Malnourished Palestinian woman flown to Italy dies in hospital

TIMES International
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Palestinian children and their families evacuated from Gaza, arrive at Rome's Ciampino military airport, Thursday, August 14, 2025. Photo: AP/UNB

A Palestinian woman who was evacuated from Gaza to Italy to receive treatment while severely emaciated has died, according to the hospital on Saturday.

Marah Abu Zuhri, 20, had arrived in Italy with her mother, and was admitted to Pisa University Hospital late Wednesday, reports AP.

She died on Friday after entering a respiratory crisis and subsequently going into cardiac arrest, the hospital said in a statement. She was removed from the Gaza Strip as part of a humanitarian mission and arrived with a “with a very complex, compromised clinical picture,” according to the hospital.

Hospital staff had performed tests and started supportive therapy before she died, the statement said.

Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said almost 120 Palestinians — 31 patients and their families — had been flown to Rome, Milan and Pisa on three planes. In a post on X, Tajani said that it was the 14th medical evacuation of Palestinians that Italy had conducted since January 2024, and the largest.

The hospital did not specify whether the woman had suffered from malnutrition, but said that she had arrived in a “state of severe physical deterioration.”

Earlier in the week, United Nations spokesman Stephane Dujarric said that starvation and malnutrition in Gaza were at their highest levels since the Israel-Hamas war began.

The UN says nearly 12,000 children under 5 were found to have acute malnutrition in July — including more than 2,500 with severe malnutrition, the most dangerous level. The World Health Organization says the numbers are likely an undercount.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last month no one in Gaza is starving. “There is no policy of starvation in Gaza, and there is no starvation in Gaza,” he said.

US President Donald Trump responded to Netanyahu’s claim by noting the images emerging of emaciated people. “I don’t know,” Trump said when asked if he agreed with the Israeli leader’s comment. “I mean, based on television, I would say not particularly because those children look very hungry.”

Over the past two weeks, Israel has allowed around triple the amount of food into Gaza than what had been entering since late May.

That was after two and a half months when Israel barred all food, medicine and other supplies, saying it was to pressure Hamas to release hostages taken during its October 2023 attack that launched the war.

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