What we can and can’t know about the death toll in Gaza - Poynter (2024)

From the earliest days of the Israel-Hamas war, global leaders have questioned the reliability of fatality data coming out of Gaza. In October, without citing a specific reason, President Joe Biden said he had“no confidence”in the numbers.

Today, the overall figure of people dead is reported at about 35,000. But there’s no clear understanding about how many of these people are combatants and how many are civilians.

That’s because over most of the conflict, the figures have come from Gaza’s Ministry of Health, an agency of the region’s Hamas-controlled government.

Hamas, identified as a terrorist organization by the U.S. in 1997, has ruled Gaza since it swept a majority in 2006 parliamentary elections. After Hamas-led militants attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing more than 1,200 people, Israel in its retaliationlargely blockedforeign journalistsfrom entering the Gaza strip. Israeliprotesters blockedhumanitarian aid. And Israeli attacks crushed Gaza’s infrastructure, fueling mounting concern about the Ministry of Health’s fatality data’s accuracy.

Without any other options, the United Nations and other leaders rely on Hamas government figures despite little transparency over its sources or methodology.

Its Ministry of Health describes all casualties asvictims of“Israeli aggression.”

Confusion over the figures reached a boiling pointMay 8, when the U.N. released data thatshowed a significant reduction in the number of women and children who had died Gaza:

OnMay 6,the U.N.had reported greater than 9,500 women and greater than 14,500 children dead. Two days later, the figures showed 4,959 women and 7,797 children.

“UN halves estimates of women and children killed in Gaza,” MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” cohost Joe Scarborough wrote in a May 12X post. Scarborough shareda May 11 Jerusalem Post articleand said, “Apparently, the Hamas figures repeatedly cited are false.”

Israeli officials also seized on the change: “The miraculous resurrection of the dead in Gaza,” Israel’s Foreign Minister Israel Katz wrote in aMay 13 X post. “The @UN had reduced its estimate of women and children killed in Gaza by 50% and claims that it relied on data from the Hamas Ministry of Health. Anyone who relies on fake data from a terrorist organization in order to promote blood libels against Israel is antisemitic and supports terrorism.”

AnotherMay 13 Instagram postsaid, “The UN quietly admitted the casualty numbers in Gaza were OVER INFLATED by nearly half.”

Others said that critiques of the Ministry of Health’s fatality data went too far. Edward Ahmed Mitchell, deputy executive director for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said that the reported death toll out of Gaza is likely an undercount of what he described as “mass slaughter.”

Louis Charbonneau, the U.N. director at Human Rights Watch, said no one is going to have exact numbers, but the Ministry of Health data is the best available. “Death tolls are a messy business — extremely difficult,” Charbonneau said. “And at the end of the day, no one is expecting 100% accuracy because it’s just impossible. We know the number’s big.”

How much can the available data tell us? It’s complicated.

Not according to the U.N.’s explanation.

Farhan Haq, deputy spokesman for the United Nations Secretary-General, said the overall number of fatalities recorded by authorities in Gaza and reported by the U.N. have “remained unchanged at more than 35,000 people” since Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas launched a violent attack on Israel. But the subcategorization on deaths of women and children changed because the ministry provided an updated breakdown of those whose identities it said had been fully documented. This was a smaller subset of the total number of fatalities.

Typically, when a conflict occurs, the U.N. gets its casualty data from what Haq described as “our trusted sources on the ground,” then it cross-checks that information. The scale and intensity of the fighting in Gaza, however, sets this conflict apart and, in this case, Haq said, the U.N. has no means to verify firsthand the Ministry of Health’s data.

Although the data cannot be interpreted as incontrovertible, the U.N., World Health Organization and organizations that track conflict casualties said Hamas’ government-sourced data should not be dismissed outright.

Following previous conflicts, the U.N.’s efforts to independently verify the Ministry of Health’s fatality data found onlysmall discrepancies. That said, this conflict stands apart in its scale of destruction, experts said, making the statistics’ reliability more of an open question.

Between theMay 6andMay 8updates, the total number of reported fatalities increased from34,735 peopleto34,844 people, including a subset of more than 10,000 people “reported missing or under the rubble.”

The Government Media Office provided the May 6 estimate of reported fatalities, which included more than 9,500 women and more than 14,500 children. The U.N.’s May 8 graphic’s demographic breakdown is what sparked confusion and concern.

