Malnutrition cases grow in Gaza, hospitals report, as little aid and food make it through

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Malnutrition cases grow in Gaza, hospitals report, as little aid and food make it through

Hospital officials in the Gaza Strip say they’re dealing with a growing number of malnutrition cases among children in the enclave as little aid is making it through the crossings and the aid that does enter is violently looted. 

Dr. Mohammed Shaheen, an intensive care physician at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, said cases of malnutrition across the Gaza Strip are becoming a greater issue for hospitals.

“They cannot deal with all these patients,” Shaheen said.� 

Shaheen said the hospital, which is already operating at full capacity in Deir al-Balah, has had to transfer patients to other hospitals with little to no formula or food for children.

A woman is feeding her child milk.
Sobh’s son Ahmad remains in Al-Aqsa Martyrs hospital where he is continuing to receive formula and treatment for malnutrition. (Mohamed El Saife/CBC)

Hanan Sobh, who was displaced from Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza, gave birth to her son prematurely in June, a month before her due date. Since then, her son Ahmad has been lacking the nutrients to grow.

“He’s supposed to gain weight with the milk that the hospital gives him,” she told CBC News from Al-Aqsa Hospital in  central Gaza. “He’s the same weight as when he was born … it hasn’t changed.”

‘Malnutrition is everywhere,’ says Palestinian mother

Her son, now five months old, was placed in a hospital incubator for two days after he was born. He remains in the hospital where he is continuing to receive treatment, Sobh said.

The 32-year-old mother, who has been displaced roughly five times over the 13-month long war, said some days they have little formula available but other days there is nothing for her son.

“Malnutrition is everywhere,” she said, adding that mothers like her cannot find food to eat themselves, let alone to help produce milk for their babies.

Sobh is one of many Palestinians feeling the direct impact of malnutrition, blamed on the Israeli army’s control of the crossings to allow food and aid to enter the besieged enclave. 

This is not the first time over the war where Palestinians in the Gaza Strip have experienced a dire need for food. Earlier this year, children were reported to be dying of hunger in the Palestinian territory.

WATCH | Malnutrition cases among children growing in Gaza: 

5-month-old boy among growing number of child malnutrition cases in Gaza

3 hours ago

Duration 0:59

Hanan Sobh, whose son Ahmad was born a month early and has been suffering from malnutrition since birth, said Wednesday she worries how she will continue to feed her child amid a shortage of formula, food and humanitarian aid in the Gaza Strip. Her son is receiving treatment at Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza, one of the hospitals reporting a growing number of malnutrition cases, particularly among children.

Hussam Abu Safiya, the director of the Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza where Israeli troops have launched a more than month-long offensive, echoed those concerns, saying cases of malnutrition among children were increasing at its hospital, which was operating at a minimal level.

Abu Safiya said the hospital was under siege by Israeli forces and the World Health Organization had been unable to deliver supplies of food, medicine and surgical equipment. The Israeli army sent tanks and soldiers into Beit Lahiya and the nearby towns of Beit Hanoun and Jabalia, the largest of the Gaza Strip’s eight historic refugee camps, early last month in what it said was a campaign to fight Hamas militants waging attacks and prevent them from regrouping.

“We receive daily distress calls, but we are unable to assist them due to the lack of ambulances, and the situation is catastrophic,” he said.

“Yesterday, I received a distress call from women and children trapped under the rubble, and due to my inability to help them, they are now among the martyrs [dead].”

Canada expresses concern over malnutrition levels

Last Thursday, Canada’s Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly expressed deep concern about “catastrophic” humanitarian conditions across Gaza and warned about “the life-threatening levels of acute malnutrition.”

Joly cited a Nov. 8 report by the Famine Review Committee that found a strong likelihood that famine is occurring or imminent in areas within the northern Gaza Strip. The committee has previously found that 133,000 people in Gaza were facing catastrophic food insecurity.

“This means that civilians — men, women and children — are dying because of the lack of humanitarian assistance allowed into Gaza,” she said in a joint statement with International Development Minister Ahmed Hussen.

