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What new research reveals about Gaza’s real death toll — and why it’s far higher than official figures

Update What new research reveals about Gaza’s real death toll — and why it’s far higher than official figures
A Palestinian woman reacts as a man carries an injured child pulled from the rubble of the Shaheen family home that was targeted in an Israeli strike in the Saftawi neighborhood, Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip on June 9, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 05 July 2025

What new research reveals about Gaza’s real death toll — and why it’s far higher than official figures

What new research reveals about Gaza’s real death toll — and why it’s far higher than official figures
  • Israel claims Gaza’s health ministry inflates civilian deaths, but a new survey suggests it may be undercounting them
  • Independent researchers estimate 83,740 people have died in Gaza since Oct. 7, 2023 — far more than official reports

LONDON: Since October 2023, Israel has been waging two parallel wars in Gaza: One, to destroy Hamas and rescue its hostages; the other, a propaganda campaign designed to discredit the tally of civilian fatalities issued by the Gaza Ministry of Health.

However, as new independent research suggests, far from exaggerating the number of deaths since Israel began its retaliation for the Oct. 7, 2023 attack, the Gaza Ministry of Health appears to have been significantly underestimating them.

According to the latest tally from the Ministry of Health, the total number of Palestinians killed since the war began is now approaching 55,000, with a further 126,000 injured.




A Palestinian man carries a child pulled from the rubble of the Shaheen family home that was targetted in an Israeli strike in the Saftawi neighborhood, Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip on June 9, 2025. (AFP)

A paper published by a team of researchers in the US, UK, Norway and Belgium, working in collaboration with the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research in Gaza, shows the death toll is likely far higher.

As of January 5 this year, it found the total number of violent deaths over the course of the conflict had already reached 75,200.

This figure, derived independently of the Ministry of Health, is based on an exhaustive household survey, which revealed another disturbing statistic about the war in Gaza.

In addition to the 75,200 violent deaths, the survey highlighted a further 8,540 non-violent deaths caused by indirect factors, including disease, hunger, and loss of access to medical treatment and medication.




Palestinian men, wounded in gunfire as people were receiving humanitarian aid in Rafah, arrive for treatment at congested Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on July 3, 2025. (AFP)

That brings the total number of deaths resulting from the war in Gaza since October 2023 to 83,740.

“Our estimate for the number of violent deaths far exceeds the figures from the Ministry of Health,” said Michael Spagat, a professor of economics at Royal Holloway College, University of London, the lead author of the study and chairman of the board of trustees of the UK charity Every Casualty Counts.

“The implication of this is that the ministry has not been exaggerating the number of violent deaths.”

IN NUMBERS

75,200 Violent deaths resulting from the war in Gaza.

8,540 Non-violent deaths caused by indirect factors.

83,740 Total number of deaths since October 2023.

(Source: Gaza Mortality Survey)

The ministry has also been accused of falsifying the number of children killed in Israeli attacks. But “the demographics of the ministry’s figures seem to be about right,” said Spagat.

“The proportion of women, elderly, and children among the dead in its figures is consistent with what we found.”

The new research estimates that 56 percent of those killed between October 2023 and January this year — 42,200 of the total 75,200 victims — were either women, children, or those aged over 65.





Palestinian civil defense first responders and other people inspect the remains of a burnt-down classroom following an Israeli strike at the UNRWA's Osama bin Zaid school in the Saftawi district of Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip on June 27, 2025. (AFP)

More than half of these (22,800) were children under the age of 18, meaning that almost one in three of those killed in Gaza up to January this year was a child.

The Gaza Mortality Survey, which in line with standard academic procedure received ethical pre-approval from the University of London and obtained informed consent from each respondent, was conducted between Dec. 30, 2024, and Jan. 5, 2025.

Ten two-person teams from the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research, tracked by GPS and real-time monitoring, conducted face-to-face questionnaire-based interviews, which were recorded on tablets and phones, and uploaded data instantly to a secure central server.

The survey teams visited a sample of 2,000 households, representative of prewar Gaza, and collected information about the “vital status” of 9,729 household members and their newborn children ­­— including whether they were alive or dead and, if dead, how they had died.

The survey, said Spagat, “would have been impossible without the support of the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research.