That graphic shows the Ministry of Health’s data for a smaller subset of the nearly 35,000 reported casualties, Haq said. It provides a breakdown of demographic information for 24,686 people the ministry had fully identified with their dates of birth and death, gender and ID number and whose deaths it had documented as of April 30, U.N. spokesperson Jens Laerkeexplained May 17.

During aMay 13 briefing, Haq said the change came after the Ministry of Health provided an updated breakdown of fatalities “for whom full details have been documented.”

What we can and can’t know about the death toll in Gaza - Poynter (2)

(Screenshot/United Nations)

“Out of those, then — out of that smaller number, that subset of identified bodies — you have 7,797 children, 4,959 women, 1,924 elderly and 10,006 men,” Haq said during the briefing. People in the “elderly” group are not categorized by gender.

The Ministry of Health told the U.N. that it is still in the process of detailing the identities of all who are found dead, according to Haq.

We tried to contact the Government Media Office and Ministry of Health for additional information about the data but did not hear back.

Early in the conflict, fatality data came from public and private hospitals, where medical workers recorded names, ages, genders and ID numbers of people who died. The information went into an electronic database, according tonewsreports.

Attacks on hospitals andcommunications blackoutssignificantly impacted the quality of data over time, researchers at organizations that track data about armed conflict told us.

On Dec. 11, 2023, the Ministry of Health announced in a statistical digest that it had started incorporating media sources for its fatality figures, said David Adesnik, a senior fellow and research director at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a conservative, foreign policy-focused think tank. The ministry did not identify what media sources it was relying on but the proportion of data coming from media accounts increased over time, Adesnik said: “Media sources served as the documentation for more than three-fourths of deaths counted during the first three months of 2024.”

The biggest change in the U.N.’s data in early May wasn’t the data format, but its source, Adesnik said.

The May 6 update sourced its information on women and children killed to the Government Media Office; the May 8 update identified only the Ministry of Health.

During aMay 17 press briefing, Laerke said that the U.N. views the Ministry of Health as the “best available source” for fatality data. Although the Government Media Office breakdown was used for a period when the ministry couldn’t provide data, the U.N. switched back to the ministry’s data when it became available again “because we provide the best available data at the time of reporting.”

Salma Eissa, Middle East research manager for the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, said data quality has diminished.

“There has been a discernible downward trend in the quality of the data, which has continued since mid-February when only three of the eight Gaza hospitals meant to track fatalities were doing so,” Eissa said, citingApril analysisby U.K.-based Action on Armed Violence, which records and investigates armed violence against civilians globally.

Rachel Taylor, the executive director at Every Casualty Counts, a U.K.-based organization that focuses on recording and identifying armed violence deaths, said that the current scale of devastation means the Ministry of Health’s data collection methodology “can no longer be applied consistently” as it has in the past.

“Over the course of the violence, the hospitals have been destroyed,” said Taylor, who anticipates the actual numbers are higher than is being reported. “The morgues have been destroyed. The paper records have been destroyed. Healthcare professionals have been killed or displaced.”

In theMay 12 episodeof the “Call Me Back” podcast, IsraeliPrime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that about 14,000 combatants had been killed “and probably around 16,000 civilians have been killed.” We contacted the Israeli Defense Forcesfor additional information about that data and received no response.

Experts at the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project cautioned that the Ministry of Health’s list of identified fatalities includes some deaths that might be attributable to Palestinian armed groups or have undetermined causes.

PolitiFact Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report.

This fact check was originally published by PolitiFact, which is part of the Poynter Institute. See the sources for this fact check here.

What we can and can’t know about the death toll in Gaza - Poynter (2024)

FAQs

What we can and can’t know about the death toll in Gaza - Poynter? ›

Today, the overall figure of people dead is reported at about 35,000. But there's no clear understanding about how many of these people are combatants and how many are civilians.

Is the death toll accurate in Gaza? ›

But top humanitarian organizations and leading experts say that the numbers from the health ministry have historically proven reliable. The ministry's tally is largely calculated via hospital records, and it releases casualty updates every couple of hours.

How many people died in the Gaza war? ›

PARSING GAZA HEALTH MINISTRY DATA

The ministry said publicly on April 30 that 34,622 had died in the war. The AP analysis was based on the 22,961 individuals fully identified at the time by the Health Ministry with names, genders, ages, and Israeli-issued identification numbers.

