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8/16 Humanitarian Situation Updates from OCHA and UNRWA for Gaza and West Bank

Humanitarian Situation Update #313 | Gaza Strip


14 Aug 2025



In Gaza, soaring temperatures are worsening the already dire humanitarian situation. Children spend hours under the sun searching for water and food, as shortages drive rising levels of dehydration and malnutrition. © 2025 UNRWA photo.
In Gaza, soaring temperatures are worsening the already dire humanitarian situation. Children spend hours under the sun searching for water and food, as shortages drive rising levels of dehydration and malnutrition. © 2025 UNRWA photo.

Key Highlights

  • The UN Secretary-General called for an independent and impartial investigation into the killing of six Palestinian journalists in an Israeli strike in Gaza city on 10 August, which highlights the extreme risks that journalists and media workers covering the war continue to face.

  • Hunger-related deaths are rising, and the Gaza Strip continues to face starvation. Eight people have reportedly died in the past 24 hours.

  • Child malnutrition can lead to lifelong harm and generational poverty, says Save the Children.

  • To push back escalating starvation, the Food Security Sector calls for the immediate resumption of large-scale humanitarian assistance with guaranteed safe, unimpeded and sustained access, and for scaling up the entry of nutritious food through the commercial sector.

  • Primary health-care response in Gaza is undermined by the lack of adequate medical supplies, leaving thousands of chronic disease patients and those suffering from communicable illnesses without life-saving support, and heightening the risk of a large-scale public health crisis, UNRWA warns.

Humanitarian Developments

  • Over the past week, Israeli forces have continued to carry out heavy bombardment from the air, land and sea across the Gaza Strip, alongside continued ground operations. Rocket fire by Palestinian armed groups into Israel and fighting with Israeli forces have taken place. There are continued reports of casualties due to strikes on schools, tents and residential buildings and among people trying to access food supplies at militarized distribution points or waiting for humanitarian aid convoys, detonation and demolition of residential buildings, destruction of civilian infrastructure, and large-scale displacement. According to the Site Management Cluster (SMC), more than 780,000 Palestinians in Gaza were displaced between 18 March and 12 August, including over 12,500 displacement movements reported between 29 July and 12 August, 68 per cent of which originated from Gaza governorate, mostly between 10 and 11 August.

  • In a briefing to the UN Security Council on Gaza, OCHA’s Director of the Coordination Division, Mr. Ramesh Rajasingham, expressed concern over the prolonged conflict and reports of atrocities and signalled worry of further human toll following the Government of Israel’s decision to expand military operations: “Gaza lies in ruins. Almost everyone in Gaza has been forcibly displaced at some point over the past two years and at least once. Palestinians in Gaza have been forced into an area that amounts to less than 14 per cent of the territory, in areas that are not safe and are lacking basic services or shelter. Further expansion of military operations will make these conditions even worse.” He highlighted that hunger-related deaths are rising, noting that this is “no longer a looming hunger crisis – this is starvation, pure and simple,” and that humanitarian conditions remain largely unchanged despite some improvements in operations enabled by the Israeli military’s “tactical pauses” and the Israeli authorities’ recent approval of a mechanism for the gradual resumption of controlled commercial goods into Gaza.

  • According to the Ministry of Health (MoH) in Gaza, between 6 and 13 August, 564 Palestinians were killed, and 3,083 were injured. This brings the casualty toll among Palestinians since 7 October 2023, as reported by MoH, to 61,722 fatalities and 154,525 injuries. MoH further noted that the number of casualties among people trying to access food supplies has increased to 1,859 fatalities and more than 13,594 injuries since 27 May 2025.

  • According to the Israeli military, between 6 and 13 August, no Israeli soldiers were killed in Gaza. The casualty toll among Israeli soldiers since the beginning of the ground operation in October 2023 stands at 454 fatalities and 2,872 injuries, according to the Israeli military. According to Israeli forces and official Israeli sources cited in the media, more than 1,654 Israelis and foreign nationals have been killed, the majority on 7 October 2023 and its immediate aftermath. As of 13 August, it is estimated that 50 Israelis and foreign nationals remain captive in Gaza, including hostages who have been declared dead and whose bodies are being withheld.

  • On 10 August, the Israeli military hit a tent used by journalists outside the main gate of Al Shifa Hospital in Gaza city, killing six journalists and media workers, including four staff (two correspondents and two cameramen) of Al Jazeera Media Network in Gaza city. The UN Secretary-General called for an independent and impartial investigation into these latest killings, which highlight the extreme risks that journalists in Gaza continue to face when covering the ongoing war. The Palestinian Journalists Syndicate (PJS) strongly condemned the incident and stated that with the killing of the six journalists, the total number of journalists and media workers killed since the start of the escalation has risen to 238. In July 2025, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) had called for the protection of one of the journalists killed, citing concerns that he was being targeted by an Israeli military smear campaign. CPJ Regional Director, Sara Qudah, said that “Israel has killed more journalists in the 22 months since the start of the war than were killed worldwide in the preceding three years.”

  • Other key incidents resulting in casualties over the past week include the following:

    • On 7 August at about 10:00, at least five Palestinians, including at least one woman, were reportedly killed and more than 30 others injured when fire was opened towards Palestinians seeking food near the militarized distribution point in Ash Shakoush, in northern Rafah.

    • On 7 August, at about 16:15, six Palestinians, including a couple and three of their children, were reportedly killed and others injured when a tent for internally displaced people (IDP) was hit in Ash Sheikh Radwan, northwest of Gaza city.