Economics professor Michael Spagat of Royal Holloway College, University of London. (Supplied)

“First of all, we would not have been let into Gaza, but our partner was already there. They have experienced survey researchers in Gaza, and they were the ones who conducted the interviews.

“Also crucial was that this organization has been tracking population movements since the war began. If we were doing a survey in Gaza under stable conditions, we would have a list of where people are, based on the last census. But there has been so much displacement the census-based list was of limited value.”

Instead, because it has been tracking population movements throughout the war, the PCPSR was able to identify 200 sample sites sheltering internally displaced people which reflected the distribution of pre-2023 populations, including in the now inaccessible areas of northern Gaza, Gaza City, and Rafah.





Palestinian civil defense first responders and other people inspect the remains of a burnt-down classroom following an Israeli strike at the UNRWA's Osama bin Zaid school in the Saftawi district of Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip on June 27, 2025. (AFP)

As with all such research, all the numbers come with a cautionary “confidence interval” — a margin of error that shows the possible range of figures, allowing for under- and overestimation. For the total number of violent deaths estimated by the survey, this gives a range of between 63,600 and 86,800.

“Even the lowest figure is a big number, and about 16,000 above the comparable Ministry of Health figure at the time of the survey,” said Spagat.

“We have tried to draw conclusions that we are quite confident won’t get overturned by further research, and one of our conclusions is that the Ministry of Health is not capturing all of the deaths in Gaza and that there is a substantial degree of undercount there.”

He added: “Our estimate for the number of children killed (22,800) is shockingly high, and well above the Ministry of Health figure.”




A Health Ministry rescue team is seen at work in the Zarqa neighborhood in northern Gaza City following an Israeli strike on October 26, 2024. (AFP/File)

Taking into account the survey’s confidence interval, the number of child deaths could range from a low of 16,700 to as many as 28,800. And at either end of that scale, said Spagat, “that is an awful lot of children.”

It is, he said, “possible that the true number of total violent deaths is even below the bottom of our confidence interval, but it’s extremely unlikely to be so far below it that it would overturn our conclusion that the Ministry of Health is not capturing all of the deaths.”

He is anxious that the survey’s conclusions should in no way be seen as a criticism of the Ministry of Health, “which has had a lot on its plate.”

In fact, although the ministry’s tally is not fully comprehensive — it has, for instance, yet to compile or release figures for non-violent war-related deaths, which this survey has revealed for the first time — Spagat said its work should be highly commended.




A man reacts as others gather to watch the burial of some of the 88 bodies in a mass grave in Khan Yunis on September 26, 2024. The bodies were recovered after Israeli strikes on civilian homes. (AFP/File)

Despite the constant criticism by Israel and its supporters, the work it is doing, under extreme conditions, “is exceptionally transparent,” he said.

“For each person they’re saying is dead, they’re listing a name and they’re listing a national ID number, a sex, and age.”

The first list of the dead was released by the ministry in October last year, in response to accusations that it was making up the numbers killed by Israel.

One factor that has been widely overlooked by critics of the ministry’s figures is the significance of the ID numbers.




Based on 2,000 household interviews, researchers say many deaths in Gaza have gone uncounted due to displacement. (AFP)

“It’s the Israelis who maintain the population register for the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, and East Jerusalem, so at a minimum, they can take that list and they can check to verify that everyone listed on it is a real person,” said Spagat.

“They must have done some checking like this, and I’ve got to believe that if the Ministry of Health was just making up names Israel would have made that known.”

Ultimately, Spagat believes, the lists being compiled by Gaza’s Ministry of Health “will serve as a memorial for the people who are killed in a way that just recording a number can’t. By listing people individually, you are recording some semblance of who they were as human beings.”

The model for this, he said, was the Kosovo Memory Book, an exhaustive record of all those killed, missing, or disappeared in the fighting between 1998 and 2000, compiled by the Humanitarian Law Center in Kosovo.




A view of the wall plaques at a memorial dedicated to the victims of the Racak massacre, in the village of Racak, Kosovo. (AFP)

This record, say its authors, “calls everyone to pause in front of it, to read each name and find out who these people were and how they died. It urges people to remember people.”

In time, it adds, “when the data on the fate of those who are still missing are finally obtained … the Kosovo Memory Book will have become the most reliable witness to our recent past.”

