Israel/Palestine
Related: About this forumThe photo of the toddler who became a symbol of hunger in Gaza: Investigation shows he suffers from genetic disease
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Among the most influential visuals was a photo of 18-month-old Palestinian toddler Muhammad al-Matouq, taken by journalist Ahmad al-Arini. The imageshowing the child in a makeshift diaper made from a black trash bag held by his motherwas widely published by major outlets including CNN, The New York Times, Sky News, The Guardian, Daily Mail, The Times, and the BBC. Even the pro-Israel Daily Express featured it.
I took the photo to show the world the extreme hunger faced by babies and children in Gaza, al-Arini told the BBC. He said he found the boy and his mother living in a tent in Gaza City after being displaced from northern Gaza, with little more than a small stove inside. He claimed the toddler had dropped from 9 kg to 6 kgabout half the healthy weight for his ageand had never received breast milk, infant formula or supplements.
Al-Arini described the tent as resembling a grave, emphasizing the visual as symbolic of Gazas plight. But investigative journalist David Collier published a detailed report revealing that the child suffers not from starvation, but from rare genetic conditionsincluding cerebral palsy and blood oxygen deficiency. Collier based his findings on a medical report from the Basma Association for Aid in Gaza, signed by Dr. Saeed Mohammed al-Nassan, which stated the boy has required nutritional supplements since birth in December 2023two months after the war beganand that his medical condition stems from chronic illness affecting muscle tone, movement and posture. Collier also pointed out that al-Arinis photo omits the boys older brother Jude, age 3, who appears healthy in other, less widely distributed images. He noted that Muhammads mother, Huda, also shows no signs of severe malnutrition that would suggest an overall family food crisis.
On edit: this article is about unethical exploitation of a sick child by an unscrupulous journalist. Neither I nor the article made any comments about the starving Gazans beyond this particular case..

choie
(5,887 posts)I guess kids are not starving in Gaza. Glad you set the record straight.
Beastly Boy
(13,174 posts)Should I have kept quiet about it?
lapfog_1
(31,143 posts)That would be to allow hundreds of journalists into Gaza to report about things like whether or not children are starving.
But somehow the Israeli government doesn't want that to happen.
Oh, and stop censoring the reporting from Gaza. That would help too.
Then reasonable people can make up their own minds about what is happening there.
Beastly Boy
(13,174 posts)So I don't disagree with your post in principle at all.
Regardless, when blatant disregard for journalistic integrity becomes evident, it is important to shed light on it. I can't se how this can be objected to.
Jilly_in_VA
(12,534 posts)He cannot also be STARVING, FFS! Your post is disingenuous, to put it mildly!!!!!!
Beastly Boy
(13,174 posts)He could also have been starving, or not, but that wouldn't have reflected on his appearance as much as his genetic condition.
His appearance was deceptively presented as evidence of starvation, with no mention of his genetic predisposition to it. He deserves all the sympathy either way. It is the reporter who exploited his appearance who is a scumbag.
I didn't think I would have to explain this self-evident point.
choie
(5,887 posts)The excuses for total absence of journalistic integrity are appalling.
jmbar2
(7,106 posts)Kids who are already sick and disabled shouldn't be starved any more than kids who were healthy before Israel attacked them.
Beastly Boy
(13,174 posts)What we do know, it wouldn't have been improved if he were the best fed child in the world.
jrthin
(5,204 posts)Beastly Boy
(13,174 posts)Who would do it if I didn't?
vanessa_ca
(375 posts)Beastly Boy
(13,174 posts)But shameless is OK with me.
vanessa_ca
(375 posts)you and your pal David Collier want us to scrutinize one photo of a malnourished child whose alleged cerebral palsy would be greatly exacerbated by the horrendous situation in Gaza, rather than look at the growing pile of skeletal, dead children behind him. Israel has been starving Gaza's children for YEARS.
This poor baby needed specialist medical supplements since birth. Did he get them? Most probably not what with the cruel blockade.
Despicable.