How many people died in Gaza since October 7th? ›

October 7 was the date of the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel, and the beginning of Israel's relentless war on Gaza, which has killed more than 35,000 people and injured more than 70,000 more, with some 10,000 missing, presumed dead under the rubble of the destroyed Strip.

Has the death toll in Gaza been lowered? ›

The shift is significant because the death rate for women and children is the best available proxy for civilian casualties in one of the 21st century's most destructive conflicts. Women and children made up fewer than 40% of those killed in the Gaza Strip during April, down from more than 60% in October.

Is it safe to visit Gaza? ›

Gaza is an active conflict zone and is extremely dangerous. There are ongoing Israeli air strikes and land based IDF operations as well as a threat of civil unrest, shooting and rocket attacks. Rockets can land in both Gaza and Israel. Our ability to provide consular assistance in Gaza is extremely limited.

Is the water in Gaza safe? ›

Clean water is unavailable for most living in Gaza, and Israeli airstrikes are destroying water infrastructure and wells—in potential violation of international humanitarian law—in addition to taking thousands of lives and displacing almost two million Gazans.

Is Gaza Israel or Palestine? ›

The Gaza Strip (/ˈɡɑːzə/; Arabic: قِطَاعُ غَزَّةَ Qiṭāʿ Ġazzah [qɪˈtˤɑːʕ ˈɣaz.za]), or simply Gaza, is a polity and the smaller of the two Palestinian territories (the other being the West Bank). On the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea, Gaza is bordered by Egypt on the southwest and Israel on the east and north.

What percentage of Muslims live in Gaza? ›

Today, Islam is a prominent religion in both Gaza and the West Bank. Most of the population in the State of Palestine are Muslims (85% in the West Bank and 99% in the Gaza Strip).

How many Palestinians are left? ›

Based on population estimates prepared by PCBS, there are about 14.3 million Palestinians in the world in mid-2022, of whom about 5.35 million in the State of Palestine; 2.72 million males and 2.63 million females.

How many kids have been killed in Gaza? ›

7 attack on Israel, an estimated 13,450 children have been killed in Gaza, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health. Thousands more have been injured.

Who destroyed Gaza? ›

On Oct. 7, Hamas terrorists invaded Israel, and Israel retaliated with ongoing military operations in Gaza. Since the beginning of the retaliation, at least 34,735 people in Gaza have been killed and 78,108 have been injured, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health.

What will Gaza population be in 2030? ›

The coastal enclave is expected to experience a major demographic challenge in 2030 as the population will surpass 3 million people in the Gaza Strip, which is under a 16-year-long Israeli blockade, according to a Palestinian expert.

Is the death toll in Gaza inaccurate? ›

Despite its revision based on identified deaths, the U.N. maintains that the Gaza Health Ministry's overall death toll of more than 35,000 people killed in the ongoing Israeli military offensive in Gaza is reliable. Here's a closer look at the figures: The U.N.

How many people are dying daily in Gaza? ›

“Israel's military is killing Palestinians at an average rate of 250 people a day, which massively exceeds the daily death toll of any other major conflict of recent years,” Oxfam said in a statement.

How many Israeli soldiers have died in Gaza? ›

At least 307 Israeli troops have been killed and thousands wounded since October 27 when the ground invasion of Gaza was launched. At least 37,296 Palestinians – mostly women, children, and elderly – have died since the war began on October 7, Gaza's health ministry says.

Is the Gaza Health Ministry reliable? ›

Its numbers have historically been considered reliable by the United Nations, the World Health Organization, and Human Rights Watch. In relation to the Israel-Hamas war, two scientific studies published in The Lancet journal did not find evidence of inflation or fabrication.

How much of the water in Gaza is drinkable? ›

This has led to the alarming statistic that 97% of Gaza's water is unfit for human consumption.

How many hospitals are left in Gaza? ›

Current. The World Health Organization says only about 12 of Gaza's 36 hospitals are still able to function, although a total of 29 have suffered damage during the conflict. In all, 84% of health facilities are damaged or destroyed.

How many people died in the first battle of Gaza? ›

First Battle of Gaza
Strength
31,00019,000
Casualties and losses
523 killed 2,932 wounded 512 missing16 dead or wounded, 41 missing 300 killed, 750 wounded, 600 missing
9 more rows

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