Gaza doctors starving while fighting to save lives - Medic - Newstrends
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Gaza doctors starving while fighting to save lives – Medic

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Dr Mohammed Abu Mughaisib says he struggles to eat knowing his colleagues in Gaza are still suffering

Gaza doctors starving while fighting to save lives – Medic

For two decades, his job and purpose in life was to heal people. But Dr Mohammed Abu Mughaisib also wanted to stay alive.

So, when he could no longer even look after himself, and the hunger was too much to bear, he took a rare chance to leave Gaza.

“I would never have imagined starving,” the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) medic said.

“But my head hurt and I had pain in my stomach from starvation.”

After working non-stop at hospitals throughout Gaza over the past two years, Dr Abu Mughaisib was evacuated to Ireland in mid-September, along with a group of students taking up scholarships.

Safe and fed, he is now able to reflect on his time working in increasingly dire conditions as Israel’s offensive destroyed medical and other critical infrastructure – and how he feels about leaving colleagues behind.

“The decision was very difficult,” he told me, sitting in a peaceful park in Dublin – with a soundtrack of birdsong, rather than bullets, drones and explosions.

The contrast between the two worlds was almost overwhelming for him.

“I’m physically here but my heart and soul are in Gaza,” he said. “It’s very strange seeing people living a normal life, and it will take time to get used to it.”

“I’m happy that I’m a survivor. Because I could have been killed or injured anytime. But I’m sad that I left behind my colleagues and my people.”

Dr Abu Mughaisib was in charge of operations for the international medical charity in the Gaza Strip, including all its hospitals, clinics and mental health services. It is one of the biggest providers of medical services in Gaza.

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Around 51% of Gaza’s population are under 18, according to figures from Unicef

He struggled to put into words the “indescribable” consequences for his colleagues of the past two years of war, with Israel’s offensive leaving Gaza’s hospitals under severe strain, with some forced to close and others operating at drastically reduced levels.

He told me about medics forced to sip glucose solution just to give themselves a little energy to carry on working.

At one point, among doctors and nurses, the only topic of conversation in the hospital was food, and the desperate hunt for it. “Starving doctors were treating malnutrition,” he said.

And the injured just kept coming.

“When you enter a hospital, you smell blood,” he told me.

“Hospitals are meant to be holy places, sterile places but in Gaza it’s like going to a public market. Patients are literally lying on the ground because there are no beds for them.

“There are not enough doctors to look after them. In the intensive care unit, they wait for someone to die, to admit another critical patient.”

He adds: “I hope that one day you can have access to see what’s happening in these hospitals in Gaza. It’s horrible.”

Foreign journalists are banned by Israel from entering Gaza independently, so news organisations, including the BBC, rely on trusted local freelancers to report from the ground.

The 52-year-old doctor has lost count of the number of times he was displaced since the start of the war Israel launched in retaliation for the Hamas-led attacks of 7 October 2023.

Those attacks were “totally unacceptable” and shocked him, he said.

He said his large home in Gaza City – which used to have a barbecue and picnic table on the lawn – was taken over as an Israeli military base and then looted by local people.

Dr Abu Mughaisib managed to get his family evacuated to Egypt in February 2024, while he stayed behind.

“I lived in a tent. I lived in the hospital. I lived in the MSF office. I put my mattress down in the electricity room of a restaurant.”

But wherever he was, he kept working.

Fear accompanied him everywhere. “Every time I walked in the street, I was very terrified and I looked around me, staring at people, because I didn’t know who was Hamas”, he said.

“And I thought, OK this guy, maybe he’s wanted, maybe they [Israel] will target him. And they will kill everyone around.”

Each day brought moral dilemmas over how to treat the injured.

“Which patient do you admit? You decide you can only take children, but they’re mostly children, so which one do you prefer to take care of?”

“The situation is beyond description,” he added.

More than 18,000 of the 66,000 people the Hamas-run health ministry has recorded killed during the war are children. The UN considers these figures reliable.

And as Israel continues its offensive in Gaza City, the UN says that attacks on and around hospitals have left sick and injured civilians with nowhere to go for life-saving treatment.