Beastly Boy
(13,174 posts)Publishing fictitious reports is ethical, and calling someone out on publishing fictitious reports is unethical, right?
Let me stand on my head and look at your post again. Maybe it will make more sense.
And does David Collier know he is my pal? I never met him in my life, but you seem to know better. You seem to know what I want you to do better than me. Can I rely on your recollection instead of mine? Or perhaps we should ask Mr. Collier. I want a second opinion before jumping to conclusions.
NewHendoLib
(61,264 posts)mike_c
(36,652 posts)Seriously? You felt compelled to suggest that if one starving child also has cerebral palsy, then maybe all those starving Gazans are just antisemitic propaganda? That is despicable, despite your last sentence attempt to distance yourself from it. If a starving child is sick, do you suggest it's OK to starve children if they're ill, or that their illness excuses their deliberate starvation? Is deliberately starving Palestinian children more or less evil than shooting or bombing them? Or their families? This has gone well beyond any appropriate response to Hamas.
Beastly Boy
(13,174 posts)aggravated by exploiting a sick child to score undeserved publicity.
I remember a time when forging content like this used to get people discredited and condemned in public.
When did forgery become worthy of defending?
OilemFirchen
(7,279 posts)That's literally incredible.
Beastly Boy
(13,174 posts)I am speechless.
Israeli
(4,431 posts)Never heard of him .
Have you heard of Nir Hasson ???
This Week, Israel Starved 43 People to Death by Wednesday Afternoon. The Gaza War Is in a Fatal New Phase
For Israeli decision-makers, starvation of the Gaza Strip was in the cards from day one of the war
By Nir Hasson
Jul 25 2025
About 30,000 people live in the southern Israeli city of Sderot. Imagine that the refrigerators of all Sderot residents are empty. In fact, they don't even have refrigerators. The bakeries are closed. The supermarket shelves offer nothing. Residents are hungry. And then, once every 24 hours, a single truck enters the city gates and distributes food, door to door. And the food on that truck? That's all there is, for the entire city.
About 30,000 people also live in Or Akiva. And in Arad. Each city gets one truck a day.
Will the residents of Sderot still be hungry by the end of the day? And what will happen after a week? And after a month?
According to official data from the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories, which is responsible for carrying out the government's civilian policy in those areas, an average of 71 trucks entered the Gaza Strip each day over the past month. Seventy-one trucks meant to feed 2.1 million people. One truck for every 30,000. Half of the trucks made it to a distribution center but the other half of them, brought in by the United Nations and various aid organizations, were looted en route.
It's a pitiful amount of food. But one can only wish the Sderot scenario was the reality in Gaza. The situation there is much worse.
In Gaza, the truck does not distribute food door to door. Half of the food it carries is unloaded in large piles in remote military zones. The gates there open for just 15 minutes a day, according to a random schedule. You're reading that right: 15 minutes a day.
People loot the other half of the goods straight from the trucks. In both cases, those who manage to get to the food are almost exclusively young men, those who can carry heavy loads, run fast and are willing to risk their lives.
Over 1,000 have died so far while crowding around to get food, since late May, most of them from Israel Defense Forces gunfire.
What happens to those who can't make it to the trucks or the distribution centers? What about the women, the disabled, the sick, the elderly? What about the unlucky?
They are starving to death.
Gaza and Sderot are a world apart. Two million Gazans have been starving, to varying extents, for nearly two years now. Throughout this time, most of them have eaten almost no vegetables, fruit, dairy products, meat or fish. They live in tattered tents, among rubble, without even the most basic sanitation. Their blood lacks sufficient iron, vitamins and protein; their immune systems are on the verge of collapse.
The food packages being distributed contain flour, rice and chickpeas, but there's no cooking gas in the Strip, and no firewood.
Many people died in Gaza this week. Many were killed in IDF strikes, some died of their wounds, others succumbed to illness. Starting this week, we must also count how many people are dying of starvation. As of this writing on Wednesday afternoon, 43 people died since the beginning of the week because Israel starved them.
Source : Haaretz
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