Dozens of people stand outside of a bakery.
Dozens of Palestinians gather in front of the only operating bakery in Khan Younis in southern Gaza waiting to get their hands on any bread as the shortage of flour, aid and food continues to persist in Gaza. (Mohamed El Saife/CBC)

The statement said not enough aid is reaching those who rely on it for survival and humanitarian agencies and humanitarian workers continue to face preventable impediments.

A UN aid official said last Friday that Gaza aid access had reached a low point, with deliveries to parts of the besieged north of the enclave all but impossible.

Amjad Al-Shawa, director of the Palestinian NGO Network in Gaza, said he has concern there will be no interventions or pressure from the international community to make sure aid is delivered to those who need it, particularly in the north.

“[Over] the next few days we will witness more deterioration … there will be no real entry of aid to the Gaza Strip,” Al-Shawa told CBC News on Wednesday. “We are passing through the worst stage of this war.”

Al-Shawa called on the United Nations to declare Gaza a “famine zone.”

In Khan Younis, dozens of people stood outside the only operating bakery in Khan Younis in central Gaza Monday morning in hopes of getting their hands on bread to feed their families amid a dire flour shortage.

WATCH | Some Palestinians say they cannot find bread to feed their families: 

Flour shortage, bakery closures exacerbate already dire food situation in Gaza

2 hours ago

Duration 0:42

Dozens stood outside the only operating bakery in Khan Younis in central Gaza Monday morning in hopes of getting their hands on bread to feed their families. Palestinians say despite waiting daily for hours, they are often leaving empty-handed amid a flour shortage and bakery closures that have exacerbated an already dire food situation in the besieged enclave.

76 killed in strikes over 24 hours: Health Ministry

Meanwhile, Israeli military strikes across the Gaza Strip killed 20 Palestinians on Monday, including six people who were killed in attacks on tents housing displaced families, according to medics.

Four people, two of them children, were killed in an Israeli airstrike on a tent encampment in the coastal area of Al-Mawasi, designated as a humanitarian zone, while two were killed in temporary shelters in the southern city of Rafah and another in drone fire, health officials said.

In Beit Lahiya town in northern Gaza, medics said an Israeli missile struck a house, killing at least two people and wounding several others. On Sunday, medics and residents said dozens of people were killed or wounded in an Israeli airstrike on a multi-floor residential building in the town.

People stand atop rubble.
Palestinians, including rescuers, search for casualties at the site of an Israeli strike in Gaza City on Monday. (Mahmoud Issa/Reuters)

The Israeli military, which has been fighting Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza since October 2023, said it conducted strikes on “terrorist targets,” in Beit Lahiya.

An Israeli airstrike on a house in Gaza City killed seven people and wounded 10 others, medics said. Later on Monday, an Israeli airstrike killed four people in the Nuseirat camp in the central Gaza Strip, they added.

There has been no Israeli comment on Monday’s incidents.

The Gaza Health Ministry said Israeli military strikes had killed 76 Palestinians across the enclave in the past 24 hours.

In Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, relatives of Palestinians killed in an Israeli airstrike on tents housing displaced families sat beside bodies wrapped in blankets and white shrouds to pay farewell before walking them to graves.

“My brother wasn’t the only one; many others have been martyred in this brutal way — children torn to pieces, civilians shredded. They weren’t carrying weapons or even know ‘the resistance,’ yet they were ripped apart into fragments,” said Mohammed Aboul Hassan, who lost his brother in the attack.

Violent looting of aid convoy causes loss of 98 trucks

A convoy of 109 trucks was violently looted on Nov. 16 after entering Gaza, resulting in the loss of 98 trucks in what aid workers say is one of the worst such incidents in the more than 13-month-old war, an UNRWA aid official told Reuters on Monday.

The convoy carrying food provided by UN agencies UNRWA and the World Food Program was instructed by Israel to depart at short notice via an unfamiliar route from Kerem Shalom crossing, Louise Wateridge, UNRWA senior emergency officer, told Reuters.

“This incident highlights the severity of access challenges of bringing aid into southern and central Gaza,” she said, adding that injuries occurred in the incident.