According to the UN Human Rights Office, there have been at least 17 Israeli attacks in or near health facilities in Gaza Strip in the second part of September alone.

“There were no signs it’s only targeting Hamas,” said Dr Abu Mughaisib. “It’s the civilians, the population, me, my friends, my colleagues, my neighbours, they are not Hamas.

“We are the ones who were killed and injured and running from one place to another and starving.”

Israel says it takes steps to reduce civilian casualties and blames Hamas for using civilians as human shields.

Dr Abu Mughaisib said he knew that Israel’s retaliation for the 7 October attacks would be massive. But he never imagined the scale of it, describing it as an “attack on every layer of life in Gaza, from infrastructure, electricity, the water supply, the sewage system, the hospitals, schools and universities.”

He told me people in Gaza are so desperate that they will their elderly relatives to die to spare them further suffering.

“I have colleagues still under the rubble”, he said.

At least 13 MSF staff have been killed over the past two years. The latest, a nurse who died of shrapnel injuries from an Israeli air strike near his tent in September.

Safe now from the war in Gaza, Dr Abu Mughaisib enjoyed his first proper shower in almost two years.

But after dreaming for weeks about eating, now that there’s food all around him, he has no appetite.

“Of course, I’m happy that I left. But I’m not enjoying this happiness. When I know my colleagues are suffering, I can’t eat a proper meal.”

He left Gaza with only his mobile phone and the clothes he was wearing. Nothing else was allowed.

He was told that the Israelis had strictly prohibited evacuees from taking any sand or earth from Gaza.

And he is convinced that this was for a reason: “So there’s no proof that you are from Gaza. You have no links to Gaza. You have no memories of Gaza.”

“I wanted to take all of Gaza with me,” he said. “Not just a bit.”

He said the destruction in Gaza is so extensive that towns he passed through as he left through the border crossing with Egypt were completely unrecognisable.

I asked him if he thought Gaza would ever heal.

“It will be very difficult,” he replied.

“The wounds are not just physical. They are social, psychological, emotional and spiritual.

“Everything is lost.”

Healing will take a long time, he said.

“And I think the people will need the support of the world to heal them.”

Additional reporting by Imogen Anderson

Gaza doctors starving while fighting to save lives – Medic

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Trump Halts Minnesota Immigration Crackdown After Fatal Shootings, Protests

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U.S President Donald Trump
U.S President Donald Trump

Trump Halts Minnesota Immigration Crackdown After Fatal Shootings, Protests

The Trump administration has officially halted Operation Metro Surge, a controversial immigration enforcement operation in Minnesota, following widespread protests, political backlash, and the deaths of two U.S. citizens. The decision was announced by Tom Homan, the U.S. “border czar,” who confirmed that President Donald Trump approved ending the monthslong crackdown.

Operation Metro Surge, launched in December 2025, focused on the Minneapolis–St. Paul metropolitan area, deploying nearly 3,000 federal immigration officers at its peak. The operation aimed to detain undocumented immigrants, which the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) described as targeting “criminal illegal aliens.” However, reports indicate that many detainees had no criminal records, including children and U.S. citizens, raising concerns about the operation’s scope and fairness.

The crackdown drew intense public opposition after anti-ICE protesters Renée Good and Alex Pretti were fatally shot during separate incidents in Minneapolis. The shootings intensified calls for accountability and prompted local and national criticism of federal enforcement tactics.

In a statement, Homan said, “I have proposed and President Trump has concurred that this surge operation conclude.” He noted that a drawdown of federal personnel had already begun, with a smaller contingent remaining temporarily to transition operations and coordinate with local authorities.

During the operation, DHS reported over 4,000 arrests, though critics highlighted the disproportionate impact on communities and families, emphasizing the humanitarian and civil liberties concerns arising from the surge.

Minnesota officials, including Governor Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, welcomed the decision, calling the operation an overreach that harmed communities and strained trust between law enforcement and residents. Civil rights groups also praised the halt but urged comprehensive immigration reforms to prevent future abuses.

The end of Operation Metro Surge marks a significant development in the national debate over immigration enforcement, sanctuary policies, and federal authority, highlighting the challenge of balancing border security with human rights and community safety.

