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How Gaza’s hospitals became a battleground against Israeli bombs and hunger

Analysis How Gaza’s hospitals became a battleground against Israeli bombs and hunger
Gaza’s health sector has been decimated by Israel’s devastating military assault. (AFP)
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Updated 20 August 2025

How Gaza’s hospitals became a battleground against Israeli bombs and hunger

How Gaza’s hospitals became a battleground against Israeli bombs and hunger
  • Food shortages in the territory have hit exhausted medics as they struggle to help floods of severely malnourished patients
  • Accounts from the territory describe hospital staff unable to feed themselves or their families in latest blow to collapsed health system

LONDON: In Gaza’s overwhelmed hospitals, doctors, nurses and other medical staff are battling against what many fear could be their most insurmountable challenge in nearly two years of Israel’s war on the territory’s people — hunger.

“We go to work sometimes without eating and we treat patients while actually feeling dizzy, lightheaded and weak,” said Dr. Mohammed Abu Mughaisib, a physician working in the territory. “The starvation is not just hitting families in Gaza it’s hitting the health workers too.”

Gaza’s health sector has been decimated by Israel’s devastating military assault. Hospitals have been bombed, doctors killed and detained, and medical supplies cut off.

Beleaguered and bloodied, health care workers are now locked in a daily struggle against hunger and malnutrition affecting people across the entire territory.




Casualties surged into hospitals, and the facilities also became targets for Israeli airstrikes. (AFP)

If the medical staff cannot eat and are not strong enough to perform the painstaking work needed to treat a battered and malnourished population, the situation can only deteriorate.

In accounts provided to Arab News from medical charities, hospital workers have described their daily struggles to find enough food to sustain them through their long shifts and feed their families.

They describe colleagues fainting at work, struggling to continue their lifesaving care for those bombed, starved and shot at as they try to reach the meagre food supplies making it into the territory.

Abu Mughaisib, who is the deputy medical coordinator for Medecins Sans Frontieres in Gaza, said that despite the decades of conflict affecting the territory, he never imagined such a situation.

He said most days he and his colleagues eat only one basic meal of bread with canned food or lentils.

Some days the market is completely empty, and there are never any vegetables, fruit, or meat.

“Honestly, we don’t have options,” he said, almost anticipating that those outside of Gaza would not believe him.




Beleaguered and bloodied, health care workers are now locked in a daily struggle against hunger and malnutrition affecting people across the entire territory. (AFP)

“In the hospitals there is no food for the medical staff. Some health workers faint during their shift. They clean the wounds, they deliver babies, and perform surgeries on empty stomachs.

“Some of my colleagues started to lose weight rapidly. Some of them cannot produce milk to breastfeed their babies. This is not just burnout this is real physical starvation.”

Dr. Saeed Salah, medical director of the Patient’s Friends Benevolent Society Hospital in northern Gaza, described the food shortages as the “greatest crisis” his colleagues and patients have faced.

“Some members of our medical staff themselves are malnourished and can no longer sustain the energy needed to perform their duties,” he said, in response to Arab News questions passed through the charity Medical Aid for Palestinians.

“Our emergency ward is overwhelmed with people who haven’t eaten for days and are in urgent need of IV fluids. In over 21 months of operating under crisis, we’ve never seen days like these.”

Summer Al-Jamal, a finance and admin assistant for MAP based at Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza, described the situation there as “deeply distressing.”

The hospital has been inundated with victims from shooting attacks on Palestinians gathered at aid distribution hubs nearby, as well as patients injured from Israeli bombings, or who are sick.

Increasingly, they have been treating malnourished families and their children.

“The hospital is heavily burdened with departments overwhelmed by trauma cases and critically injured patients,” she said after a recent visit to the facility. “The scale of suffering and the intensity of the emergency were unlike anything I had witnessed before.

FASTFACTS

• Two of three famine thresholds have been reached in Gaza, according to the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification platform.

• Hunger cases crowd Gaza’s overwhelmed hospitals, 94 percent of which are damaged or destroyed, the WHO said.

“The medical staff appear exhausted, physically and emotionally. Many looked pale, fatigued, and undernourished. The toll of the past weeks had left them drained.”

After Israel launched its latest Gaza campaign in response to the Hamas-led attack in October 2023, the territory’s health service soon came under fire.