    • On 7 August, at about 21:00, five Palestinians were reportedly injured when a school sheltering IDPs was hit in Ad Daraj, in eastern Gaza city.

    • On 8 August, at about 16:00, nine Palestinians, including a couple and their five children and another female, were reportedly killed when a residential building sheltering IDPs was hit in Bani Suheila, east of Khan Younis.

    • On 8 August, in the afternoon, nine Palestinians, including three children, were reportedly injured by air-dropped aid on Al Jalal Street, in northern Gaza city.

    • On 9 August, at about 12:30, a 14-year-old Palestinian boy was reportedly killed when hit by a crater of air-dropped aid in An Nuseirat Camp, in Deir al Balah.

    • On 11 August, at about 10:00, at least three Palestinians were reportedly injured when a school was hit in Az Zaytoun, in Gaza city.

    • On 11 August, in the early morning, nine Palestinians, including six children (siblings), were reportedly killed when a residential building was shelled in Az Zaytoun, in Gaza city.

    • On 11 August, at about 14:45, seven Palestinians, including a couple and at least of two of their daughters, were reportedly killed when a house was hit in Az Zaytoun, in Gaza city.

    • On 11 August, at about 19:15, eight Palestinian who were seeking aid were reportedly killed and others injured while waiting for aid convoys in As Sudaniya area, in western Beit Lahiya, in North Gaza.

    • On 11 August, at about 18:16, six Palestinians, including two boys and an elderly woman, were reportedly killed when a mobile charging point was hit in southern Deir al Balah.

    • On 12 August, at about 1:30, at least five Palestinians, including a man, his seven-month-old son, a couple and their son, who is a fire fighter with the Palestinian Civil Defense (PCD), were reportedly killed when an IDP tent was hit in Al Mawasi, in western Khan Younis. PCD stated that the killing of the fire fighter increased the number of PCD personnel killed since October 2023 to 137.

  • Between 27 May and 8 August, the Red Cross Field Hospital in Rafah treated more than 4,500 weapon-wounded patients, most of whom reported that they were attempting to reach food distribution sites when they were injured. Since the opening of these distribution sites, there have been more than 30 mass casualty incidents received at the field hospital. Also in southern Gaza, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) reported that 1,380 casualties, including 28 fatalities, were received at its Al-Mawasi and Al-Attar clinics, located near the militarized distribution points, between 7 June and 24 July 2025. During those seven weeks, MSF teams treated 71 children for gunshot wounds, 25 of whom were under the age of 15. “Children shot in the chest while reaching for food. People crushed or suffocated in stampedes,” said the General Director of MSF Spain, adding: “In MSF’s nearly 54 years of operations, rarely have we seen such levels of systematic violence against unarmed civilians.” MSF also received tens of patients that were injured either in the crush of the crowd or by being beaten and robbed of their supplies immediately after receiving them. MSF teams treated 196 patients with injuries following chaotic scrambles at the distribution sites, including a five-year-old boy with severe head injuries and a woman who died of asphyxiation, likely caused by the suffocating crush of a crowd.

  • On 13 August, the World Health Organization (WHO) supported the medical evacuation of 38 Palestinian patients from Gaza, including 32 children and six adults, alongside 99 companions. Patients were evacuated to Italy, Belgium and Türkiye. According to WHO, more than 14,800 patients still need lifesaving medical care that is not available in Gaza.

  • Delays and impediments of humanitarian movements continue to be reported. Recently, while fewer humanitarian movements have been denied outright, missions that are approved still take hours to complete and teams have been compelled to wait on roads that are often dangerous, congested or impassable. Between 6 and 12 August, out of 81 attempts to coordinate planned aid movements with Israeli authorities across the Gaza Strip, 35 were facilitated (43 per cent), 29 were initially approved but then impeded on the ground (36 per cent), 12 (15 per cent) were denied and five (six per cent) had to be withdrawn by the organizers. Facilitated movements included missions to transfer fuel, staff movements and rotations. Denied movements included missions for essential road repairs along Salah ad Din Road. Among the 29 impeded missions, 14 were fully accomplished despite the impediments, including missions to collect fuel and supplies from Kerem Shalom and Zikim crossings and staff movements between southern and northern Gaza. Six of the impeded missions were not accomplished, including two road repair missions and two missions to collect supplies from Kerem Shalom crossing. The remaining nine missions were partially accomplished. Overall, 33 out of 81 movements were planned to collect fuel and other supplies from Gaza’s crossings, 21 were staff movements and rotations, and 27 aimed to support other ongoing humanitarian operations.

  • On 10 August, PCD stated that most of the coordination requests it submitted through humanitarian agencies since 18 March 2025 have been denied, with only 10 per cent of 300 submitted requests facilitated by Israeli authorities. PCD said that over 2,500 people who were initially injured and to whom PCD was denied access lost their lives. PCD called on the international community to put pressure on Israeli authorities to positively respond to coordination requests related to PCD’s lifesaving work.

