Israeli military accepts Gaza Health Ministry’s toll of conflict deaths

A destroyed building in the Nuseirat camp in Gaza on Thursday. Israeli military officials have admitted its forces killed about 70,000 Palestinians during the war. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 29 January 2026
Follow

Israeli military accepts Gaza Health Ministry’s toll of conflict deaths

  • Official confirms that about 70,000 Palestinians have been killed, but says proportion of civilians to militants is under review, according to Israeli media report
  • Israel had refused to accept figures despite UN, other international bodies believing the numbers accurate

LONDON: The Israeli military has admitted that the number of Palestinians killed in the Gaza conflict has been about 70,000 — in line with figures from the Gaza Health Ministry, Israeli media reported on Thursday.

Throughout the two-year conflict, Israeli officials refused to accept the numbers provided by the ministry, despite them being widely regarded as accurate by international bodies, including the UN.

A senior security official has now confirmed the overall figure, but said the actual breakdown of the toll was still under review, The Times of Israel reported.

The official claimed the proportion of civilians to militants killed was unknown, along with how many people had died directly from the fighting.

The official also rejected the ministry’s figures stating that 440 Palestinians had died of malnutrition and starvation during the conflict.

Haaretz newspaper reported that the Israeli military’s figure did not include those still missing, possibly buried under rubble.

The Gaza Health Ministry says 71,667 people have been killed in the territory by the Israeli military since the conflict started in October 2023, after a Hamas raid into Israel killed more than 1,200 people.

A report by +972 Magazine in August, based on leaked Israeli army data, suggested that 83 percent of Palestinians killed in Gaza had been civilians.


Pro-Palestinian flotilla announces new mission to Gaza

Updated 07 February 2026
Follow

Pro-Palestinian flotilla announces new mission to Gaza

  • Israel controls Gaza's borders and scrutinises all aid coming into the territory

TUNIS: A flotilla of pro-Palestinian activists who attempted to reach Gaza last year will set sail for the besieged territory again next month, one member told AFP on Friday.
The Global Sumud Flotilla said the new mission set for March 29 would be "the largest coordinated humanitarian intervention for Palestine in history" and will mobilise "thousands from over 100 countries".
"We will be sailing from Barcelona, Tunis, Italy and many other ports not yet made public," Brazilian activist Thiago Avila told AFP.
The group said an overland convoy would also leave for Gaza on the same day, without specifying from where.
The campaigners sought to break an Israeli blockade by delivering aid to Gaza by sea last October, before they were intercepted by Israel, detained and deported.
Israel controls Gaza's borders and scrutinises all aid coming into the territory.
The activists describe their actions as a "non-violent response to genocide, siege, mass starvation, and the destruction of civilian life in Gaza".