Casualties surged into hospitals, and the facilities also became targets for Israeli airstrikes. Nearly two years into the conflict, the health service is broken.




Israel imposed a complete 11-week blockade on Gaza in March, leading to desperate shortages of medicines and equipment for hospitals, along with basic food for the entire population. (AFP)

Of the 36 hospitals in the territory before Israel’s current war on Gaza, only 18 remain partially operational, and less than 40 percent of primary health care facilities are still functional, according to the World Health Organization.

All the facilities have been damaged and are flooded with patients far beyond their maximum operating capacities.

Gaza’s Health Ministry says Israeli forces have killed more than 1,500 Palestinian health workers since October 2023, with the WHO recording at least 700 attacks on health care facilities in the territory.

Doctors and hospital staff have been detained, and more than 10,000 critically ill patients need to be evacuated.

And then there is the dwindling medical supplies. Israel imposed a complete 11-week blockade on Gaza in March, leading to desperate shortages of medicines and equipment for hospitals, along with basic food for the entire population.




If the medical staff cannot eat then they are not strong enough to perform the painstaking work needed to treat a battered and malnourished population. (AFP)

The main UN agency distributing aid was forced to stop operating and was eventually replaced by the US- and Israeli-run Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. Some supplies have resumed but at a fraction of what aid agencies say is required.

The dire situation for the health sector was further exacerbated by the sharp increase in casualties last month as Israel ramped up its campaign in the face of an international outcry and widespread accusations of genocide.

The WHO reported 13,500 injuries in Gaza in July — the highest since the first three months of Israel’s war on the territory. Many of these took place when Israeli troops repeatedly opened fire on crowds of Palestinians as they waited to collect food from GHF distribution points.

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Amid all the carnage, the shortage of food means Gaza’s people are now dying from starvation.

Late last month, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, a global initiative that analyses food security, warned that the “worst-case scenario of famine is currently playing out in Gaza.” The body said there would be “widespread death” without immediate action.

The Gaza Health Ministry said on Monday that 263 Palestinians had died of malnutrition and starvation, including 112 children, since the war started.




Of the 36 hospitals in the territory before Israel’s current war on Gaza, only 18 remain partially operational, and less than 40 percent of primary health care facilities are still functional. (Reuters)

Images of emaciated children being treated at hospitals have shocked the global community in recent weeks.

Israeli officials have claimed the numbers are inflated and that the children died from pre-existing health conditions. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has dismissed reports of severe hunger as Hamas “lies” and insisted last week there is “no policy of starvation.”

His claims are at odds with those of doctors working in the territory, who have seen a surge in severe malnutrition cases.

Rowida Sabbah, MAP’s nutrition program lead in southern Gaza, described a recent case of a mother and her two children, aged 5 and 7, who had not eaten any bread for two months.

“For two days she had only been able to give them just water,” Sabbah said. The mother finally reached a medical hub for help. “She was crying when she received the supplies,” she said.

“Every time I see children suffering from severe hunger and wasting away, my heart breaks. They beg for anything … even just a slice of bread with a pinch of salt. That’s all they hope for.”

For medical staff, the food shortages have pushed them to breaking point. Accounts given to Arab News describe the daily battle to source the most meagre of supplies, and desperate searches for small quantities of flour now selling at vastly inflated prices.

“Even health workers, already stretched to their physical and mental limits, are working long hours on little food, growing weaker as shortages persist,” Dr. Rik Peeperkorn, the WHO representative for the occupied Palestinian territory, told Arab News.

“No one can sustain this, yet they keep showing up because patients have no one else. We call for large-scale aid, including diverse and nutritious food, to be allowed via all routes.”

Support for Gaza’s medical teams has also come from more than 100 fellow health workers around the world who have spent time working in the territory during the conflict.




Some days the market is completely empty, and there are never any vegetables, fruit, or meat. (AFP)

Last week they signed a letter expressing solidarity with their Palestinian colleagues as they are “starved and shot by Israel” as part of a “methodical attack” of the health system.

“Doctors, nurses, and first responders are all rapidly losing weight due to forced starvation at the hands of the Israeli government,” the letter stated.

“Many suffer from hunger, dizziness and fainting episodes while performing operations and triaging patients in emergency rooms. Most have been displaced into tents after being forced from their homes, and many are surviving on less than a single serving of rice a day.”

