U.N. official, Carl Skau, told The Associated Press he’s concerned that Lebanon’s ports and airport might be taken out of service. More than one million people have been displaced.
Israel’s military said Hezbollah fired more than 300 projectiles over Yom Kippur, the holiest and most solemn day on the Jewish calendar. The military also said it killed 50 militants in Lebanon. Claims on either side couldn’t be verified.
Gaza facing major food shortages
Hunger warnings emerged again in northern Gaza as residents said they hadn’t received aid since the beginning of the month. The U.N. World Food Program said no food aid had entered the north since Oct. 1. An estimated 400,000 people remain there.
The World Food Program said it was unclear how long the limited food supplies it distributed in northern Gaza earlier will last.
The U.N.’s independent investigator on the right to food last month accused Israel of carrying out a “starvation campaign” against Palestinians, which Israel has denied.
Israel’s offensive in Gaza started after Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, when militants stormed into Israel, killing about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting around 250 others.
Israel’s offensive has killed more than 42,000 Palestinians, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry, which doesn’t specify between combatants and civilians. Gaza’s Health Ministry said that hospitals had received the bodies of 49 people killed over the past 24 hours.
Palestinians carry their belongings as they flee areas north of Gaza City in the northern Gaza Strip on October 12, 2024.
OMAR AL-QATTAA/AFP via Getty Images
Israel launches new round of strikes on Lebanon
Israeli airstrikes on Saturday hit multiple areas in southern and eastern Lebanon, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry. Nine were killed in Maisra village in the northeast. Four were killed in an apartment building on the edge of Barja south of Beirut. Rayak and Tal Chiha hospitals in the Bekaa Valley were damaged. In Nabatieh, eight people were wounded.
The total toll in Lebanon over the past year of conflict between Israel and Hezbollah is now 2,255 killed, according to the Lebanese Health Ministry. More than 1,400 people have been killed since mid-September. It isn’t clear how many were fighters.
“We will keep standing with the Lebanese people during these difficult circumstances and also with the Palestinian people,” the speaker of Iran’s parliament, Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, said Saturday while touring the scene of an Israeli airstrike in Beirut.
Northern Gaza residents trapped in homes, shelters
In northern Gaza, residents told the AP many were trapped in their homes and shelters with dwindling supplies while seeing bodies uncollected in the streets as the bombing hampered emergency responders.
Those who rushed to the scene of the latest deadly airstrikes in the urban refugee camp of Jabaliya found a hole 20 meters deep where a home once stood.
At least 20 bodies were recovered while others likely were under rubble, emergency service officials said.
Elsewhere in Jabaliya, a strike on a home killed two brothers and wounded a woman and newborn baby, the officials said. An afternoon strike on a home killed at least four people, including a woman, said Fares Abu Hamza, an official with the emergency service.
Israel’s military said it killed more than 20 militants in the Jabaliya area over the past day.
Military spokesperson Avichay Adraee told people in parts of Jabaliya and Gaza City to evacuate south to an Israeli-designated humanitarian zone as Israel plans to use great force “and will continue to do so for a long time.”
Israel has repeatedly returned to parts of Gaza as Hamas and other militants regroup. The war has destroyed large areas of Gaza and displaced around 90% of its population of 2.3 million people, often multiple times.
Once again, some families moved south on foot, in donkey carts or crowded in vehicles that navigated piles of rubble. Others refused to go.
“It’s like the first days of the war,” said a Jabaliya resident, Ahmed Abu Goneim. “The occupation is doing everything to uproot us. But we will not leave.”
The 24-year-old said Israeli warplanes and drones struck many neighboring houses in the past week. He counted 15 relatives and neighbors, including four women and five children as young as 3, killed in neighboring homes. He said that there were dead in the streets.
Hamza Sharif, who stays with his family in a school-turned-shelter in Jabaliya, described “constant bombings day and night.”
He said the shelter hasn’t received aid since the beginning of the month and that families “will run out of supplies very soon.”
Israeli military operations in Gaza have killed almost 42,000 people since Oct. 7, 2023, according to the Ministry of Health in the Hamas-run Palestinian territory, the majority of them women and children.
In addition to lives lost, the United Nations estimates that the war has displaced 90% of Gaza’s roughly 2.3 million people. Many of them — unable to leave the embattled enclave — have been displaced multiple times within Gaza as they try to escape the Israeli airstrikes that have decimated its towns and cities.
As of January, the war had caused around $18.5 billion in damage to infrastructure in Gaza, according to the U.N. and the World Bank. That figure is almost equal to the entire combined GDP of the Palestinian territories (Gaza and the much larger Israeli-occupied West Bank) in the year before Hamas sparked the ongoing war with its Oct. 7 terrorist attack.
An aerial view shows the destruction of Jabalia refugee camp following Israeli attacks, in Gaza City, Gaza, Oct. 3, 2024.
Mahmoud ssa/Anadolu/Getty
Most of the damage and destruction has been to housing (72% as of January), but other, critical infrastructure has also been affected. The U.N. and World Bank said 84% of health facilities and 92% of primary roads had been damaged or totally destroyed by January, and the bombing has continued since then.
How to assess destruction in Gaza
It has not been possible to comprehensively map destruction in Gaza from the ground. International journalists have not been allowed inside Gaza, apart from on highly restricted tours offered by the Israeli military, since the war started.
Palestinian journalists covering the conflict have had minimal security and been subjected to evacuation orders and restrictions on their movements like everyone else in the enclave. At least 116 journalists and media workers have been killed in Gaza since the war started, according to The Committee to Protect Journalists.