“⁠The urgency of the crisis cannot be overstated; without immediate intervention, severe food shortages are set to worsen, further endangering the lives of over two million people who depend on humanitarian aid to survive,” she said.

Hamas said via its TV station Al-Aqsa TV that its security forces carried out an operation against what it called “gang members” involved in the looting, and killed more than 20 of them. The claim has not been independently verified.

WATCH | Large food convoy violently looted Saturday, organizations say:

Convoy of aid trucks violently looted in Gaza, UN agencies say

7 hours ago

Duration 3:52

Nearly 100 trucks carrying food for Palestinians were violently looted on Nov. 16 after entering Gaza via an unfamiliar route ordered by Israel, say UNRWA and the World Food Program.

Later on Monday, COGAT, the Israeli military agency that deals with Palestinian civilian affairs, said it facilitated the delivery of 10,000 litres of fuel and 149 packages of medical equipment to hospitals in northern Gaza on Sunday and permitted the transfer of 64 patients and their companions from Kamal Adwan and Al-Awda Hospitals to functioning hospitals elsewhere in the enclave.

A World Food Program spokesperson confirmed the looting and said that many routes in Gaza were currently unpassable due to security issues.

An Israeli official said Israel had been working to address the humanitarian situation since the start of the war, adding that the main problem with aid deliveries was UN distribution challenges.

Israel invaded the Gaza Strip last year after the Hamas-led attacks in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, which killed an estimated 1,200 people, according to Israeli authorities, and saw militants abduct more than 250 as hostages. An estimated 100 hostages remain in Gaza.

Israel has since killed more than 43,800 people, according to Gaza health authorities, and destroyed much of the enclave’s infrastructure, forcing most of the 2.3 million population to move several times. The Palestinian civil emergency service estimates that the bodies of 10,000 people may be trapped under the rubble, which would take the reported death toll to more than 50,000.

Published at Tue, 17 Sep 2024 18:38:40 +0000

Some Arab Americans who voted for Trump are concerned about his picks for key positions

Just a week after winning several of the nation’s largest Arab-majority cities, President-elect Donald Trump has filled top administration posts with staunch Israel supporters, including an ambassador to Israel who has claimed “there is no such thing as Palestinians.”

Meanwhile, the two Trump advisers who led his outreach to Arab Americans have not secured positions in the administration yet.

The selections have prompted mixed reactions among Arab Americans and Muslims in Michigan, which went for Trump along with all six other battleground states.

Some noted Trump’s longstanding support for Israel and said their vote against Vice President Kamala Harris was not necessarily an endorsement of him.

Others who openly supported him say he will be the final decision maker on policy and hope he will keep his promise of achieving an end to the conflicts in the Middle East.

WATCH | What’s Trump’s goal with his cabinet picks?: 

What’s Trump’s goal with his cabinet picks?

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CBC’s Alex Panetta explains what you need to know about Trump’s cabinet picks.

Albert Abbas, a Lebanese American leader whose brother owns the Dearborn, Mich., restaurant Trump visited in the campaign’s final days, stood beside the former president during that visit and spoke in support of him.

Now, Abbas says it’s “too early” to judge Trump and that “we all need to take a deep breath, take a step back and let him do the work that he needs to do to to achieve this peace.”

“I just want you to think about what the alternative was,” said Abbas, referring to the current administration’s handling of Israel’s war in Gaza and its invasion of Lebanon.

He added, “What did you expect from myself or many members of the community to do?”

Beyond promising peace in the Middle East, Trump has offered few concrete details on how he plans to achieve it. His transition team did not respond to a request for comment.

Throughout the campaign, his surrogates often focused more on criticizing Harris than outlining his agenda. And visuals of the conflict — with tens of thousands of deaths collectively in Gaza and Lebanon — stirred anger among many in Arab and Muslim communities about President Joe Biden and Harris’ backing of Israel.

Amin Hashmi, a Pakistani American in Michigan who voted for Trump, urged him to stay true to his campaign commitments to bring peace.

“I am disappointed but not surprised,” said Hashmi, who urged Trump to “keep the promise you made to the people of Arab descent in Michigan.” 

