Ansarollah Website. Report

In a tiny patch of land, no more than thirty square kilometers of sand and devastation, over two million people live lives that fall far short of even the most basic standards of human dignity. This is Gaza, which, through thirty-two months of Zionist aggression and genocide, has been transformed into the world's largest open-air graveyard and a testing ground for the worst forms of mass torture in our modern era.

Seventy-two thousand martyrs and more; bodies still buried under the rubble, inaccessible to civil defense; thalassemia patients dying one after another due to blood shortages; pregnant mothers giving birth to stillborn or malnourished babies before they even know the taste of life; tents offering no protection from the cold or the heat, infested with rats that bite sleeping children; and displaced people burning with hunger, their hunger intensifying until they resort to burning garbage to prepare meager meals or kindling firewood, a kilogram of which costs more than their lost wages.

As for the hospitals, they are either destroyed or out of service, having become places to await death rather than places of treatment. Essential medicines, medical supplies, and laboratory testing materials have run out, and laboratories are virtually non-functional. The wounded await medical evacuation on endless waiting lists, while the Israeli enemy holds their patients hostage at the "security checkpoint," which often translates into a death sentence.

This, and more, is a concise picture of the Jewish brutality that practices killing, torture, and displacement without regard for any standards, relying on the international community's abandonment of all values, ethics, and international norms. For these criminals, there is no solution but the language of weapons, a language whose echo still deafens the ears of the submissive.

 

The Numbers of Genocide: Martyrs Fall, Many still under the Rubble

The Palestinian Ministry of Health announced Saturday that the death toll from the ongoing genocide in Gaza has risen to over 72,700 martyrs since October 7, 2023, in addition to. over 172,500 injuries. These figures reveal the scale of the escalating crime that spares no home and no child or woman.

Since the fragile ceasefire agreement announced on October 10, 2025, the death toll has risen to 850, with 2,433 injuries and 770 bodies recovered. These figures confirm that the truce was merely a deceptive maneuver, as the machinery of death quickly resumed its operations. The ministry also noted the addition of 103 martyrs to the cumulative count after their data was finalized and officially approved since the beginning of May, reflecting the ongoing field updates to the figures amidst a catastrophe that continues to unfold daily.

 

Thalassemia Patients Between Death and Displacement

In a forgotten corner of this tragedy, 237 thalassemia patients in Gaza are struggling daily for survival. The Ministry of Health has recorded the deaths of 50 patients out of 334 during the recent aggression, while 47 patients have left the Gaza Strip in search of a life they cannot find in their homeland.

The number of children under the age of twelve is 52, while the number of those over twelve is 185. This distribution reflects the ongoing burden on Palestinian families who find themselves facing impossible choices: either watch their child die due to a lack of medication, or watch their condition deteriorate due to the absence of laboratory tests and the scarcity of necessary blood units caused by the Israeli blockade.

The Ministry of Health has warned that the destruction of laboratory infrastructure by the Israeli enemy and the lack of testing equipment are preventing preventative, diagnostic, and treatment tests, which threatens to reveal new, undetected cases. It erases years of accumulated efforts in disease prevention, and pushes patients who were living near-normal lives into an abyss of daily suffering.

 

Who cooks with garbage for their children? A crippling gas crisis

In another scene of daily suffering, the cooking gas crisis continues to deepen the wounds of displaced people in Gaza, forcing thousands of families to use cloth, plastic, and garbage to light fires and prepare food inside the camps. Yes, garbage. What we once considered trash has now become fuel for life, after the silent world turned into an Israeli tool that will ultimately be consumed by the flames of Zionist hatred.

The Israeli enemy continues to restrict the entry of fuel and cooking gas in a trickle, despite the growing need for these materials. Residents initially resorted to using firewood as an alternative, but its price quickly jumped to more than $3 per kilogram, an amount beyond the means of families who have lost their sources of income since the outbreak of war.

As for searching for firewood, it is a perilous adventure, as some residents are forced to head to the eastern border areas near Israeli enemy positions, amidst the overflight of drones and the fear of being shot. They are selling their lives for a pittance, just to cook food that may not even be enough for their children.

 

Malnutrition is a silent crime that kills fetuses and children

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has revealed alarming indicators of the devastating impact of the malnutrition crisis in the Gaza Strip, asserting that the Israeli blockade and restrictions on the entry of food and medicine have had a devastating effect on pregnant women, breastfeeding mothers, and newborns.

The organization's emergency medical officer, Mercy Rocaspana, stated that the malnutrition crisis is entirely man-made. She explained that the Strip did not suffer from this phenomenon before the Israeli war on Gaza, but the systematic ban on aid and commercial goods for over two years has severely restricted access to food and clean water.

In a new analysis of medical data, the organization observed in four health facilities - which it manages or supports - a clear increase in premature birth and death rates among children born to mothers who suffered from malnutrition during pregnancy, along with recording high levels of spontaneous abortion. 90% of children born to malnourished mothers were born prematurely, and 84% of them had low birth weights, rates that are much higher than those recorded for children born to mothers who did not suffer from malnutrition. In fact, the infant mortality rates among infants born to malnourished mothers were double compared to others, according to the organization.

