In Gaza, where bombs fall faster than bread can rise, more than 60,000 children under the age of five are now battling malnutrition. As the siege tightens and aid convoys are blocked at the border, Palestinian families are watching their children waste away in silence—forgotten by a world too slow to act.
Sigrid Kaag, UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, recently spoke of the crisis with unusual clarity: humanitarian aid has not been allowed to enter Gaza since mid-March. Food, medicine, fuel—basic lifelines—are no longer reaching the people who need them most. Hospitals are barely functioning, and humanitarian workers, most of whom are Palestinian, risk their lives to deliver what little they can.
Each number represents a child, a family, a community worn down by war and deprivation. These are not accidental consequences—they are the outcome of deliberate policies that have turned Gaza into an open-air prison, where even milk becomes a luxury and silence a death sentence.
Despite the clear obligations under international law, the Israeli occupation continues to block vital aid, drawing condemnation from humanitarian experts who warn that this amounts to collective punishment. Gaza's children are not dying from lack of aid—they are dying because that aid is being denied.
As the world looks elsewhere, the children of Gaza continue to fight a battle they never chose. Their survival should not depend on ceasefires or diplomatic forums. It should be a matter of humanity.
Source : Safa News