When peace finally comes to Gaza, said Spagat, “I hope there will be funding for research on this scale (based) on the really good foundations being laid by the Ministry of Health.”


Syrian authorities arrest Assad-era war-crimes suspect

Syrian authorities arrest Assad-era war-crimes suspect
Updated 9 sec ago

Syrian authorities arrest Assad-era war-crimes suspect

Syrian authorities arrest Assad-era war-crimes suspect
  • Hussein Kalla Shukr was captured after a citizen reported his location in the Mediterranean region of Latakia
  • Investigations revealed his participation in mutilating the bodies of Syrians while serving in militias linked to the Assad regime

LONDON: Authorities in the Syrian Arab Republic arrested a suspect from the Assad era for war crimes against civilians committed during the country's civil strife after 2011.

The Internal Security Command announced on Thursday that it had arrested Hussein Kalla Shukr — a former regime member accused of involvement in war crimes — in the Mediterranean region of Latakia.

The ministry said that Shukr was captured after a citizen reported his location, and he has been referred to the Counterterrorism Directorate for further investigation pending trial.

Investigations uncovered his alleged participation in the mutilation of the bodies of Syrians while serving in militias linked to the Assad regime. After the regime collapsed in December 2024, Shukr reportedly formed a gang that was involved in drug trafficking and theft of public property, according to the ministry.


Pope Leo raises ‘tragic situation in Gaza’ in meeting with Israeli president

Pope Leo raises ‘tragic situation in Gaza’ in meeting with Israeli president
Updated 15 min 35 sec ago

Pope Leo raises ‘tragic situation in Gaza’ in meeting with Israeli president

Pope Leo raises ‘tragic situation in Gaza’ in meeting with Israeli president
  • The pontiff also called for the release of the remaining hostages held by Hamas, the statement said
  • Leo has in the past taken a more cautious tone than Francis when speaking about Israel’s military campaign in Gaza

VATICAN CITY: Pope Leo discussed the “tragic situation in Gaza” during a meeting on Thursday with Israeli President Isaac Herzog and called for a permanent ceasefire in the Palestinian enclave, the Vatican said.
The pontiff also called for the release of the remaining hostages held by the Palestinian militant group Hamas, the statement said, and reiterated the Vatican’s support for a two-state solution to the decades-long Israel-Palestinian conflict.
“A prompt resumption of negotiations was hoped for ... to secure the release of all hostages, urgently achieve a permanent ceasefire, facilitate the safe entry of humanitarian aid into the most affected areas, and ensure full respect for humanitarian law,” said the statement.
Herzog had earlier thanked Leo for the meeting on Thursday in a post on X, and said he had received a “warm welcome” at the Vatican.
“Religious leaders and all who choose the path of peace must stand together in calling for the immediate release of the hostages as a first and essential step toward a better future for the entire region,” said the president.
The Vatican did not immediately release further details about the meeting and did not say how long Leo and Herzog had spent together.
The Vatican released photos of the leaders greeting each other in the Vatican’s apostolic palace. In one image, the two stand posing side-by-side, neither smiling.
Leo, elected by the world’s cardinals in May to replace the late Pope Francis, has in the past taken a more cautious tone than Francis when speaking about Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.
Francis, who had led the Church for 12 years, had become a frequent critic of Israel. He suggested a study into whether Israel was committing genocide against the Palestinian people, which sparked sharp criticism from Israeli officials.
Leo has recently stepped up his calls for a halt to the war in Gaza. Last week, he issued what he called a “strong appeal” for an end during his weekly public audience.
Thursday’s release from the Vatican was notably longer than usual for statements about the pope’s meeting with foreign leaders, which typically only offer only a few lines of information and do not give specific details about the topics discussed by the pope.


Seven dead after migrant boat stranded in Med: NGO

Seven dead after migrant boat stranded in Med: NGO
Updated 45 min 49 sec ago

Seven dead after migrant boat stranded in Med: NGO

Seven dead after migrant boat stranded in Med: NGO
  • The survivors, the majority of them Sudanese, had been at sea for six days
  • The boat left Libya on August 27 but became stranded in international waters between Tunisia and Malta.

