Israel allowing children to starve in Gaza, says UK’s foreign secretary

British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper told a UN meeting on Israel-Palestine that the two-state solution is in grave peril. (AP)
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Updated 23 September 2025
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Israel allowing children to starve in Gaza, says UK’s foreign secretary

  • Yvette Cooper highlights Israel’s conduct in the territory as she outlines reasons for UK recognizing Palestinian state

LONDON: The UK’s foreign secretary accused Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of allowing children to starve in Gaza as she explained Britain’s decision to recognize a Palestinian state.

Speaking at a landmark UN conference co-hosted by Saudi Arabia and France, Yvette Cooper pointed to Israel’s atrocities in Gaza as a key reason why the UK had made the declaration.

Britain is among at least 10 other Western nations to have recognized Palestine in recent days in response to Israel’s war in Gaza that has killed more than 65,000 people.

Cooper said statehood is the “inalienable right of the Palestinian people” and that two states is the only path to “security and lasting peace for Israelis and Palestinians.”

She said Britain’s decision reflected “a grave reality” with the road map to a lasting peace with a Palestinian and Israeli state side by side “in profound peril.”

Cooper said: “In Gaza, the unbearable humanitarian catastrophe worsens as the Netanyahu government chooses to escalate war and hold back aid. Children dying of starvation while food rots at the border.”

She said Israel’s settlement expansion in the occupied West Bank also threatened “the very viability of a Palestinian state.”

She added: “The two-state solution risks disappearing beneath the rubble. That is what extremists on all sides want.”

Her comments came during the High-Level International Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine held in New York on Monday.

Hours earlier, President Emmanuel Macron told the meeting that France would also recognize Palestine, warning against the “peril of endless wars” if a two-state solution was not realized.

Cooper said the UK’s action was also intended to freeze out Hamas from a future Palestinian state.

“This pathway is the opposite of Hamas’ hateful vision,” she said.

She called for an immediate ceasefire, the release of all Israeli hostages seized by Hamas during the deadly October 2023 raid that triggered the conflict, and the resumption of aid to Gaza that Israel has reduced to a trickle.


Thousands of Gaza children suffer from famine conditions

Updated 7 sec ago
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Thousands of Gaza children suffer from famine conditions

  • “The number of children admitted is five times higher than in February, so we need to see the numbers come down further”

GENEVA: Thousands of children have been admitted for treatment for acute malnutrition in Gaza since an October ceasefire that was supposed to enable a major increase in humanitarian aid, the UN children’s agency said on Tuesday.
UNICEF, the biggest provider of malnutrition treatment in Gaza, said that 9,300 children were treated for severe acute malnutrition in October, when the first phase of an agreement to end the two-year Israel-Hamas war came into effect.

FASTFACTS

• UNICEF, the biggest provider of malnutrition treatment in Gaza, said that 9,300 children were treated for severe acute malnutrition in October. • While this is down from a peak of over 14,000 in August, the number is still significantly higher than during a brief February-March ceasefire.

While this is down from a peak of over 14,000 in August, the number is still significantly higher than during a brief February-March ceasefire and indicates that aid flows remain insufficient, UNICEF spokesperson Tess Ingram told a Geneva press briefing by video link from Gaza.
“It’s still a shockingly high number,” she said.
“The number of children admitted is five times higher than in February, so we need to see the numbers come down further.” Ingram described meeting underweight babies weighing less than 1 kilogram born in hospitals “their tiny chests heaving with the effort of staying alive.”
UNICEF is able to import considerably more aid into the enclave than it was before the October 10 agreement but obstacles remain, she said, citing delays and denials of cargoes at crossings, route closures and ongoing security challenges.
“We have seen some improvement, but we continue to call for all of the available crossings into the Gaza Strip to be open,” she added. There are not enough commercial supplies entering Gaza, she added, saying that meat was still prohibitively expensive at around $20 a kilogram.
“Most families can’t access this, and that’s why we’re still seeing high rates of malnutrition,” she said.
In August, a UN-backed hunger monitor determined that famine conditions were affecting about half a million people — or a quarter of Gaza’s population.
Children were severly affected by hunger as the war progressed, with experts warning that the effects could cause lasting damage.