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BBC NEWS
Every five children in the city of Gaza are malnutrition, and cases are increasing every day, says the Palestinian Palestinian Refugee Agency (Antwa).
In a statement issued on Thursday, Commissioner Anta Philip Latsarini, General Commissioner, brought him to a colleague, who said: “People died, nor alive, they go corpses.”
More than 100 international assistance organizations and human rights groups have also warned about mass fasting – pressing governments to take action.
Israel, who controls the entry of all gas supplies, says there is no siege and blame Hamas in any case of malnutrition.
However, the UN warns that the level of assistance in the gas is a “stream”, and the hunger crisis “was never so scary.”
In his statement on Thursday, Latarini said “more than 100 people, the vast majority of them, died of starvation.”
“Most children who see our teams are depleted, weak and at high risk of die if they do not need urgently,” he added, asking Israel to “allow humanitarian partners to bring unbroken and uninterrupted humanitarian aid.”
On Wednesday, the World Health Organization (WHO) stated that a large proportion of Gaza’s population is “hungry”.
“I do not know how you would call it except for the mass hunger – and it’s man -made,” said the WHO leader, Tedros Swean Gebrey.
In Northern Gaza, 40 -year -old Hanaa Almadhun said local markets are often without food and other materials.
“If they exist, they come to excessive prices that no ordinary person can afford,” she said the BBC on WhatsApp.
She said the flour was expensive and difficult to provide, and that people sold “gold and personal things” to afford it.
Mother-three said that “every new day brings a new challenge” when people are looking for “something edible”.
“With my eyes I saw the kids squeaking through the garbage in search of food waste,” she added.
During a visit to Israeli troops to Gaza on Wednesday, Israeli President Isaac Herzeg insisted that his country provides humanitarian assistance “on international law.”
But Takhani Shehada, a help worker, said that people “just try to survive an hour”.
“Even simple things, such as cooking (and) a heart, have become a luxury,” she said.
“I have a baby. He is eight months old. He doesn’t know what the fresh fruit tastes,” she added.
In early March, Israel stopped supplies to gas after a two -month ceasefire. The blockade was partially weakened after almost two months, but the deficiency of food, fuel and medicine deteriorated.
Israel from the United States has created a new assistance system managed by the Gaza Humanitarian Fund (GHF).
According to the UN Human Rights, the Israeli military has killed more than 1,000 Palestinians trying to get food assistance over the last two months.
It states that at least 766 of them were killed in the immediate vicinity of one of the four distributed GHF centers that are governed by US private contractors and are in Israeli military zones.
Another 288 people were killed near the UN and other escorts.
Israel accused Hamas of inciting chaos near assistance sites. It states that his troops were only shot by warning shots, and they deliberately do not shoot the civilians.
GHF says the UN uses “false” figures from the Ministry of Health Hamas Gaza.
Naja, a 19-year-old widow’s shelter in Gaza, said she was afraid that she was “shooting” when she goes to the aid distribution site.
“I hope they bring us something to eat and drink. We are dying from hunger, eating and drinking. We live in tents. We have finished,” Naja BBC said.
Dr. Asil, who works in Gaza with a medical charity in the UK, said Gaza was not close to hunger, but already “lives”.
“My husband went once (to the help point) and twice and then shot and everything was,” she said.
“If we die from hunger, let it be. The way to help is the way to death.”
Abu Alaoa, the market seller in Gaza, said he and his children “put to bed every night.”
“We are not alive. We are dead. We ask the whole world to intervene and save us,” he added.
Voloa Fati, who is pregnant for eight months with her third child, said the gas “experienced a catastrophe and hunger that no one could imagine.”
“I hope my baby will remain in my womb and I don’t need to give birth in these difficult circumstances,” she said BBC from Deir Al-Balah.