The Hunger and Malnutrition Crisis

  • Starvation in Gaza is at the worst level since October 2023 and the amount of aid entering the Strip is insufficient to meet the scale of needs. According to the World Food Programme (WFP), one of only eight organizations able to dispatch humanitarian aid to Gaza through the UN-coordinated manifest, aid convoys are limited each day and routes inside Gaza remain risky. Additionally, desperate crowds often offload food supplies from trucks to feed their families – while looting also prevents aid from reaching its intended destinations. In July 2025, WFP collected 1,012 trucks carrying nearly 13,000 metric tons (MT) of food supplies from Kerem Shalom and Zikim crossings, but only 10 trucks reached warehouses and the rest were offloaded en route. As of 4 August, WFP has about 167,000 MT of food destined for Gaza currently stored, under procurement, or in transit in the region. Overall, the Food Security Sector (FSS) reports that WFP and other partners have enough food in or en route to the region to feed the entire population of 2.1 million people for at least three months, but the risk of spoilage and infestation of the stranded food supplies has significantly increased, and some of them are nearing their expiry dates. To push back escalating starvation, FSS calls for the immediate resumption of large-scale humanitarian assistance with guaranteed safe, unimpeded and sustained access, complemented by scaling up the entry of nutritious food through the commercial sector.

  • According to FSS, while more food is entering Gaza, the quantity and quality remains insufficient to reach the minimum daily caloric and nutritional needs of the population. As of 10 August, 324,000 individual meals are being prepared daily at 81 community kitchens supported by 16 FSS partners. This includes about 99,000 meals delivered in the north and around 225,000 meals delivered in the south and central Gaza. This reflects a noticeable increase compared with the 259,000 daily meals prepared two weeks ago but remains far below the over one million daily meals that partners were able to distribute in April. People continue to suffer from extremely imbalanced diets that lack essential nutrients, increasing the risk of acute malnutrition, with an especially severe impact on pregnant and breastfeeding women and newborns who are more likely to be born with health complications.

  • Prior to October 2023, Gaza was largely self-sufficient in nutritious food, including eggs, fresh milk, fish, poultry, olive oil and red meat – a context that has drastically changed in the past 22 months. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), about 96 per cent (approximately 15,000) of Gaza's cattle, 61 per cent of goats, 64 per cent of sheep, and 98 per cent of layers and broilers have died and nearly all calves were slaughtered. Likewise, agricultural land sustained severe damage, with 86 per cent of permanent crop fields damaged and only 1.5 per cent of Gaza’s cropland currently accessible and not damaged as of July 2025. According to the World Bank’s Interim Rapid Damage and Needs Assessment (IRDNA), issued in February 2025, economic losses in the agricultural sector are estimated at US$1.3 billion, and US$1.06 billion is required to address agricultural and food systems needs in the immediate and short terms (up to three years), with a focus on stabilizing infrastructure and basic needs to achieve 70 per cent functionality of critical assets in the first year and increase local food production by 40 per cent.

  • Within this context of collapsed food systems, the large-scale entry of commercial food into Gaza is critical to improve dietary diversity and ensure the population has access to a wide range of nutritious food, such as fruits, vegetables, meat, fish, and dairy products, FSS emphasizes. Following the Israeli authorities’ approval on 5 August of a mechanism for the gradual and controlled entry of commercial goods into Gaza, different types of food have started to trickle into the markets. While humanitarian partners have observed some level of price decrease in some items, the prices keep fluctuating based on speculations rather than actual availability. For example, the price of sugar, which reached NIS 600 ($177) per kilogram at one point during the past three weeks, has dropped to NIS 30-40 ($9-12) per kilogram on 10 August. On the other hand, energy prices have skyrocketed, with cooking gas disappearing from the market already five months ago and firewood becoming further unaffordable. More people have been forced to use waste and scrap wood as alternative cooking sources, which hinders proper food preparation and intake, exacerbates health and protection risks, and causes environmental hazards.

  • The nutritional status of children in Gaza continues to deteriorate. According to the Nutrition Cluster, almost 13,000 new admissions of children for acute malnutrition treatment were recorded in July. Moreover, the severity of cases continues to grow; in July, over 2,800 cases were found to be suffering from severe acute malnutrition (SAM) out of approximately 13,000 acute malnutrition cases (22 per cent). There are currently 106 outpatient sites providing treatment of malnutrition in the Gaza Strip. The most severe cases of children suffering from SAM with complications, who need to be hospitalized and treated in stabilization centres, have also increased, with 129 cases in July alone compared with 215 cases between January and June. Despite the growing caseload, there are only five SAM stabilization centres across the Gaza Strip, including two in Gaza city, one in Deir al Balah, and two in Khan Younis, with a combined bed capacity of 43 that is insufficient to cope with the high number of cases.

  • According to MoH in Gaza, as of 13 August, 235 malnutrition-related deaths, including 106 children, were documented since October 2023. This includes 170 deaths since 1 July 2025, of whom 45 were children, and eight people who died in the past 24 hours.

  • On 10 August, Save the Children stated that the reported death of 100 children due to starvation in Gaza since October 2023 is a “devastating milestone that shames the world and demands long overdue urgent action,” and highlighted the devastating, long-term health repercussions of acute malnutrition on children. Save the Children’s Regional Director for the Middle East, North Africa and Eastern Europe, Ahmad Alhendawi, said that “these figures are just the tip of the iceberg,” adding that malnutrition among children “can lead to lifelong health issues like stunting, weakened immune systems and organ failure. The effects of malnutrition can span generations, with its impacts on children making learning and development harder, creating a cycle of poverty for the entire population.” He emphasized that “nearly two years of war and a chokehold on lifesaving aid have condemned children to mass deaths, suffering, and shattered futures – all of which are entirely preventable.”

