Ansarollah Website Offical Report

Published: Safar 24, 1447 AH

 


 

The Israeli entity continues to spare no effort in proving that the so-called “aid distribution centers” it has established — in cooperation with the United States — are nothing more than death traps for Gaza’s civilians.

 

In Gaza’s narrow streets, standing in line for aid has become part of the ritual of survival. Exhausted faces, thin shoulders, and mothers whispering their children’s names for fear they may be lost in the crowd. Yet the bullet often arrives before the flour sack, and the tear gas before the milk can, turning distribution points into new arenas of terror added to the Zionist enemy's long, bloody list of war crimes in Gaza.

At first light, hundreds of men and women gathered around a truck carrying what little flour and canned goods it could bring. The air was thick with dust and anticipation. “I haven’t eaten for two days,” was the silent cry of those waiting. Minutes later, gunfire scattered the crowd. Bags of flour fell to the ground, and salt spilled as if to rub new wounds.

Doctors Without Borders reported on Saturday that the number of Palestinian civilian casualties has tripled daily since the opening of the Israeli–American “aid centers” in Gaza.

Mohammed Abu Mughaisib, deputy medical coordinator for Doctors Without Borders, said:

“The health sector in Gaza faces a new terror after food distribution points supported by the Zionist enemy have turned into killing zones.”

He explained that many of those injured at aid distribution centers die before reaching hospitals due to the severity of their wounds.

 


Between Hunger and Bombs: Only Death Remains

Here, hunger is not a passing event; it is daily engineered into life. One meal must suffice for an entire family. Milk is diluted with water to last a week, and bread is baked over fires fueled by broken furniture after gas supplies ran out. Young men recount how they take turns eating: “Today it’s the children’s turn; tomorrow, if anything remains, we eat.” Weight melts off bodies as nerves unravel, and food becomes the only conversation that matters.

The humanitarian catastrophe manifests in multiple ways in Gaza: dying of hunger, being killed while searching for food, perishing for lack of medical care, or falling to direct Israeli bombardment. Gaza has become the world’s largest open-air killing field under deafening Arab and international silence.

According to Gaza’s Ministry of Health, 1,965 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli gunfire near aid distribution points, with 14,701 others injured in the same locations.

 


The Accelerating Wheel of Starvation

Each time people line up for aid, questions of survival echo in the background: Will the truck arrive? Will we live to reach it? Reports of Israeli attacks on gatherings near aid points and roads have become routine. Aid has turned into a gamble with life. Blood stains are visible on ripped parcels, as though carrying the message: “Even the right to ease your hunger is denied.”

Despite the rapid escalation of death by starvation — leaving 258 dead, including 110 children, as of Sunday — aid supplies remain grossly insufficient to meet the catastrophe.

 


Hospitals Without Medicine, Doctors With Bare Hands

In emergency rooms, doctors write prescriptions that cannot be filled. Surgical thread has run out, antibiotics are rationed drop by drop, and painkillers are offered with apologies more often than with doses. One nurse said:

“We spend the night convincing mothers that their children’s fevers will drop with compresses alone… we have nothing but water and patience.”

With medicines scarce, treatable injuries worsen, minor wounds turn life-threatening, and operating rooms become long queues toward the unknown.

Dr. Khalil al-Daqran, spokesperson for Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, explained:

“The lack of medicine and spread of hunger has turned patients’ and the wounded bodies into skeletons, complicating their recovery because of weakened immunity.”

He added that children’s bodies cannot endure days of hunger due to their fragile immunity and poor nutritional reserves. Around 60,000 infants are in urgent need of milk and medical treatment, while about 300,000 people with chronic illnesses are at risk of death from famine and medicine shortages, caused by Israel’s policy of drip-feeding aid. Al-Daqran said the only solution is the immediate entry of 1,000 aid trucks per day into Gaza.

UNICEF spokesperson Kazem Abu Khalaf warned of a frightening deterioration of the humanitarian situation, reporting that 112 children fall into malnutrition daily.

Meanwhile, as starvation deaths climb, Israeli bombardment continues to claim lives. The Ministry of Health reported that Israel’s assault has killed 62,004 Palestinians and injured 156,230 since October 7, 2023. Over the last 24 hours alone, 60 were killed and 344 wounded. Since March 18, 2025, the toll has risen by 10,460 dead and 44,189 injured.

International aid agencies warn that death rates from the Zionist enemy’s starvation war may double in the coming days as famine spreads rapidly across Gaza. They stress that lifting the siege and allowing sufficient aid into the strip is an urgent necessity. Though warnings of genocide crimes in Gaza are not new, they now seem to record the death of the international community before the death of Gaza’s people.

 


Fear Devours What Hunger Leaves

Fear has become an additional meal. Children memorize the sounds of warplanes more than their own names, and women sleep in their clothes in case they must flee suddenly. The number of explosions between food distributions measures time. Stories once told to calm children are now about dignity — about how one remains human when reaching for food but fearing bullets.

In Gaza today, hunger is not born of nature’s failure but of sealed borders, closed crossings, and bombardments that chase even those waiting for food. The killing of aid seekers adds a brutal new layer of cruelty to a scene already saturated with loss. Meanwhile, scarce medicine leaves bodies hostage to pain and infection.

Ending the targeting of civilians, ensuring the safe and sufficient entry of aid, and bringing in medicine and fuel without delay are not political demands. They are basic human imperatives. In a city where hunger knocks at every door, the right to safe food and accessible medicine is the simplest definition of humanity.