ROME: Seven people were lost at sea and 41 others were brought to Italy’s Lampedusa island after a migrant boat got into difficulty in the Mediterranean, German NGO Sea-Watch said Wednesday.
The survivors, the majority of them Sudanese, had been at sea for six days before landing on Lampedusa late Tuesday. They were rescued by Sea-Watch’s ship Aurora after refusing help from the Tunisian authorities, the NGO said.
According to the testimony of those on board, the boat left Libya on August 27 but became stranded in international waters between Tunisia and Malta.
Seven people were lost in the water.


Tunisian authorities ordered a supply ship operating in the Miskar gas fields to rescue the 41 survivors, and the Tunisian navy turned up days later — but the migrants refused to go with them, a Sea-Watch spokesman told AFP.
“Some of these people would rather die than be forced to Tunisia,” he said.
Sea-Watch, which monitored events with its observation aircraft, said that Malta refused its requests to help but it finally received permission from Tunisian authorities to collect the migrants.
The Aurora took them to Lampedusa, located just 90 miles (145 kilometers) off the Tunisian coast.
Tunisia is a key transit country for thousands of African migrants seeking to reach Europe by sea each year.
In 2023, Tunisia signed a 255-million-euro ($290-million) deal with the European Union, nearly half of which was earmarked for tackling irregular migration.
The deal aimed to bolster Tunisia’s capacity to stop boats leaving its shore, but campaigners say migrants face discrimination, racism and violence in the country.
Italy’s hard-right government backed the Tunisia deal as part of its efforts to stop the boats, which also included restricting the activities of NGO ships.

 


Scotland to hinder arms firms doing business with Israel

Scotland to hinder arms firms doing business with Israel
Updated 50 min 26 sec ago

Scotland to hinder arms firms doing business with Israel

Scotland to hinder arms firms doing business with Israel
  • Laws to be changed around financial support for firms working with governments accused of genocide
  • First Minister John Swinney: ‘The scale of suffering (in Gaza) is unimaginable. Nobody can ignore it’

LONDON: The Scottish government is to change its rules on financial support for arms manufacturers to deter them from doing business with countries justifiably accused of genocide, The Guardian reported.

Scottish First Minister John Swinney made the announcement after urging the UK to join a case at the International Court of Justice against Israel.

He said defense firms in Scotland would need to prove they do not do business with the Israeli military if they want financial assistance in future.

Swinney told the Scottish parliament: “The scale of suffering (in Gaza) is unimaginable. Nobody can ignore it. We must confront this crisis with urgency, compassion and an unwavering commitment to accountability.”

The Scottish Enterprise business agency and the Scottish National Investment Bank have been instructed not to offer financial support to companies that breach the new regulations.

Meanwhile, trade ties with Israel will be cooled, with Scottish Enterprise also being told not to help new export deals for non-military goods with the country.

According to investigative journalism platform The Ferret, Scottish Enterprise has awarded more than £2.75 million ($3.69 million) to defense firms Raytheon, Thales and Leonardo since January 2022, all of which have major contracts with the Israeli military.

A UK government source said Swinney’s moves are “all over the place,” after he also announced plans to help defense companies — many of which arm Israel — supplying munitions to Ukraine.

Defense manufacturing and exporting is a significant part of the Scottish economy. On Sunday, the UK announced that a £10 billion deal had been reached with Norway to supply it with at least five Type 26 frigates to be built by BAE Systems at shipyards just outside Glasgow. 

BAE is a major player in the global arms supply chain, and has repeatedly been criticized by activists for its role in manufacturing parts for the F-35 fighter jet, which is used extensively by the Israeli military in Gaza.

Earlier this year, BAE was the recipient of £9.22 million for a new training center for apprentices set up at the site that will see the construction of the Type 26 frigates.

Swinney said none of the funding for apprenticeships in the industry would be affected by efforts to hinder the arms trade with Israel.

Jamie Livingston, head of the anti-poverty charity Oxfam, said: “Gaza is being turned into a graveyard before our eyes. History will ask if leaders did everything they could to stop it. The first minister has committed to act; Westminster must do the same.”

A UK government spokesperson said: “We have suspended licences for exports of military equipment to the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) that might be used in operations in Gaza, subject to the special measures in place for exports to the global F-35 program, based on our assessment that these could be used to commit or facilitate serious violations of international humanitarian law.