Challenges Facing the Health System

  • Since 25 June 2025, when medical supplies were allowed into Gaza following over three and a half months of suspension, WHO has brought into Gaza 80 trucks with medical supplies. Yet, entry processes remain difficult and ever changing, reported Dr. Rik Peeperkorn, WHO representative in the OPT, who called for the opening of multiple crossings to allow the delivery of humanitarian supplies and for access to deliver all the essential medicines needed in Gaza. He explained: “Staff members’ inspection activities at [crossing] points had been delayed by restrictions. Many items, such as assistive devices, intensive care unit beds, freezers, cold chain medicines, anaesthesia machines, had been denied entry. Some 282 pallets of supplies had entered via Ben Gurion Airport, but the clearance process was far too slow.” Among the supplies that were brought into Gaza, WHO delivered 6,000 blood units to Al Shifa and Nasser hospitals. These amounts, however, are only a fraction of what is needed to meet the scale of needs, underlined WHO’s Director General. Health facilities continue to struggle to provide the required treatment to patients while facing ongoing mass casualty incidents and growing numbers of patients suffering from infectious diseases. Shortages of fuel needed to operate generators are also one of the key challenges facing about 230 health points that remain partially functional across the Gaza Strip – including 18 hospitals, 10 field hospitals, 66 primary health-care clinics, 112 medical points or mobile clinics and 25 ambulance centres – in addition to the lack of spare parts and engine oils needed to repair and maintain the generators. WHO said it is seeking to stock up hospitals and build its own reserves in the context of a potential military operation in Gaza city but has not been able to do so sufficiently.

  • UNRWA plays a critical role in providing primary health-care services in Gaza, serving over 100,000 registered patients suffering from non-communicable diseases (NCD), providing antenatal, post-natal and family planning care, physiotherapy rehabilitation services, and administering routine vaccinations. However, for over five months since 2 March, these services have been severely disrupted due to UNRWA’s inability to bring in lifesaving medicines and medical supplies, critical shortages of fuel, and obstacles to safe movements. This has left health facilities currently managed by UNRWA across the Gaza Strip – including four primary health-care centres, two temporary clinics and many medical points (21 as of 10 August) – with dwindling stocks to provide the needed care and treatment for tens of thousands of patients. At present, 59 per cent of essential medicines (56 out of 95 items) are out of stock at these health facilities, including antihypertensive drugs, oral antibiotics for adults, antiparasitic products, and iron supplements for children, while 12 per cent (11 items) are only available to cover one month of needs. Moreover, over the past week, limited fuel supplies have forced some UNRWA health centres to operate one shift instead of two.

  • Shortages of medicines, fuel and basic infection control materials are having devastating consequences for patient care; according to UNRWA, NCD patients, including those with diabetes, hypertension and heart disease, are increasingly unable to access their prescribed treatment due to depleted stocks, which will have serious repercussions on their health. At the same time, the lack of antibiotics, antiparasitic and antifungal medications is hampering treatment of infectious diseases, which are on the rise due to overcrowding, poor sanitation conditions, and limited access to clean water. UNRWA reports that on average, 10,300 cases of patients suffering from infectious diseases are received at its health centres and medical points per week, with acute respiratory infections and watery diarrhoea being the most reported diseases across all areas and a growing number of cases of acute bloody diarrhoea being observed, particularly in Al Mawasi area of Khan Younis. UNRWA warns that without adequate medical supplies, primary health-care response is undermined, leaving thousands of chronic disease patients and those suffering from communicable illnesses without life-saving support and heightening the risk of a large-scale public health crisis.

  • Widespread starvation, malnutrition and disease are having particularly catastrophic consequences for pregnant and breastfeeding women and newborns, according to the UN Population Fund (UNFPA). New mothers are often too malnourished to breastfeed, and both safe water and milk formula are scarce. Over 100 frontline midwives are working to reach women in health facilities in overcrowded shelters that lack electricity and water, often travelling long distances on foot. Amid insecurity and movement restrictions, since 1 July, midwives deployed by MoH and 10 national and international partners, with support from UNFPA, have assisted in the delivery of approximately 3,500 babies across 13 comprehensive emergency obstetric and newborn care facilities that are still partially functioning in Gaza. Emergency deliveries outside hospitals have also been reported, taking place at home, in unequipped health centres, or during transport to hospitals. These situations highlight severe access barriers caused by insecurity and fuel shortages.

  • The ability of partners to provide essential maternal and neonatal care is further constrained by shortages of supplies, services, food and water, affecting both patients and sexual and reproductive health providers, UNFPA reports. Exhaustion among health workers has forced maternity service providers to shorten shifts, reducing the availability of lifesaving care. Since July 2025, UNFPA has only been able to deliver six types of Reproductive Health Kits prepositioned during the ceasefire to partners across Gaza, serving about 5,400 people. Since 2 March, UNFPA has not been able to deliver any other supplies to the Gaza Strip, while more than 170 truckloads of lifesaving items remain in Al Arish, in Egypt, and the West Bank. These include reproductive health kits, midwifery kits, postpartum kits, maternal health medicines and consumables, medical equipment, family planning commodities, hygiene kits, and shelter materials sufficient to serve an estimated 470,000 women and girls over the next three months.