The letter called for the immediate release of detained health workers, an end to attacks on medical facilities, and the lifting of Israel’s blockade of humanitarian supplies.

With little sign of progress on a ceasefire and Israel’s ramping up of military operations around Gaza City, doctors in the territory are bracing for things to get even worse.




Nearly two years into the conflict, the health service is broken. (Reuters)

Yet despite their hardship, they are working to provide the best treatment possible to a people brutalized by Israel’s war.

“We are also facing a severe shortage of therapeutic infant formula,” Salah at the PFBS hospital said, focusing on the immediate challenges.

“Mothers are dehydrated and unable to breastfeed, and pregnant women are suffering complications and are at increased risk of miscarriage. Malnourished patients are deteriorating.

“Without urgent intervention, more lives will be lost.”


Israeli forces demolish two-story home in Al-Mughayyir near Ramallah

Israeli forces demolish two-story home in Al-Mughayyir near Ramallah
Updated 18 sec ago

Israeli forces demolish two-story home in Al-Mughayyir near Ramallah

Israeli forces demolish two-story home in Al-Mughayyir near Ramallah
  • The house was under construction in the southern part of the village
  • Al-Mughayyir village has about 4,000 residents and in August had about 3,000 olive trees destroyed by the Israeli military

LONDON: Israeli forces on Thursday demolished a home in the village of Al-Mughayyir, northeast of Ramallah, which is the administrative seat of the Palestinian Authority, according to the Wafa news agency.

Amin Abu Aliya, the head of Al-Mughayyir, reported that Israeli forces stormed and demolished a two-story house under construction in the southern part of the village, citing building without a permit as the reason.

The house belonged to Wajih Musa Abu Aliya.

Al-Mughayyir, a village with about 4,000 residents, in August suffered the destruction of about 3,000 olive trees by the Israeli military under the pretext that the trees posed a “security threat” to an Israeli settlement road that runs through the village’s territory.

The olive tree is a national symbol for Palestinians and provides a vital source of income for 80,000 to 100,000 families who rely on harvesting and selling olives, olive oil, and other products derived from it.

The Israeli settlement of Adei Ad, established in 1998, encroaches on the agricultural groves of Al-Mughayyir as well as land belonging to the Palestinian villages of Jalud and Turmus’ayya.


Syrian authorities arrest drug kingpin from Assad clan near Lattakia

Syrian authorities arrest drug kingpin from Assad clan near Lattakia
Updated 10 min 33 sec ago

Syrian authorities arrest drug kingpin from Assad clan near Lattakia

Syrian authorities arrest drug kingpin from Assad clan near Lattakia
  • Internal Security Forces captured Nomair Al-Assad alongside several members of a criminal gang in the city of Qardaha
  • Ministry of Interior emphasized that the arrest reflects the forces’ commitment to pursuing remnants of the Assad regime

LONDON: Syrian authorities arrested a prominent drug dealer on Thursday in the coastal province of Lattakia.

Nomair Al-Assad is regarded as one of the country’s most prominent drug dealers and has been involved in several crimes during the era of the Bashar Assad regime, according to the Ministry of Interior.

Internal Security Forces captured Al-Assad alongside several members of a criminal gang in the city of Qardaha, famously known as the hometown of the Assad family.

Brig. Gen. Abdulaziz Al-Ahmad of the ISF told SANA that Al-Assad used his kinship with the Assad regime to “form and manage organized terrorist networks, which were involved in murders, kidnapping, extortion and armed robbery against civilians in a number of governorates.”

Al-Ahmad added that Al-Assad oversaw drug production and smuggling to neighboring countries and participated in an armed attack on Syria’s forces early this year.

The ministry emphasized that the arrest reflects the ISF’s commitment to pursuing remnants of the Assad regime, combating crime, and achieving justice.

Since the fall of the regime last December, the new government in Damascus has arrested several suspects, including army officers, for crimes committed against Syrians during the country’s civil conflict.

Additionally, Syrian authorities continue to fight against drug trafficking, cooperating with neighboring countries such as Jordan, Turkiye, and Iraq to dismantle criminal networks.