Trump picks what pro-Israel conservatives call ‘dream team’

Those in the community with concerns have specifically pointed to former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, nominated as Trump’s ambassador to Israel.

Huckabee has consistently rejected the idea of a Palestinian state in territories seized by Israel, strongly supported Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and opposed a two-state solution, claiming “there really isn’t such a thing” as Palestinians in referring to the descendants of people who lived in Palestine before the establishment of Israel.

A man in a suit stands at a podium. A red banner behind him says "Build Israel Great Again".
Former governor Mike Huckabee is shown in 2018. (Oded Balilty/The Associated Press)

While Huckabee has sparked the most concern among community members, other Trump Cabinet picks have strongly spoken in Israel’s favour as it targets Hamas following the militant group’s Oct. 7, 2023, attack in which it killed 1,200 Israelis and took hundreds more as hostage.

WATCH | Why a Michigan business owner says he couldn’t vote for Kamala Harris: 

Here’s why this Michigan business owner says he couldn’t vote for Kamala Harris

12 days ago

Duration 2:00

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, nominated for secretary of state, has opposed a ceasefire in the war, stating that he wants Israel to “destroy every element of Hamas they can get their hands on.”

Trump’s pick to be his ambassador to the United Nations, New York Republican Elise Stefanik, led the questioning of university presidents over antisemitism on campuses. She has also opposed funding for the U.N. Relief and Works Agency, which oversees aid to Gaza.

Donald Trump listens to Albert Abbas, owner of The Great Commoner, left, as Massad Boulos looks on during a visit to a cafe in Michigan in Nov. 2024.
Donald Trump listens to Albert Abbas, owner of The Great Commoner, left, as Massad Boulos looks on during a visit to a cafe in Michigan in Nov. 2024. (Julia Demaree Nikhinson/The Associated Press)

The Republican Jewish Coalition, which organized for Trump in Michigan, has been outspoken in its support for many of Trump’s Cabinet picks.

Sam Markstein, the group’s political director, described the proposed lineup as a “pro-Israel dream team,” adding that “folks are giddy about the picks.”

He praised Trump’s pro-Israel record as “second to nobody.”

“The days of this mealymouthed, trying to have support in both camps of this issue are over,” Markstein said.

“The way to secure the region is peace through strength, and that means no daylight between Israel and the United States.”

No roles yet for key figures in Trump’s Arab American outreach

Among the reasons some Arab American voters supported Trump was that they believed his prominent supporters would be key in the next administration.

Massad Boulos, a Lebanese businessman and father-in-law of Trump’s daughter Tiffany, led efforts to engage the Arab American community, organizing dozens of meetings across Michigan and other areas with large Arab populations.

Donald Trump greets Sen. Marco Rubio during a campaign rally at Raleigh, N.C., on Nov. 4, 2024, the day before the U.S. presidential election. Trump was victorious at the polls and will return to the White House in January.
Donald Trump greets Sen. Marco Rubio, during a campaign rally on Nov. 4, 2024, in Raleigh, N.C. (Evan Vucci/The Associated Press)

Some sessions also featured Richard Grenell, former acting director of national intelligence, who was well-regarded by those who met with him.

Neither Boulos nor Grenell has been tapped yet for the coming administration, though Grenell was once considered a potential secretary of state before Rubio was selected. Boulos declined to comment and Grenell did not respond to a request for comment.

“Some people expected Trump to be different and thought Massad would play a significant role,” said Osama Siblani, publisher of the Dearborn-based Arab American News, which declined to endorse a candidate in the presidential race.

WATCH | Why anger over the Middle East could cost Democrats the U.S. election:

Why anger over the Middle East could cost Democrats the U.S. election

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Siblani himself turned down a suggested meeting with Trump after the non-endorsement announcement.

“But now people are coming to us and saying, `Look what you’ve done,”‘ Siblani said. “We had a choice between someone actively shooting and killing you and someone threatening to do so. We had to punish the person who was shooting and killing us at the time.”

Published at Mon, 18 Nov 2024 18:20:40 +0000

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