Funding

  • As of 13 August 2025, Member States have disbursed approximately $914 million out of the $4 billion (22 per cent) requested to meet the most critical humanitarian needs of three million out of 3.3 million people identified as requiring assistance in Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, in 2025, under the 2025 Flash Appeal for the OPT. Nearly 88 per cent of the requested funds are for humanitarian response in Gaza, with just over 12 per cent for the West Bank. Moreover, during July 2025, the oPt Humanitarian Fund managed 111 ongoing projects, totalling $65.2 million, to address urgent needs in the Gaza Strip (87 per cent) and the West Bank (13 per cent). Of these projects, 54 are being implemented by INGOs, 43 by national NGOs and 14 by UN agencies. Notably, 39 out of the 68 projects implemented by INGOs or the UN are being implemented in collaboration with national NGOs. For more information, please see OCHA’s Financial Tracking Service webpage and the oPt HF webpage.


UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs



UNRWA Situation Report #184 on the Humanitarian Crisis in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem


All information updated for 7 - 13 August  2025 [1]

Days 669- 674 since the start of the war in the Gaza Strip

 


 

Published 15 August 2025

Highlights

|   The Gaza Strip

  • During the reporting period, the Gaza Strip has been experiencing a heatwave, with record-high temperatures surpassing 40°C (or 104°F). Dehydration is increasing because of the very limited water available.

  • As reported by OCHA, on 10 August, the Israeli Forces hit a tent of journalists outside the main gate of Al Shifa Hospital in Gaza city, killing six journalists and media workers, including four staff of the Al Jazeera Media Network .

  • UNRWA Commissioner General said: ”Journalists must be protected and international media must get into Gaza to support the heroic work of their Palestinian colleagues. This is the only way to counter disinformation and prevent doubts about the scale of atrocities committed in Gaza.”

  • The UN Secretary-General called for an independent and impartial investigation into these latest killings, which highlight the extreme risks that journalists in Gaza continue to face.

  • WHO has warned that public health conditions in Gaza are catastrophic, with hospitals operating far beyond capacity and some life-saving medicines being totally out of stock, while deaths from malnutrition and disease are on the rise.

  • A group of UN experts stated that “Health and care workers have been continuously targeted, detained, tortured and are now, like the rest of the population, being starved.” And that “The UN has reported that health and care workers have fainted due to lack of food and starvation, a violation not only of their own right to health, but one that curtails their ability to perform their duties and compromises the care and healing conditions necessary to treat their patients.”

  • UNRWA frontline staff have been repeatedly displaced. They are exhausted, psychologically strained, and in many cases enduring acute food insecurity themselves, while they keep on working and serving the community with dedication. Since the war began, nearly 360 UNRWA team members have been confirmed killed.

  • The health response in the Gaza Strip continues to face operational challenges, including extensive damage to health facilities, obstacles to safe movements and restrictions on the entry of medical supplies and fuel. UNRWA medical services are under-resourced. The agency has run out of nearly 60 per cent of essential medicines.

  • Over 100 NGOs, issued a statement calling for the Israeli authorities to allow them to bring in NGOs to bring in lifesaving goods, as organisations’ requests are rejected as them being “not authorised to deliver aid”, linked to new INGO registration rules introduced by Israeli authorities in March 2025.

  • UNRWA has not been allowed to bring any humanitarian aid into Gaza, including medicines and medical supplies, for more than five months now (since 2 March 2025).

  • As of 13 August, 86.3 per cent of the Gaza Strip remains within the Israeli-militarized zone, under displacement orders, or where these overlap.  


Key points

The Gaza Strip

|     Fatalities and Injuries

  • Israeli Forces continue to carry out heavy bombardments from air, land and sea across the Gaza Strip and expanded ground operations, resulting in tens of thousands of reported casualties, destruction of civilian infrastructure, and large-scale displacement. People are living in inhumane conditions, seeking shelter anywhere they can, including damaged or destroyed buildings, overcrowded displacement sites, and open areas. Strikes on people sheltering in schools and tents, as well as on people trying to access food or other forms of humanitarian assistance keep being reported, resulting in mass casualties, including among children.

  • Between 7 October 2023 and 13 August 2025, according to the MoH in Gaza, as stated by OCHA, at least 61,722 Palestinians have been reportedly killed in Gaza and 154,525 have been injured. As reported by OCHA, Gaza MoH recorded that, of the 60,199 identified fatalities as of 31 July, 27,605 were men, 9,735 women, 18,430 children, and 4,429 elderly.

  • Since the war began, nearly 360 UNRWA team members have been confirmed killed.



|     Food insecurity

  • As reported by OCHA, and according to the Nutrition Cluster, almost 13,000 new admissions of children for acute malnutrition treatment were recorded in July 2025: over 2,800 cases were found to be suffering from severe acute malnutrition (SAM) (22 per cent). The most severe cases of children suffering from SAM with complications, who need to be hospitalized and treated in stabilization centres, have also increased, with 129 cases in July alone compared with 215 cases between January and June.

  • UNRWA’s latest Mid-Upper Arm Circumference (MUAC)-based findings show that malnutrition has reached 21.5 per cent in Gaza City, meaning nearly one in five young children is now malnourished.

  • On 10 August, Save the Children stated that the reported death of 100 children due to starvation in Gaza since October 2023 is a “devastating milestone that shames the world and demands long overdue urgent action,” and highlighted the devastating, long-term health repercussions of acute malnutrition on children.

  • With minimal food assistance, people in Gaza, particularly the most vulnerable, keep facing hunger and malnutrition, while having exhausted all coping mechanisms.  


|     Health

  • The health response in Gaza continues to face severe operational challenges, including extensive damage to health facilities, killing of medical workers, obstacles to safe movements within the Gaza Strip, and restrictions on the entry of medical supplies and critical fuel. This is forcing the few remaining hospitals to ration resources and/or suspend critical services.

