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STUDY: Gaza Death Toll Could be 40% Higher

The number reported by the Palestinian Health Ministry is undercounted, new research suggests

by Editor Asiatoday
January 11, 2025
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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NATO Member to Join Genocide Case Against Israel

Genocide in Gaza. FILE: UN

ASIATODAY.ID, GAZA – The official Palestinian death toll from the Israel-Hamas conflict may be significantly lower than the actual number, a new report has found. The paper was published in The Lancet medical journal on Thursday, the same day Gaza’s Health Ministry announced that the death toll from the 15-month conflict exceeded 46,000.

According to the report, the official Palestinian tally in Gaza in the first nine months of the war likely undercounted the number of deaths by around 40%.

The researchers attribute the discrepancy to the collapse of healthcare infrastructure in the besieged enclave and the challenges of accurate record-keeping during the conflict.

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The study, conducted by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in collaboration with Yale University, used a statistical method known as capture-recapture analysis to estimate deaths. The approach compares multiple independent data sources to account for unreported fatalities.

The researchers estimate that 64,260 deaths occurred due to traumatic injuries from October 2023 to June 2024, around 41% higher than the official Palestinian Health Ministry count for that period.

“The estimated annualised mortality from traumatic injury of 39.3 per 1000 people is exceptionally high, surpassing rates seen during earlier conflicts in the Gaza Strip,” the report reads.

Over 59% of the victims were women, children, and elderly individuals, the document said.

Israeli officials have said the country’s military goes to great lengths to avoid civilian casualties. The report’s authors, however, have cast doubt on these claims.

“The scale and age-sex patterns of traumatic injury deaths raise grave concerns about the conduct of the military operation in Gaza despite Israel stating that it is acting to minimise civilian casualties,” the document reads.

The reliability of casualty statistics has been a contentious issue throughout the conflict. In December, a report by the Henry Jackson Society, a London-based security think tank, alleged that Hamas had vastly inflated the death toll to garner international sympathy.

The conflict began on October 7, 2023, when the militant group Hamas launched a large-scale attack on Israel, resulting in over 1,200 deaths. In response, Israel launched a massive air and ground offensive in Gaza, declaring that it will not stop until Hamas is eliminated.

The UN has documented substantial civilian casualties in Gaza and has criticized Israel’s military tactics, suggesting that some actions may amount to serious violations of international law, including war crimes and crimes against humanity. (RT)

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