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“These staggering figures are both appalling and heartbreaking. Influential actors in the international community have not only failed to hold Israel to account, they are also complicit in the atrocities by continuing to unconditionally supply it with arms. It will take generations to recover from the devastating impacts of this war and there is still no ceasefire in sight.”

Sally Abi Khalil
Oxfam’s Middle East and North Africa Director

“For children, the trauma is equally profound. Over 25,000 children have either lost a parent or become orphans, leaving them in deep emotional distress. Most children are grappling with anxiety and severe physical injuries, with many having lost limbs.”

Dr Umaiyeh Khammash
Director of Oxfam partner, Juzoor Juzoor
Contact information:

Spokespersons are available for interviews. Please contact:

Oxfam Media office | Media.OPTI@oxfam.org  

For updates, please follow @NewsFromOxfam and @OxfamJerusalem

Notes to editors:
  • The data is available to journalists upon request 
  • Oxfam analyzed the number of women directly killed by conflict comparison based on The Small Arms Survey Global Violent Deaths database, which contains the latest data available from 2004 to 2021. It includes data and estimates on direct conflict deaths disaggregated by gender of the victims. The previous highest number of women estimated to be killed in a conflict in one year was 2,647 in Iraq in 2016. Even accounting for potential under-reporting of women killed in other conflicts, the death toll in Gaza is much higher. It was compared with the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) cumulative impact report on 25 September, sourced from the Ministry of Health in Gaza. The Ministry does not differentiate between civilian and combatant deaths.
  • A report by the organisation Every Casualty Counts examined the information available on the deaths of 11,420 children in the Syria conflict from March 2011 to the end of August 2013 (approximately 29 months), which averages 394 children a month - 4,725 children a year 
  • The Children and Armed Conflict reports issued by the Secretary General of the UN started reporting consistently on grave violations against children in 2006, with annual data for the previous year.  The UN reports contain both verified and estimated figures for the number of children killed each year, but even when Oxfam factored in the most extreme assumptions for each estimation and checked additional data sources, the number of children killed in Gaza far exceeds any single year for children killed in all conflicts. These figures were then compared with the OCHA report 
  • The total number of children killed in Gaza and the West Bank according to the UN Children and Armed Conflict reports between 2005 and 2022 is 2,304. 11,355 children have been killed so far this year, which is 4.9 times more, when compared with the OCHA report 
  • There is limited, verified data available for the number of women and children killed directly by conflict during the Tigray civil war (November 2020 – November 2022) in northern Ethiopia. While there are some women fatalities for Ethiopia within The Small Arms Survey report, the most referenced data is from the University of Ghent which estimates between 300,000 to 600,000 civilian deaths over a two-year period. Of the well-documented 3,074 deaths, 8 per cent were women and 9 per cent children (under 20 years of age). The study estimates that 10 per cent of total deaths were victims of bombing and massacres, 30 per cent due to lack of healthcare and 60 per cent due to starvation 
  • Human Rights Watch published an analysis of the 7 October 2023 attacks and the Times of Israel documented the number of Israeli child hostages 
  • Action On Armed Violence (AOAV) records, investigates and disseminates evidence of armed violence against civilians worldwide. Data from 7 October to 23 September inclusive showed 2,854 Israeli explosive strikes – including airstrikes, missiles and tank shelling – with information including the date, event description, number of civilians killed and location. AOAV uses English-language media reports to capture the information. An AOAV report last year found that English-language media underreports the number of casualties caused by specific incidents of explosive weapons use, capturing only roughly a third of the actual civilian deaths from specific explosive incidents in Gaza.  
  • Counting the dead in Gaza: difficult but essential was published in The Lancet in July this year, studying indirect deaths in Gaza due to the war.