  • As also reported by OCHA, for over five months since 2 March, UNRWA’s primary healthcare services have been severely disrupted due to UNRWA’s inability to bring in lifesaving medicines and medical supplies, critical shortages of fuel, and obstacles to safe movements. At present, nearly 60 per cent of essential medicines (56 out of 95 items) are out of stock at these health facilities, including antihypertensive drugs, oral antibiotics for adults, antiparasitic products, and iron supplements for children, while 12 per cent (11 items) are only available to cover one month of needs. Moreover, over the past week, limited fuel supplies have forced some UNRWA health centres to operate one shift instead of two.

  • Shortages of medicines, fuel and basic infection control materials are having devastating consequences for patient care. Non-Communicable Diseases (NCD) patients, including those with diabetes, hypertension and heart disease, are increasingly unable to access their prescribed treatment due to depleted stocks, which will have serious repercussions on their health.

  • As reported by UNRWA Director of Health, due to the prolonged siege on aid and supplies, there is a critical shortage of life-saving medicines like insulin. People with type one diabetes, including children, in Gaza, need insulin every day to stay alive. Even when these become available, patients with diabetes are still at risk, as sometimes, insulin works too strongly, causing hypoglycemia, a drop in blood sugar that can lead to unconsciousness and even death. Yet with just a bit of sweet juice, candy, or sugar, it can easily be prevented or treated. However, shortages of basic supplies, including sugar, fruit, or exorbitant prices prevent stopping side effects of medications.

  • UNRWA has reported a weekly average of 10,300 infectious diseases cases, which are on the rise due to overcrowding, poor sanitation conditions, and limited access to clean water. Between 4 and 10 August, 9,915 infectious diseases cases were detected, with acute respiratory infections and watery diarrhoea being the most reported diseases across all areas and a growing number of cases of acute bloody diarrhoea being observed, particularly in Al Mawasi area of Khan Younis. A total of 76 cases of Guillain Barre Syndrome were reported as of 7 August, with no medications available for treatment.

  • UNRWA warns that without adequate medical supplies, primary healthcare response is undermined, leaving thousands of chronic disease patients and those suffering from communicable illnesses without life-saving support and heightening the risk of a large-scale public health crisis.  


|     Displacement, Site management

  • As reported by OCHA, over 86 per cent of the Gaza Strip remains within the Israeli-militarized zone, under displacement orders, or where these overlap, as of 13 August 2025.

  • According to the Site Management Cluster (SMC) latest population movement report, 780,358 people have been displaced since the breakdown of the ceasefire, on 18 March 2025, with 12,530 being displaced between 29 July and 12 August, 68 per cent of which originated from Gaza governorate, according to the report.

  • According to the UN, at least 1.9 million people – or about 90 per cent of the population – across the Gaza Strip have been displaced during the war. Many have been displaced repeatedly, some 10 times or more. The many displacement orders issued by the Israeli Forces since the collapse of the ceasefire forced more people to flee in search of safety.

  • With shelter supplies banned from entering Gaza for over five months now,  tents are deteriorating and unsuitable for summer and the scorching heat  as most of the shelters have been  used for six months to a year and are  worn out due to prolonged sun exposure and frequent displacement, as reported by the Site management cluster. Some shelters are erected on rubble or partially burned structures, posing safety risks.

  • Through its site managers and frontline staff, UNRWA continues monitoring movement of displaced persons, as well as sites of displacement. At the time of writing, over 99,000 forcibly displaced persons are estimated to be living in UNRWA shelters and the surrounding areas, with UNRWA running over 60 shelters.

  • During the period between 6 to 12 August, three displacement orders were issued by the Israeli Forces across the Gaza Strip, impacting 17 UNRWA installations:  

    • 7 August, a displacement order impacted Gaza City (Tuffah and Daraj), with no UNRWA installations affected.

    • 6 August, a displacement order impacted Khan Younis, with 11 UNRWA installations affected.

    • 6 August, a displacement order impacted east Gaza (Zeitoun), with six UNRWA installations present in the area.

  • At least 189 UNRWA installations – or over half of all UNRWA installations in the Gaza Strip – are located within the Israeli-militarized zone, under displacement orders, or where these overlap.


|     Operational implications and humanitarian response

  • Despite limited quantities of fuel entering Gaza over the past week, fuel supplies remain critically low, significantly undermining the ability of humanitarian partners to deliver and sustain lifesaving services, particularly those related to water provision. Limited fuel supplies also remain insufficient to sustain UNRWA operations in the Gaza Strip.

  • Over 100 NGOs, issued a statement calling for the Israeli authorities to allow them to bring in NGOs to bring in lifesaving goods, as organisations’ requests are rejected as them being “not authorised to deliver aid.”, linked to new INGO registration rules introduced by Israeli authorities in March 2025. This exclusion has left hospitals without basic supplies, children, people with disabilities, and older people dying from hunger and preventable illnesses, and aid workers themselves going to work hungry.

  • UNRWA Commissioner General stated that “UNRWA has also been banned from bringing in aid to Gaza for over five months now. Our warehouses in Egypt and Jordan are full with food, medicine and hygiene supplies to fill 6,000 trucks.”

  • All UNRWA international staff are banned from entering the occupied Palestinian territory. This follows the passage of two laws by Israel’s parliament, (the Knesset), on 28 October 2024[2], that prohibit UNRWA’s operations in “Israeli territory” and bar any contact between Israeli officials with UNRWA. The Israeli authorities have not granted the Agency’s international staff visas for more than six months now (end of January 2025).

