Over 800,000 Gazans face death by starvation, thirst: Media Office
Palestinian children receive food at a U.N.-run school in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, Palestine, Oct. 23, 2023. (AFP Photo)


Over 800,000 Gazans are facing death by starvation and thirst amid Israel's continuous attacks and an ongoing siege on the Palestinian territory, the Gaza Media Office said Saturday.

In a statement Saturday, the office said that hundred of thousands of people "in the governorates of Gaza and northern the enclave" are facing death because of Israel’s policy of starvation and thirst against the enclave.

It explained that the two governorates "need 1,300 food trucks daily to overcome the hunger crisis, with 600 trucks for the north and 700 for Gaza city."

The office pointed out that Israel was speeding up the pace of a real famine and killed "14 martyrs who tried to get food" without providing further details about the deaths.

The Media Office warned of the army's "deliberate and intentional efforts to cause a real famine in Gaza city and northern the enclave.​​"

It also highlighted the army's continued prevention of "aid, supplies, food, and provisions from entering the governorates, as well as shooting at trucks attempting to reach them, targeting drinking water pipelines and wells, and hindering all aspects of life."

The statement held the "international community, the United States, and the occupation" fully responsible for the catastrophic and deadly consequences of famine and thirst, demanding that they "immediately and urgently stop the war."

Since Oct. 7, 2023, Israel has continued a complete siege of Gaza by closing all crossings with the outside world. The Rafah crossing is partially opened for limited aid entry, the exit of dozens of patients and injured individuals and several foreign passport holders.

On Nov. 24, Israel allowed small quantities of humanitarian aid to enter the Gaza Strip through the Rafah crossing, within a one-week pause reached between resistance groups in Gaza and Israel, mediated by Qatar, Egypt, and the U.S. The pause included a hostage swap deal.

Truck entry to southern areas of Gaza has been limited since the Oct. 7 Hamas incursion that killed 1,140 people.

Since then, the Israeli army has waged a destructive war on Gaza, resulting in, as of Saturday, 23,843 fatalities and 60,317 injuries, mostly women and children, along with massive destruction to infrastructure and an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe, according to Gaza authorities and the United Nations.