Trump Halts Minnesota Immigration Crackdown After Fatal Shootings, Protests

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Russia Escalates Digital Control with Attempted WhatsApp Block

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WhatsApp

Russia Escalates Digital Control with Attempted WhatsApp Block

WhatsApp has accused the Russian government of trying to completely block its messaging service in the country, a move aimed at steering users toward the state-backed app MAX. The Meta-owned platform said the effort, reported on February 12, 2026, threatens over 100 million users and undermines private, encrypted communication in Russia.

In a statement, WhatsApp said: “Today the Russian government attempted to fully block WhatsApp in an effort to drive people to a state-owned surveillance app. Trying to isolate over 100 million users from private and secure communication … can only lead to less safety for people in Russia. We continue to do everything we can to keep users connected.”

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The attempt is part of a broader crackdown on foreign tech platforms in Russia. Authorities have previously restricted access to Facebook, Instagram, and targeted other services like Telegram. Reports indicate that Roskomnadzor, Russia’s communications regulator, removed WhatsApp from its national internet directory, forcing users to rely on VPNs to access the platform. Critics warn that such measures are designed to expand state surveillance and control over digital communication.

The government is actively promoting MAX, a domestic “super-app” similar to China’s WeChat, which combines messaging with other services. Rights advocates caution that the push toward MAX could compromise privacy protections that platforms like WhatsApp provide. Meanwhile, Kremlin officials have indicated that WhatsApp and other restricted apps could be restored if Meta complies with local data storage and regulatory laws.

WhatsApp’s statement emphasizes that the company will continue to work to keep its service accessible where possible, but the attempted block highlights Russia’s ongoing effort to enforce digital sovereignty and shift users toward state-controlled technology platforms.

Russia Escalates Digital Control with Attempted WhatsApp Block

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Tumbler Ridge Massacre: Canada Investigates Shooter’s Mental Health, Police History

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Tumbler Ridge Massacre: Canada Investigates Shooter’s Mental Health, Police History

Tumbler Ridge Massacre: Canada Investigates Shooter’s Mental Health, Police History

Canadian authorities are intensifying investigations into the mental health history and prior police interactions of Jesse Van Rootselaar, the 18-year-old who carried out a deadly mass shooting in the remote mining town of Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia, on February 10, 2026. The tragedy has left the small community in mourning and raised national questions about gun control, mental health support, and law enforcement interventions.

According to RCMP Deputy Commissioner Dwayne McDonald, authorities are still unclear on the motive behind the attack, which is one of the deadliest school shootings in Canadian history. Van Rootselaar, a transgender woman who had dropped out of Tumbler Ridge Secondary School four years ago, first killed her mother and stepbrother before opening fire at the school, where she shot six more victims. The shooter later took her own life at the scene.

Investigators have confirmed that Van Rootselaar was known to police and had previous interactions with the public health system due to mental health concerns. Authorities are reviewing prior incidents, including earlier firearms seizures and her lapsed gun licence, to understand how warning signs were addressed before the massacre. British Columbia Premier David Eby said officials are working with the health system to determine “what interactions may have taken place” in the past.

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The victims include a 39-year-old female teacher and five students aged 12 and 13, with one child, 12-year-old Maya Gebala, in critical condition after trying to lock herself and classmates in a library during the attack. First responders arrived within minutes, but the scale of the violence left the tight-knit community of about 2,700 residents reeling. Hundreds gathered for a candlelight vigil to honour those killed and injured.

Prime Minister Mark Carney addressed parliament, describing Tumbler Ridge as a resilient, compassionate community of miners, teachers, and construction workers, and emphasised the need to learn from the tragedy. Flags across Canada have been lowered to half-staff for seven days in remembrance of the victims. Britain’s King Charles and Queen Camilla also expressed shock and sorrow over the massacre.

Schools in the area will remain closed for the remainder of the week as authorities continue their investigation into Van Rootselaar’s mental health background, police interactions, and access to firearms, seeking to understand how similar tragedies can be prevented in the future.

Tumbler Ridge Massacre: Canada Investigates Shooter’s Mental Health, Police History

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