Oman receives prestigious award from Japan’s top university

The award was based on the role played by the Sultan Qaboos Chair for Middle Eastern Studies.
The award was based on the role played by the Sultan Qaboos Chair for Middle Eastern Studies.
Updated 16 min 27 sec ago

Oman receives prestigious award from Japan’s top university

The award was based on the role played by the Sultan Qaboos Chair for Middle Eastern Studies.
  • The award was received by Oman’s Ambassador to Japan Dr. Mohammed bin Said Al Busaidi on behalf of the government of Oman

TOKYO: The University of Tokyo has announced that it has awarded the prestigious Shokomon Award to the government of the Sultanate of Oman in recognition of its contribution to supporting scientific research and academic and cultural exchange in the field of Middle Eastern studies.

The award was received by Oman’s Ambassador to Japan Dr. Mohammed bin Said Al Busaidi on behalf of the government of Oman.

The award was based on the role played by the Sultan Qaboos Chair for Middle Eastern Studies, which was inaugurated at the university in 2011.

It is the highest honor bestowed by the University of Tokyo on individuals and institutions who have made significant and influential contributions to enriching the university’s progress and serving its academic goals.

Oman is the first Arab government to receive it.

The University of Tokyo has a significant academic relationship with Oman, primarily through the University of Tokyo Centre for Middle Eastern Studies (UTCMES), which was established with funding from Oman. The relationship includes academic exchange, research, and events such as seminars, lectures, and exhibitions focusing on Oman.

The university also works with institutions like Sultan Qaboos University and has received book donations from Oman.

UTCMES conducts and disseminates research on the Middle East and organizes events like public lectures, symposia, and exhibitions that focus on Oman.


Algeria buys about 400,000 tons durum wheat in tender, traders say

Algeria buys about 400,000 tons durum wheat in tender, traders say
Updated 57 min 15 sec ago

Algeria buys about 400,000 tons durum wheat in tender, traders say

Algeria buys about 400,000 tons durum wheat in tender, traders say
  • The tender sought a nominal 50,000 metric tons but Algeria frequently purchases more than the volumes initially sought.
  • Algeria does not disclose the results of its tenders

HAMBURG: Algeria’s state grains agency OAIC is believed to have purchased about 400,000 metric tons of durum wheat in an international tender which closed on Wednesday, European traders said on Thursday.
The tender sought a nominal 50,000 metric tons but Algeria frequently purchases more than the volumes initially sought.
Initial estimates of the purchase price were around $324 a ton cost and freight (c&f) included for larger Panamax shipments and around $334 a ton c&f for smaller Handymax shipments.
About 90,000 tons of the purchase was believed to involve US-origin durum with much of the rest believed to involve Canadian-origin of type 3 Canada western amber durum (No.3 CWAD).
The tender sought shipment in four periods: November 1-15, November 16-30, December 1-15 and December 16-31.
Algeria does not disclose the results of its tenders and results reported are based on trader assessments. More detailed estimates of prices and volume are possible later.


Houthis confirm death of chief of staff in Israeli airstrike

Houthis confirm death of chief of staff in Israeli airstrike
Updated 30 min 7 sec ago

Houthis confirm death of chief of staff in Israeli airstrike

Houthis confirm death of chief of staff in Israeli airstrike
  • Houthis confirm that their chief of staff, Mohammed al-Ghamari, was killed in an Israeli airstrike, along with his son and several companions

LONDON: The Houthis confirmed on Thursday the death of Major General Mohammed AbdulKareem Al-Ghamari, their chief of staff and one of the group’s most prominent military figures, following an Israeli airstrike.

An announcement from the group’s Armed Forces also reported the deaths of several of his companions and his 13-year-old son, Hussein, according to Houthi news agency SABA. 

Al-Ghamari had been previously reported wounded in the strike, but the group’s official statement on Thursday confirmed his death. 

Major General Mohammed AbdulKareem Al-Ghamari. (SABA)

Israeli officials said in June that Al-Ghamari was the target of an airstrike.

Since the onset of Israel’s military operations in Gaza in October 2023, which have been widely condemned as acts of genocide, the Houthi movement in Yemen has escalated its retaliatory attacks on Israeli targets. 

Their actions have been framed as acts of solidarity with Palestinians under siege. 

In response, Israel has conducted multiple airstrikes on Houthi-controlled areas in Yemen, intensifying the regional conflict.