22 September 2025
OCHA reports that over the weekend, Israeli military operations continued across the Gaza Strip – with intensified air strikes and shelling in Gaza city killing or injuring scores of people.
The Palestinian Civil Defense says that over the last 10 days, it carried out more than 50 rescue or recovery missions across the five governorates.
Health services are under major strain. Today, the Ministry of Health in Gaza called on people to donate blood amid severe shortages in hospitals.
OCHA reiterates that civilians and civilian infrastructure must always be protected and should never be a target. Civilian sites must also never be used to shield military operations.
In Gaza governorate, where famine was confirmed over a month ago, OCHA says that hostilities have disrupted nutrition services. Partners working in nutrition report that almost half of the treatment centres there are reportedly closed. This hampers efforts to detect new cases and maintain treatment for hundreds of children.
On Friday, the Ministry of Health said that 162 people – including 32 children – have died from starvation and malnutrition since famine was confirmed in August.
Meanwhile, the growing number of people moving to the south of Gaza is putting mounting pressure on already strained services available in Khan Younis and Deir al Balah, where conditions are dire.
Partners report that people are squeezed in tents along the beach, crammed into school shelters, or sleeping in the open on the rubble of destroyed homes.
Although aid organizations are overstretched, they continue to serve those in need, as much as possible.
Today, seven out of 12 humanitarian missions coordinated with Israeli authorities were facilitated. While teams managed to collect health supplies from Kerem Shalom, two missions to retrieve food cargo were denied.
When humanitarians are allowed to work – and when aid and commercial goods are allowed to move unimpeded into and throughout Gaza – aid organizations can save lives. It is essential for all crossings to be open and accessible. Rapid, unimpeded, safe passage inside Gaza is also critical to put an end to the suffering of people in need.
Meanwhile, partners at four monitoring points report that desperate families are leaving Gaza city, with many moving towards Khan Younis and Deir al Balah in the south, where there is very little space to accommodate new arrivals and displacement sites are already extremely overcrowded. At the same time, many people remain in the north and need urgent humanitarian support.
UNICEF said yesterday that amid new displacement orders and repeated displacement in Gaza city, family separation is a growing risk. The agency called for the protection of children and families, whether they move or stay.
Related items for detailed information on this issue:
- UN experts: Israel must restore UN humanitarian system to stave off starvation in Gaza (07 August)
- UN Relief Chief: Gaza famine “must spur the world to urgent action” (22 August)
- FAO, UNICEF, WHO, WFP: Joint Press Release: Famine confirmed for first time in Gaza (22 August)
- OCHA, OHCHR, WFP, WHO: Famine “irrefutably” confirmed, UN humanitarians unite in plea for aid access (22 August)
- UNRWA Commissioner-General: Famine is now confirmed in Gaza City (22 August)
- WFP: As famine grips Gaza, families turn to desperate measures to survive (22 August)
- UN Humanitarian Coordinator for the Occupied Palestinian Territory: Statement on famine in Gaza (22 August)
- UN Human Rights Chief: Gaza Governorate famine is direct result of Israeli Government actions (22 August)
- UNFPA: Gaza famine a catastrophe for mothers and infants (22 August)
- FAO, WFP, UNICEF Emergency Directors: Press Conference on famine in Gaza (25 August)
- UNFPA: Famine confirmed in Gaza – pregnant women and newborns at acute risk (25 August)
- Security Council: Speakers warn Gaza’s population systematically being starved to death, demanding immediate ceasefire, end to deliberate famine (27 August)
- UN Deputy Relief Chief: “Failure to act will have irreversible consequences,” statement to Security Council on Gaza famine (27 August)
- UN Palestinian Rights Committee Bureau: Calls for urgent action to end Gaza famine (27 August)
- Security Council (14 Members): Joint statement on IPC report confirms famine in Gaza (27 August)
- Deputy Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process: “Palestinians must be able to live safely on their land.” – statement to Security Council (27 August)
- WHO, OCHA: We are on a descent into a massive famine in Gaza – press briefing (29 August)
- UN Human Rights Chief: Calls for end to starvation of civilians and humiliation of hostages in Gaza (27 August)
- UNRWA: A so called “aid system” responsible for the killing of nearly 1,400 starving people (28 August)
- UNRWA Commissioner-General: Hunger has become the latest killer in Gaza (28 August)
- UN Palestinian Rights Committee Bureau: Urges world leaders to back two-State solution at General Assembly’s High-Level Session (30 August)
Document Sources: Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)
Subject: Famine, Gaza Strip, Health, Humanitarian relief, Refugees and displaced persons, malnutrition
Publication Date: 22/09/2025
URL source: https://www.unocha.org/news/todays-top-news-occupied-palestinian-territory-sudan-central-african-republic-haiti-ukraine