“We will work with our allies and those in the region on a meaningful process towards a two-state solution and continue to do what we can to support the foundations of Palestinian statehood.”


Just 25% of Gaza war detainees are combatants: Israeli data

Just 25% of Gaza war detainees are combatants: Israeli data
Updated 04 September 2025

Just 25% of Gaza war detainees are combatants: Israeli data

Just 25% of Gaza war detainees are combatants: Israeli data
  • Probe: Overwhelming majority are civilians, including elderly, sick, children, healthcare workers
  • Rights group: ‘We believe the proportion of civilians among those detained is even higher than Israel’s own figures suggest’

LONDON: Three-quarters of Palestinians arrested in Gaza are civilians, including children, disabled people and healthcare workers, according to classified Israeli data.

The revelation comes after a joint investigation by The Guardian, +972 Magazine and Local Call, which found that among the detained were an 82-year-old woman with Alzheimer’s who was held for six weeks without charge, and a single mother taken for 53 days, forcing her children to beg on the street.

More than 47,000 people have been identified by Israel as militants fighting for Hamas and Islamic Jihad, drawn largely from the groups’ own files seized in Gaza.

Of these, 1,450 were identified in May as being in Israeli captivity, or just under 25 percent of all Palestinians detained in Gaza under Israel’s “unlawful combatants” law since the outbreak of the war in October 2023.

The law allows indefinite detention without charge. An additional 300 people identified by Israel as participants in the Hamas attack of Oct. 7, 2023, are also being held. 

No one has been charged in relation to Oct. 7 or the war so far, with Israel allowing a 180-day period before detainees gain access to a lawyer, and 75 days before appearing in front of a judge to confirm the legality of the detention.

However, the large number of civilian prisoners held under the law could be even greater, with Israeli newspaper Haaretz quoting senior officers in late 2023 that “85 to 90 percent” of prisoners taken by Israel were not Hamas members.

Tal Steiner, director of the Public Committee Against Torture, told The Guardian: “As soon as the wave of mass arrests began in Gaza in October 2023, there was serious concern that many uninvolved people were being detained without cause.

“This concern was confirmed when we learned that half of those arrested at the beginning of the war were eventually released, demonstrating that there had been no basis for their detention in the first place.”

The Sde Teiman military base at one point had so many elderly and disabled prisoners that the wing they were kept in was nicknamed “the geriatric pen,” an Israeli soldier who served there told the investigation.

“They brought men in wheelchairs, people without legs,” he said. “I always assumed the supposed excuse for arresting patients was that maybe they had seen the hostages or something.”

Samir Zaqout, deputy director of Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights, which has represented hundreds of civilians imprisoned by Israel, said: “We believe the proportion of civilians among those detained is even higher than Israel’s own figures suggest.”

He added: “At most, perhaps one in six or seven might have any link to Hamas or other militant factions, and even then, not necessarily through their military wings.”

A military medic who treated 82-year-old Alzheimer’s patient Fahamiya Al-Khalidi at Anatot detention center after she was taken from Gaza City in December 2023 told The Guardian: “I remember her limping badly toward the clinic. And she’s classified as an unlawful combatant. The way that label is used is insane.”

He added that he had treated a woman bleeding after suffering a miscarriage, and a breastfeeding mother who had been separated from her infant.

The mother, Abeer Ghaban, knew after she was detained that Israeli authorities had mistaken her estranged husband for a Hamas member with the same name.

Despite proving his identity through comparing photos, she was not released for weeks, leaving her three children to fend for themselves in a war zone. “They were alive, but seeing the state they had been in for 53 days without me broke me,” Ghaban said.

Hassan Jabareen, director of the Palestinian legal rights group Adalah, said the Israeli system “strips detainees of protections guaranteed under international law, including safeguards specifically intended for civilians, using the ‘unlawful combatant’ label to justify the systematic denial of their rights.”

An Israeli source at another military facility said soldiers wanted to hold innocent civilians longer to be used as leverage in hostage negotiations.

A spokesperson for Al-Mezan said: “Even before Oct. 7, Israel withheld the bodies of hundreds of Palestinians, using them as bargaining chips instead of returning them to their families for burial.

“We believe the thousands of civilians from Gaza now in detention are likewise intended to be used as bargaining chips.”