Given the difficulties of on-the-ground assessment, a team of researchers based in the U.S. have used data and other resources from the European Space Agency and NASA to map indicators of damage in conflict zones, including Gaza.
“The satellite data, specifically, is not a picture like you would think from a normal camera,” Corey Scher, at the City University of New York, explained to CBS News. “This is radar, so it shoots a burst of radar into the Earth that echoes back to the sensor, and we can get an idea of this three dimensional structure and arrangement of an area in a way that you don’t get with an optical image.”
The technique allows the team to track indicators of destruction more quickly than is possible by analyzing traditional satellite imagery, which can take many weeks, Scher said.
Mapping the situation on the ground
CBS News has used data provided by Scher and Jamon Van Den Hoek, an Associate Professor of Geography at Oregon State University who’s also worked on the project, to map the indicators of destruction in Gaza over the course of the war in an effort to reveal the overall extent of the damage to infrastructure.
Scroll through the map below to see how the damage escalated over the course of the last 12 months.
“Over time, it becomes inevitable that people are displaced to areas where there are just – there is no safety, there is no shelter that can support… the population. The food insecurity, lack of access to water, just the constant uprooting on top of the background of damage is also extremely unique in this conflict,” Van Den Hoek said.
“The pace of the bombing, the breadth of the bombing, that resulted in this damage was extremely unique,” said Van Den Hoek, adding that it was the most destruction he had seen in any of the conflicts he’s looked at in his work with Oregon State’s Conflict Ecology lab.
“Over time, it becomes inevitable that people are displaced to areas where there are just – there is no safety, there is no shelter that can support… the population. The food insecurity, lack of access to water, just the constant uprooting on top of the background of damage is also extremely unique in this conflict,” said Van Den Hoek.
“It’s beyond the brick and stone”
“The damage has been colossal and also unprecedented and unheard of in the history of the U.N.,” Juliette Touma, communications director for UNWRA, the U.N. agency that supports Palestinian refugees, told CBS News.
Touma said that of the 190 buildings UNRWA had in Gaza before the war, two thirds had been either damaged or totally destroyed, with several being hit multiple times.
“It’s beyond the brick and stone,” Touma said. “It’s about what these buildings and structures used to represent — and the vast majority of these buildings were schools for children.”
Before Oct. 7, 2023, UNWRA provided education services for about 300,000 children across Gaza. By September 2024, Touma said all the school buildings still standing were being used as shelters for displaced people.
In January 2024, Israel accused 12 UNWRA employees of participating in the Oct. 7 attacks. After an internal U.N. investigation, the global body fired nine of its staffers, accepting that they may have taken part in the attacks. The agency employs some 13,000 people in Gaza and, as of September 2024, the U.N. said at least 222 of its team members had been killed in the war.
“What is the fate of these children who used to go to these buildings that are now either destroyed or severely damaged, or they continue to house people and continue to provide shelter for displaced families?” Touma said. “Even if there is a miracle and we have a cease-fire tomorrow, what will this mean for education? And how will children be able to go back to school? Because… 70% of our schools in Gaza cannot be used.”
The destruction and successive Israeli evacuation orders have forced many people to flee to increasingly difficult places to survive, including hundreds of thousands crammed into the coastal area of al-Mawasi, west of Khan Younis. Israel’s military has designated al-Mawasi a humanitarian zone, but before the war, it had “no facilities for human beings,” Touma said.
“People just started setting up shop there, meaning putting these plastic sheeting with, you know, wooden boards and living anywhere and everywhere,” she told CBS News. “At some point, Mawasi had a million people.”
But even al-Mawasi has been bombed. The most deadly attack was in July, when 90 people were killed and 300 wounded. Israel said it targeted and killed Mohammed Deif, the head of Hamas’ military wing, with the strike.
“A damaged building is a proxy for a displaced family, a displaced group of, you know, a school or a bakery,” Scher said. “It’s also an indicator of a potential hazard for an unexploded ordnance… It’s a proxy for everything that’s happening on the ground.”
Thousands of pro-Palestinian demonstrators rallied across California on Monday protesting Israel’s war in Gaza and Lebanon.
The demonstrations come on the anniversary of Oct. 7, when Hamas militants in Gaza attacked Israel, killed an estimated 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took about 250 hostages.
At USC, hundreds of protesters shut down the intersection of Jefferson Boulevard and McClintock Avenue in the afternoon. The crowd held pro-Palestinian signs and chanted, “Free, free Palestine,” according to video posted on social media. Protests were also anticipated at UCLA later in the day.
In the past year, Israeli military operations in Gaza and, more recently, against the Hamas-allied militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon, have been the focus of protests. More than 41,000 Palestinians in Gaza, including many women and children, have died in Israeli attacks, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. In Lebanon, hundreds have been killed and more than 1.2 million people have been displaced, according to the U.N. Refugee Agency.
Demonstrations occurred across the country throughout the weekend and into Monday.
On Sunday, demonstrators filled San Francisco’s Mission District to protest what they said was the oppression of Palestinians. In Orange County, demonstrators gathered along Jeffrey Road in Irvine — one of the city’s main thoroughfares — on Sunday waving Lebanese and Palestinian flags and holding signs that focused on the human cost of the war.
Elsewhere, masked demonstrators set up an encampment outside Ohio Democratic Rep. Greg Landsman’s house in Cincinnati early Sunday. Landsman is Jewish. Protests were also underway in New York City.