
-
Manchester gives hometown heroes Oasis rapturous reception
-
Canada just can't win in trade war with Trump
-
US State Department begins mass layoffs
-
Fuel to Air India jet engines cut off moments before crash: probe
-
Chelsea out to stop PSG completing clean sweep in Club World Cup final
-
Ecuador's top drug lord agrees to US extradition
-
Son of Mexico's 'El Chapo' pleads guilty in US drugs case
-
500 tourists evacuated from Grand Canyon wildfires
-
Italy join Spain in Women's Euro 2025 quarter-finals
-
Chelsea's Fernandez warns of 'dangerous' heat at Club World Cup
-
Maresca optimistic for Chelsea against 'best in world' PSG
-
Trump voices shock at devastating scale of Texas flood damage
-
Sinner unfazed by French Open collapse as he prepares for Alcaraz rematch
-
Lyles scorches to comeback win, Alfred conquers 100m
-
'Superman' aims to save flagging film franchise, not just humanity
-
Forest winger Elanga signs for Newcastle
-
Liverpool to retire Diogo Jota's number 20 shirt
-
'Still in the game': Lyles outstrips Tebogo in season-opening 200m
-
Bumrah proud of 'really special' five-wicket haul at Lord's
-
Son of Mexico's 'El Chapo' pleads guilty in US drugs case: report
-
Mob lynches five alleged thieves in quake-hit Guatemalan town
-
South Korea's Lee carves out narrow halfway lead at Evian
-
Paris glory means nothing to Alcaraz ahead of Sinner rematch in Wimbledon final
-
Lightweight boxing champion Davis arrested: reports
-
US appeals court scraps 9/11 mastermind's plea deal
-
Djokovic admits age catching up with him after Wimbledon defeat
-
Alcaraz, Sinner will resume rivalry in Wimbledon final
-
Part of Grand Canyon evacuated as wildfire spreads
-
Venus Williams, 45, accepts wildcard for WTA DC Open
-
Trump in Texas to survey flood damage as scrutiny of response mounts
-
Sinner mauls Djokovic to reach first Wimbledon final
-
Australia's Aboriginals win bid for UNESCO listing of ancient site
-
Archer strikes on Test return before India's Gill falls cheaply
-
Latest Grok chatbot turns to Musk for some answers
-
Moscow sizzles in record-breaking heatwave
-
PKK militants want to enter Turkish politics: top commander
-
MSF warns acute malnutrition soaring in Gaza
-
France probes X over claims algorithm enabled 'foreign interference'
-
Wimbledon withdrawal 'most painful moment' for Dimitrov
-
Three Cambodia genocide sites added to UNESCO register
-
Alcaraz reaches third successive Wimbledon final, Djokovic faces Sinner
-
Wildfire forces evacuation of part of Grand Canyon
-
Crystal Palace demoted to UEFA Conference League for multi-club breach
-
Trump's tariff threats and delays: state of play
-
Alcaraz subdues Fritz to reach third successive Wimbledon final
-
She's Electric: Manchester wired as 'Oasis Day' dawns
-
Pogacar pounces to retake Tour de France lead
-
Pogacar pounces to retakes Tour de France lead
-
Archer strikes with third ball on Test return against India
-
Spurs sign Kudus but Gibbs-White move stalls

MSF warns acute malnutrition soaring in Gaza
Doctors Without Borders warned Friday that its teams on the ground in Gaza were witnessing surging levels of acute malnutrition in the besieged and war-ravaged Palestinian territory.
The medical charity, known by its French acronym MSF, said levels of acute malnutrition had reached an "all-time high" at two of its facilities in the Gaza Strip.
"MSF teams are witnessing a sharp and unprecedented rise in acute malnutrition among people in Gaza," the organisation said in a statement.
"In Al-Mawasi clinic, southern Gaza, and the MSF Gaza Clinic in the north, we are seeing the highest number of malnutrition cases ever recorded by our teams in the Strip."
MSF said it now had more than 700 pregnant and breastfeeding women and nearly 500 children with severe and moderate malnutrition currently enrolled in ambulatory therapeutic feeding centres in both clinics.
The numbers at the Gaza City clinic had almost quadrupled in under two months, from 293 cases in May to 983 cases at the start of this month, it said.
"This is the first time we have witnessed such a severe scale of malnutrition cases in Gaza," Mohammed Abu Mughaisib, MSF's deputy medical coordinator in Gaza, said in the statement.
- 'Intentional' starvation -
"The starvation of people in Gaza is intentional," he charged, insisting that "it can end tomorrow if the Israeli authorities allow food in at scale".
Starting in March, Israel blocked deliveries of food and other crucial supplies into Gaza for more than two months, leading to warnings of famine across a territory widely flattened by Israeli bombing since Hamas's deadly October 7, 2023 attack on Israel.
Israel began allowing food supplies to trickle in at the end of May, but using a new US- and Israel-backed organisation called the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).
That group's operations, which effectively sidelined a vast UN aid delivery network in Gaza, have been marred by chaotic scenes and near-daily reports of Israeli forces firing on people waiting to collect rations.
The UN said Friday that at least 615 people had been killed in the vicinity of GHF sites since May 27. The organisation itself denies that fatal shootings have occurred in the immediate vicinity of its aid points.
MSF maintained Friday that "the existence of malnutrition in Gaza is the result of deliberate, calculated choices by the Israeli authorities".
They have decided, it said, to "restrict the entry of food to the bare minimum for survival, dictate and militarise the means of its subsequent distribution, all while having destroyed the majority of local food production capacity".
MSF described how injured patients at its clinics warned that its malnourished patients were "begging for food instead of medicine, their wounds failing to close due to protein deficiency".
Far more babies were also being born prematurely, while six-month pregnant women often weighed no more than 40 kilos (88 pounds), it said.
"The situation is beyond critical," said MSF doctor Joanne Perry.
O.M.Souza--AMWN