Gaza Famine: Starvation Used as Weapon, Deaths Rise

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Gaza’s Starvation Crisis Deepens as Ceasefire Talks Drag On

24 DAILY NEWS – As ceasefire negotiations teeter on the brink, the humanitarian crisis in Gaza continues to escalate, with famine reaching critical levels, according to sources on the ground.

By 24 DAILY NEWS

Gaza City, July 29, 2025 — As ceasefire negotiations continue, famine in Gaza is reaching unprecedented and catastrophic levels. Starvation is being deliberately used as a weapon by the Israeli occupation, with the death toll climbing daily.

In the past few weeks alone, 63 Palestinians have died from hunger, including 25 children. Since the start of the siege, at least 111 people have starved to death80 of them children — according to figures gathered by local authorities and reported by 24 DAILY NEWS.


The Face of Gaza’s Starvation

On July 19, 2025, the tragic death of 19-year-old Mohammad al-Sawafiri, a Palestinian man with special needs, shocked Gaza and the world. Emaciated beyond recognition, his frail body became a haunting symbol of Gaza’s man-made famine. His death, documented in widely shared images, underscored warnings from Gaza Civil Defense: if aid remains blocked, al-Sawafiri will not be the last.

Across the Strip, starved doctors treat starved patients, while exhausted paramedics and civil defense crews risk their lives to reach them. Even journalists like Anas Al-Sharif, reporting live amid the devastation, speak with trembling voices and tear-filled eyes.

Fathers scour the streets in vain, seeking food for their children. If available, prices are crippling:

  • Flour: $25 per kilo

  • Lentils: $16 per kilo

  • Pasta: $19 per kilo

  • Potatoes: $14 per kilo

  • Rice: $22 per kilo


Ceasefire Promises and the Reality on the Ground

Every time Gaza hears of potential ceasefire agreements, hope briefly rises — only to be crushed by failed negotiations and intensified airstrikes. As 24 DAILY NEWS reports, each round of talks follows a familiar pattern: bold announcements early in the week, mounting optimism, and then collapse or half-measures by week’s end.

Recent negotiations between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and U.S. President Donald Trump have floated possibilities of humanitarian aid deliveries, phased troop withdrawals, and even a “permanent ceasefire.” Yet, for Gazans, such promises carry the weight of bitter history — hope mixed with fear that nothing will change in time to save lives.


Memories of a Brief Ceasefire

The January ceasefire brought a rare moment of relief. Displaced families returned from the south, streets briefly filled with laughter, and friends reunited over shared meals.

One 24 DAILY NEWS contributor recalls walking through Gaza City, passing the ruins of her home, eating kebabs and ice cream with friends, and savoring survival itself. That fragile pause ended quickly, leaving only memories and longing.


Dreams in the Midst of Genocide

For nearly two years, Gaza has endured a genocide that has killed more than 57,000 Palestinians and injured hundreds of thousands more. Yet amid relentless bombardment, starvation, and grief, Gazans still dream:

  • Eating chicken, meat, dairy, and fresh fruit again.

  • Meeting friends at restaurants and by the sea.

  • Returning to classrooms and universities without fear of bombing.

  • Walking streets without wondering if the next step could be their last.

As one resident told 24 DAILY NEWS, “Hope is the last thing to die.”


What a Ceasefire Cannot Undo

Even a lasting ceasefire cannot erase the trauma:

  • The smell of blood.

  • The images of crushed buildings and lifeless children.

  • The memories of entire families wiped out overnight.

It cannot restore the lives lost, heal the widows and orphans, or undo the months of malnutrition and despair. But it could stop the killing, open the crossings, and allow aid to flow before famine claims even more lives.


Hope as Resistance

Despite the horrors, Gaza’s people refuse to surrender their hopes. For them, hope is resistance — a form of survival.

“We imagine a Gaza where dreams bloom again,” says a survivor interviewed by 24 DAILY NEWS. “We imagine journalists removing their helmets, students returning to schools, friends gathering at the beach. We imagine breathing without fear.”

Israel’s siege has stolen much, but it has not killed the will of Gaza’s people to dream, survive, and one day rebuild.

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24 Daily News
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