A rigorous analysis published on Saturday
of Hamas authorities’ death statistics in Gaza shows they were vastly
inflated and methodologically flawed.
The report by
the London-based Henry Jackson Society security think tank breaks down
the figure of about 44,000 deaths since Oct. 7, 2023, that the
Hamas-controlled health ministry in Gaza has published, and which
international media have reported without scrutiny.
The scale of civilian deaths in Gaza is a
key element in a legal and propaganda attempt by Israel’s enemies to
isolate it internationally using false allegations of genocide.
The figure, which does not distinguish
between civilians and the 17,000 terrorists Israel says it has killed in
Gaza, also includes about 5,000 people who die of natural causes each
year, states the report.
“This report raises serious concerns that
the Gaza MoH figures have been overstated,” wrote Andrew Fox, an analyst
who specializes in defense, the Middle East and disinformation, who
wrote the report for the Henry Jackson Society.
The report was reported on Saturday in mainstream media, including the New York Post and The Telegraph, whose article the Israel Foreign Ministry reposted on X.
‘Questionable Counting’
“The data behind their figures contains
natural deaths, deaths from before this conflict began and deaths of
those killed by Hamas itself; it contains no mention of Hamas combatant
fatalities; and it overstates the number of women and children killed,”
reads the report, titled “Questionable Counting: Analysing the Death
Toll from the Hamas-Run Ministry of Health in Gaza.”
Some cancer patients were listed as
requiring treatment after they had already been listed as war
causalities. Jihad Mahmoud Adeeb Al-Taweel, ID number 950130153, was
described in an April 15 list as a patient with laryngeal cancer, two
weeks after being listed as a war fatality.
The report outlined additional statistical
inconsistencies in the data collection process, including in the
hospitals that reported it to the health ministry.
A “dramatic change happened in reports
from al-Aqsa hospital [in Deir al-Balah], where the claimed number of
fatalities jumped from 4,994, as per the 31 March 2024 report, to 6,608
just a week later. At the same time, the number of children jumped from
1,294 to 2,142, meaning children were responsible for 52.5% of the sharp
increase,” the report said.
In a Dec. 10 article about the latest death statistics by the health ministry in Gaza, The Palestine Chronicle
reported that “Palestinian and international organizations say that the
majority of those killed and wounded are women and children”—a claim
that anti-Israel activists often cite to promote the genocide charge
against the Jewish state.
But Fox’s report found that “most
fatalities are men aged 15–45, contradicting claims that civilian
populations are being disproportionately targeted.” Deaths reported by
families, as opposed to how they are listed by the health ministry,
“suggests that many fatalities classified as civilian may be combatants,
a distinction omitted from official reporting,” the Fox report states.
On Dec. 10, Hamas’s Government Media
Office wrote that nearly 44% of 44,758 reported fatalities in the Gaza
Strip were children. The report disputes this data, showing cases of
adults being listed as children. The document also shows that the
Government Media Office, which says its data come from the health
ministry, routinely inflates the share of women and children in the
statistics.
The health ministry data also shows that
men have been misclassified as women, the Fox report states. “In the
August 2024 list, 103 names were marked as female who had a male first
name (e.g. Mohammed).”
The report comes as Israel is on trial for
alleged genocide at the International Court of Justice and prosecutions
for alleged crimes against humanity at the International Criminal Court
against Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Israel and the United States, among other countries, have categorically
rejected and condemned those charges.
Israel’s advocates have said that even
Hamas’s unreliable statistics, when combined with the Israeli estimates
on the number of terrorists killed in the Gaza Strip, reveal a
relatively low rate of civilian deaths. Considering the urban warfare
conditions of the Gaza Strip, and Hamas’s strategy of using civilian
shields, Israel’s defenders say the statistics reflect a major effort to
avoid civilian loss of life during IDF operations to dismantle Hamas
and free Israeli hostages.
An estimated 6,000 Palestinian terrorists
invaded Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, murdering some 1,200 people and
abducting another 250. About 100 hostages remain in the Gaza Strip,
though dozens of them are believed to have died. Israel and Hamas are
engaged in indirect talks for a ceasefire. The condition of the hostages
is unknown as Hamas has not allowed aid organizations, including the
Red Cross, to visit them.
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