  • Meanwhile, around 12,000 Palestinian UNRWA personnel in Gaza continue to provide services and assistance to an entire population in need, while leading the collective humanitarian response. In the occupied West Bank including East Jerusalem, UNRWA continues to play a central role with over 4,000 UNRWA Palestinian staff providing education, health and other services to Palestine Refugees.



In Gaza, soaring temperatures are worsening the already dire humanitarian situation. Children spend hours under the sun searching for water and food, as shortages drive rising levels of dehydration and malnutrition. © 2025 UNRWA photo.


The occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem

  • According to OCHA, between 7 October 2023 and 4 August 2025, 995 Palestinians – among them at least 210 children – were killed in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem. Of those, 180 Palestinians, including at least 37 children, were killed since the beginning of this year alone.

    • On 7 August, the funeral of the community member shot and killed by an Israeli settler on 28 July in the Bedouin refugee community of Umm al Kheir took place, after his body was released by Israeli authorities. Temporary access restrictions on the community were imposed by Israeli Forces, preventing non-residents from attending the funeral.

    • On 7 August, it was publicly reported that the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem had been banned by Israeli Forces from entering the Al Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem for six months, due to end in January 2026. The banning order was purportedly linked to a sermon previously delivered referencing the situation in Gaza.

    • On 10 August, Israeli Forces conducted a search operation in Jericho, with one Palestinian later dying of injuries incurred by live ammunition.

    • On 12 August, tear gas canisters fired by Israeli Forces during the course of an operation in Al ‘Arroub Camp, in the southern West Bank, landed in the grounds of the UNRWA Al ‘Arroub Basic Girls School, causing limited damage.


Gaza Humanitarian overview and response

Between 7 October 2023 and 13 August 2025, according to the MoH in Gaza, as stated by OCHA, at least 61,722 Palestinians have been reportedly killed in Gaza while 154,525 have been reported injured.



Humanitarian access, protection of civilians

  • UNRWA is working to verify the details of incidents that reportedly impacted UNRWA premises and/or personnel. Additional information will be provided once it becomes available*.

  • From 6 to 12 August, several armed-conflict-related incidents have reportedly impacted UNRWA installations:

    • On 11 August 2025, an UNRWA school in Zaitoun, southeast of Gaza City, was reportedly directly struck by an Israeli Forces airstrike. Moderate damage to the facility and no casualties among UNRWA personnel were reported.

    • Late Report: On 5 August 2025, an UNRWA health centre was reportedly impacted by an Israeli Forces airstrike at Sheikh Radwan, northeast of Gaza city, when structures close to the installation were reportedly directly struck. Significant damage to the facility and no casualties among UNRWA personnel were reported.


As of 12 August 2025, 895* incidents impacting UNRWA premises and the people inside them have been reported since the beginning of the war. 311* (or nearly all) UNRWA installations have been impacted by armed conflict-related incidents since the beginning of the war, with some installations impacted multiple times. UNRWA estimates that, in total, at least 845* persons sheltering in UNRWA installations have been reported killed and at least 2,554* injured since the start of the war. UNRWA continues to verify and update the number of casualties caused by these incidents.


*Since the start of the war in October 2023, the latest casualty figures are continuously under review as UNRWA gains access to locations that were previously inaccessible and as further verifications occur. The summary figures will be published/updated as information becomes available, noting that these numbers are subject to change once verifications are concluded.

  • OCHA reported that of the 81 planned aid movements coordinated with Israeli authorities across Gaza between 6 and 12 August 2025, 15 per cent were denied, six per cent withdrawn. Forty-three (43) per cent of the movements were facilitated (37 or 51 per cent). Twenty-nine (29) missions were initially approved but then impeded (36 per cent). Facilitated movements included missions to transfer fuel, staff movements and rotations. Denied movements included missions for essential road repairs along Salah ad Din Road.


UNRWA response

The Gaza Strip


Health and Nutrition

  • Since 18 March (when the ceasefire collapsed) and until 27 July, UNRWA health teams provided over 1.5 million health consultations (or over 14,000 per working day), including nearly 107,000 maternal consultations including antenatal, post-natal and family planning care, over 56,000 dental and oral health consultations in fixed and mobile clinics, and over 37,500 physiotherapy rehabilitation services sessions. Between 7 October 2023 and 27 July 2025, UNRWA provided over 9.44 million medical consultations across the Gaza Strip.

  • In addition to medical consultations, UNRWA (in partnership with and supported by other UN agencies, including UNICEF and WHO) continued to vaccinate children. Over 300,000 routine vaccines have been given to children since January 2024.

  • To date, only four out of 22 UNRWA health centres and two additional UNRWA-rented facilities used as temporary health centres were operational in Gaza. In addition, as of 10 August, health services are provided through 116 mobile medical teams working in 21 medical points inside and outside shelters in the Middle Area, Khan Younis, Al Mawasi, Gaza City. UNRWA health facilities provide primary health care, including outpatient services, non-communicable disease care, medications, vaccination for children, antenatal and postnatal health care, laboratory and dental services, physiotherapy and dressings for the injured. The number of operational health facilities changes constantly based on demand, access and security.

  • Between 4 and 10 August, an average of over 1,081 UNRWA health personnel per day worked in UNRWA health centres, temporary clinics and medical points across the Gaza Strip, providing 66,957 including health consultations (or around 11,000 per working day).

