Ten Palestinians have died from starvation in last 24 hours, says Gaza health ministry
Ten Palestinians including two children have died from starvation in the last 24 hours, the health authorities in Gaza said on Wednesday, as Pope Leo XIV demanded that Israel stop its “collective punishment” of the population in the besieged territory.
At least 313 people have died from hunger, including 119 children, since the war in Gaza began and Israel intensified its siege on the Palestinian territory. Last week a UN-backed monitoring body confirmed that Gaza is in the throes of famine, warning that without more aid increasing numbers of people would lose access to food.
As humanitarian conditions continue to worsen the pope called for a suspension of hostilities.
“I beg for a permanent ceasefire to be reached, the safe entry of humanitarian aid to be facilitated and humanitarian law to be fully respected,” Leo said. He referred to international law and its “prohibition of collective punishment, indiscriminate use of force and the forced displacement of the population”.
The pope was interrupted twice by applause as he called for a ceasefire in front of thousands of people in the Vatican auditorium.
Despite calls for a ceasefire, Israeli tanks rolled into the outskirts of Gaza City overnight, destroying houses and displacing residents. Tanks shelled the Ebad al-Rahman neighbourhood on the northern outskirts of the city, causing injuries, as Israeli forces sought to clear a path into Gaza City before its expected offensive.
Strikes and fire from the Israelis killed at least 76 people throughout Gaza in the previous 24 hours, the Gaza health authorities said.

The Israeli military said that it was operating in Jabaliya and on the outskirts of Gaza City to “dismantle terror infrastructure sites and eliminate terrorists”. It claimed to have killed a senior Hamas member, Mahmoud al-Aswad, who was the militia’s head of intelligence for west Gaza.
Israel has said that it will launch its new offensive in Gaza City regardless of whether a ceasefire is reached, describing the city as Hamas’s last stronghold in Gaza.
The city has become densely populated during the war as Palestinians fled from other areas. Gaza City now hosts about one million people – half the population of Gaza – who Israel said will be ordered to leave.
Humanitarians have warned that such mass forcible displacement is not only against international law, but would exacerbate already dismal humanitarian conditions in Gaza.
Israel has brushed off such concerns, with an Israeli military spokesperson, Avichay Adraee, saying that “evacuating Gaza City is inevitable” on Wednesday. Israel has already asked humanitarians in the north and south of Gaza to prepare for an influx of people and said that increased number of tents had been sent to the territory.
“Before transitioning to the next phase in the war, I wish to confirm that there are vast empty areas in the southern strip, just as is the case in the central camps and in al-Mawasi. These areas are free of tents,” said Adraee, sharing a map of separate, discrete “empty zones” in southern Gaza.
Thousands of Gaza City’s residents have already left, fleeing intensifying Israeli bombardment. However, local church leaders said that they would not leave and that people sheltering in the churches were too weak and malnourished to move and displacement would be “a death sentence”.
“For this reason, the clergy and nuns have decided to remain and continue to care for all those who will be in the compounds,” said the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate and the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem in a joint statement.
The Israeli military has regularly published evacuation orders over the last 22 months in Gaza, and much of the population has been displaced several times. More than 80% of Gaza is designated as an Israeli military zone or subject to displacement orders, the UN said in June.
Continued displacement has exacerbated health and sanitary conditions, leading to the spread of disease.

Israel has yet to respond to a US-backed ceasefire proposal, despite Hamas having agreed to it last week. The proposal is reportedly almost identical to an earlier US proposal that Israel has previously accepted.
On Tuesday night, an Israeli security cabinet meeting was held without discussing the ceasefire proposal. Israeli media has claimed that the government of Benjamin Netanyahu is no longer interested in a ceasefire, and instead wants a comprehensive end to war including the return of all hostages and the departure of Hamas from Gaza.
Qatar, one of the mediators for ceasefire talks, issued a rare rebuke of Israel on Tuesday, saying that Israel “does not want to reach an agreement”.
Donald Trump was reportedly planning to lead a meeting to discuss the postwar future of Gaza at the White House on Wednesday. His special envoy, Steve Witkoff, said that Washington expected the war in Gaza to be settled by the end of the year.
Witkoff told Fox News on Tuesday that the White House meeting would discuss “a very comprehensive plan we’re putting together on the next day”.
The US state department also said that the secretary of state, Marco Rubio, would meet with Israel’s foreign minister, Gideon Saar, in Washington.
The war in Gaza has killed at least 62,895 Palestinians over the last 22 months, according to Gaza’s health ministry. Israel launched its war in Gaza after Hamas-led militants killed about 1,200 people on October 7 2023.