 

Repeated Displacement: When a Tent Becomes an Open-Air Prison

Repeated displacement and escalating insecurity have prevented many families from adhering to their children's nutritional treatment plans. Between October 2024 and December 2025, the organization's teams enrolled approximately 513 infants under six months old in therapeutic feeding programs. However, the recovery rate did not exceed 48%, while the mortality rate reached 7%, and the non-adherence rate reached 32% due to repeated displacement and the difficulty of accessing health centers.

The organization's medical coordinator in Palestine, Marina Pomares, explained that many mothers were requesting food assistance even before their children were diagnosed with malnutrition, reflecting the extent of food insecurity. Families were forced to adopt harsh coping mechanisms, including prioritizing children in food distribution over pregnant and breastfeeding women.

The organization relays the heartbreaking testimony of a 23-year-old Palestinian woman named Mona, who said that her youngest child died at the age of five months due to severe malnutrition. She explained that she personally suffered from malnutrition during her pregnancy and was living with her family in a partially destroyed house after losing her husband's source of income when his boat was destroyed in the Israeli bombing.

 

Laboratories Without Supplies and Medicines on the Verge of Depletion

The Palestinian Ministry of Health warned of a worsening crisis in the shortage of medicines, medical supplies, and laboratory testing materials, confirming that dozens of essential items have reached "zero stock." 47% of essential medicines have completely run out in the Gaza Strip's warehouses, while 59% of medical supplies have reached zero levels, in addition to 87% of laboratory testing materials being depleted.

The crisis, caused by the Israeli enemy and international complicity, has directly impacted vital health services, particularly medications for cancer and blood diseases, primary care, kidney services, and dialysis, as well as psychiatric medications. The Strip is also suffering from a severe shortage of supplies for eye surgeries, cardiac catheterization, dialysis, and laboratory tests for blood analysis, blood gases, and clinical chemistry.

The director of medical relief in northern Gaza, Muhammad Abu Afash, stated that the health sector has reached its worst point since the beginning of the war. Meanwhile, the director of medical relief in Gaza, Bassam Zaqout, warned that the shortage of medical equipment and the closure of crossings threaten the lives of thousands of wounded and sick individuals.

 

Rats: Nighttime Intruders in Displacement Camps

In a development reflecting the scale of the humanitarian crisis and the extent of the tragedy wrought by the Israeli war machine, rats are now biting children as they sleep inside their tents, according to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA). In the overcrowded displacement camps, which lack even the most basic necessities, and with the continued ban on the entry of pesticides and medical supplies, rats and other insects have become a real threat to the lives of the displaced.

UNRWA confirmed that it is monitoring, in cooperation with the World Health Organization (WHO), the rapidly increasing cases of skin infections and the risk of disease outbreaks linked to the spread of rats and parasites. It stressed the urgent need for the entry of tents, pesticides, and medicines.

The WHO announced that it has recorded more than 17,000 cases of rodent and external parasite-related infections since the beginning of this year, warning that the "desperate and dangerous" conditions are hindering health response and recovery efforts.

 

Gaza Shrinks: 65% of the Strip Restricted Areas

In a development threatening further forced displacement, the Gaza Center for Human Rights revealed that Israeli forces have expanded the so-called "yellow zone" east of Khan Younis, raising the percentage of restricted or off-limits areas for Palestinians to approximately 65% ​​of the total area of ​​the Gaza Strip.

This means that some 2.1 million displaced people are being forced into a cramped area that constitutes no more than 35% of the Gaza Strip, amidst the collapse of basic services and deteriorating health and environmental conditions. It is a recipe for a humanitarian catastrophe, as the population is left in a small patch of land lacking water, food, and medicine, while Israeli forces besiege them from all sides.

In another example of Israel's systematic destruction, Israeli warplanes bombed a three-story building in the Shati refugee camp, completely destroying it and causing near-total damage to approximately 30 neighboring homes, while injuring nine civilians.

 

A Million Trapped in Half of Gaza's Area

The spokesperson for the UN Secretary-General, Stéphane Dujarric, revealed that approximately 2.1 million people in the Gaza Strip remain trapped in less than half of the territory, with malnutrition levels rising among the population, reflecting a worsening food crisis.

The spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Thamin Khaitan, called on the Israeli authorities to lift all restrictions on basic necessities, emphasizing that the situation in Gaza remains "extremely dire," with severe shortages of clean drinking water, food, cooking gas, and medicine, depriving large numbers of patients, especially children, of access to necessary medical treatment.

 

A desperate plea for help before it's too late

This is the Gaza Strip today: 72,000 martyrs, thousands buried under rubble, empty laboratories, hospitals without medicine, children dying of starvation, thalassemia patients awaiting death, pregnant women giving birth to malnourished babies, rats biting children in their sleep, families burning garbage to cook, and displaced people crammed into less than half the Strip's area.

Doesn't this situation embarrass the international community, the United Nations, the Security Council, and all those who claim to defend human rights? Is it conceivable that inaction has reached such a level of depravity? This is Gaza... crying out in pain, but no one hears. We are faced with a world that understands only the language of weapons and guns.