  • Between 4 and 10 August, UNRWA medical teams provided 4,784 consultations for post-natal and pregnant women at high risk, 2,897 dental and oral health consultations in fixed and mobile clinics, and 1,794 physiotherapy rehabilitation services sessions in health centres and medical points. A total of 4,019 lab tests were conducted in UNRWA health centres and medical points.

  • Screening of children for Acute Malnutrition: From January to July 2025, a total of 110,829 children (six-59 months) were screened for acute malnutrition, with 6,762 malnourished children detected: of these, 5,902 were diagnosed with Moderate Acute Malnutrition (MAM) and 86 with Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM). During the same reporting period, a total of 87,320 caregivers were reached with group counselling sessions focused on safe and age-appropriate Infant and Young Child Feeding in Emergencies (IYCF-E) practices.


Mental Health and Psychosocial Support

  • UNRWA remains one of the largest providers of emergency learning and PSS services across the Gaza Strip. With the support of 236 school counsellors and over 300 assistant counsellors, the Agency has conducted 318,195 critical PSS sessions for approximately 730,000 displaced persons, including more than 520,000 children. Between 21 Jul to 31 Jul 2025 a total of 13,638 displaced persons accessed these essential services.

  • Between 7 October 2023 and 11 August 2025, UNRWA’s social work team provided services to 233,005 displaced persons, including psychological first aid, PSS services, family and individual activities, as well as case management. During the same reporting period, protection services were provided to 2,827 survivors of gender-based violence (GBV) and 4,966 children, including 2,200 unaccompanied children. The team also supported 26,814 persons with disabilities with PSS; 8,276 of these individuals received assistive devices and rehabilitation services. Awareness sessions on GBV, child protection, disability and special needs, as well as managing social and psychological stressors, were conducted for 146,537 displaced persons.

  • UNRWA continued to provide mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) services in Gaza City, the middle and Khan Younis areas, with health teams of 49 among psychiatrists, psychosocial counsellors and supervisors to assist special cases referred from UNRWA health centres and shelters. From 4 to 10 August, UNRWA teams responded to 2,083 cases in health centres and at medical points through individual consultations, psychological first aid, awareness sessions and to address cases of gender-based violence (GBV).


Learning

  • UNRWA has been providing learning services in Gaza in Temporary Learning Spaces (TLSs) and through its distance learning initiative.

  • To date, more than 56,000 children, over half t of them girls, have benefitted from learning and recreational activities delivered in 450 TLSs established across 62 UNRWA schools-turned-shelters.

  • Between 21 to 31 July 2025, a total of 12,322 children (5,364 boys, 6,958 girls, including 134 children with disabilities) benefited from TLS-based learning activities in 168 active TLSs. UNRWA has also leveraged digital tools to provide basic literacy and numeracy education to 296,028 Palestine Refugee children in Gaza, facilitated by thousands of teachers. Ongoing and reoccurring telecommunications cuts make digital learning a challenge.


Food Security

  • Since 7 October 2023 and until the start of the ceasefire (19 January 2025), UNRWA reached over 388,000 families (nearly 1.9 million people) with two rounds of flour; at least 374,000 of those families have received three rounds.

  • Up until the start of the ceasefire, UNRWA reached at least 1.7 million people with food parcels. Of those, at least 215,000 people received two rounds of food parcels since the war started. These include[3] rice, lentils, beans, oil, salt, sugar, milk powder, hummus, halawa, yeast, and canned fish, and are designed to meet the needs of a family of five for two weeks.

  • In addition to the distribution of UNRWA food parcels, the Agency has distributed food parcels on behalf of other UN organisations, having reached over 1.4 million people before the start of the ceasefire.

  • During the ceasefire, UNRWA reached over 2 million people with critical food assistance. UNRWA ran out of flour and food parcels at the end of April and was forced to halt food distributions. Between 1 March and 19 April 2025, UNRWA distributed nearly 270,000 bags of flour, reaching an estimated 88,000 families – or over 700,000 people. Since the ceasefire collapsed and until 8 April, only around 15,500 families (or an estimated 77,500 people) have received UNRWA food parcels. UNRWA ran out of food at the end of April. The Agency has not been allowed to bring in any humanitarian assistance including food for 5 months now (since 2 March 2025).


Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)

  • Since October 2023, UNRWA has carried out emergency WASH activities across the Gaza Strip, at Designated Emergency Shelters and informal settlement areas, supporting around 1.7 million displaced persons. Activities include operating and maintaining water wells and desalination systems and supplying water with water trucks and bottled water. In addition, UNRWA continues to maintain hygiene in its shelters and sites through cleaning supplies, community-based solid waste management, and pest control.

  • Despite the displacement orders in Khan Younis, UNRWA water well continued to operate producing over 500 cubic meters of water daily and benefiting displaced persons in north Rafah and Khan Younis camps. Until the end of July, UNRWA has reached around 240,000 Displaced Persons with potable water provision, and 1.2 million displaced persons with domestic water.

  • UNRWA continues to provide solid waste collection and transfer services wherever possible.

  • During the reporting period, UNRWA teams also conducted 240 hygiene awareness sessions across the Gaza Strip, benefiting 150,000 displaced persons, and conducted 95 cleaning campaigns inside DESs, benefiting over 90,000 displaced persons.


 

[1] Some of the information is reported during the reporting period but does not necessarily correspond to the reporting period.

[2] The legislation came into effect on 29 January 2025.

[3] The composition of the food parcel may change based on food item availability.


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