BREAKING

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Starvation as a Weapon: Gaza's Children and Mothers Face Death While the World Watches


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Gaza is starving — and the silence from the world’s most powerful nations is deafening. The numbers are no longer just statistics. They are the hollowed cheeks of children, the sunken eyes of mothers, and the faint, shivering bodies of healthcare workers now forced to choose between saving lives or fighting to survive themselves.


Doctors Without Borders (Médecins Sans Frontières / MSF) has raised a harrowing alarm: one in four children under five and pregnant or breastfeeding women in Gaza are now malnourished. At MSF’s Gaza City clinic alone, the number of those treated for malnutrition has quadrupled since mid-May. In just the last two weeks, rates of severe malnutrition in children under five have tripled.


This is not the result of natural famine or logistical error. This is the calculated weaponization of hunger.


“This is not just hunger – it’s deliberate starvation,” says Caroline Willemen, MSF project coordinator in Gaza City. “We are enrolling 25 new patients every single day for malnutrition. We see the exhaustion and the hunger in our own colleagues.”


A War on the Most Vulnerable

In a clinic overwhelmed with starving patients, Dr. Mohammed Abu Mughaisib, MSF’s deputy medical coordinator, not only treats the malnourished — he feels it in his own weakening body. Doctors, nurses, and aid workers are skipping meals, surviving on scraps, while they treat victims who are far worse off. Infants cry not from pain but from emptiness. Mothers faint mid-sentence. And children, some barely able to walk, are fading before they can speak.


Despite these atrocities, the international response has been meager — symbolic airdrops of food that fall tragically short of the actual need. Even these attempts are met with bloodshed.


The Israeli military has turned food lines into death traps. Distribution sites run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) — an Israeli-sanctioned and US-backed proxy — have become hunting grounds. People lining up for aid risk not just going home empty-handed but never going home at all.


“These are not humanitarian operations. They are war crimes disguised with compassion,” Dr. Mughaisib says. “Those who go to GHF’s food distributions know they have the same chance of receiving a sack of flour as they do of leaving with a bullet in their head.”


Flour for Bullets

The recent massacre at Sheikh Radwan clinic paints the grisliest picture yet. As desperate civilians approached trucks carrying flour, Israeli forces opened fire. MSF and Ministry of Health teams treated 122 people with gunshot wounds that day. Forty-six were dead on arrival.


Let that sink in: they died waiting for flour.


“This is genocide unfolding before our eyes,” says Amande Bazerolle, MSF’s head of emergency response. “Any shred of humanity in Doctors Without Borders has been wiped out in the ongoing slaughter.”


Over 1,000 civilians have been killed and more than 7,200 injured in the past two months, many of them during attempts to access food and aid. The targets include women, children, the elderly — none are spared.


Rice Once a Day, If You're Lucky

The starvation is systemic. Community kitchens, once a vital lifeline for hospitals and clinics, have shut down or now manage to serve one meal of plain rice per day — hardly enough for patients recovering from injury or infection. Medical staff, too, often go without.


This is no longer about financial hardship or conflict-disrupted supply chains. It’s about the deliberate restriction and denial of food, used as a tool of war against an entire civilian population.


Gaza’s food supply has been reduced to near extinction, leaving nearly 2 million people in survival mode. MSF’s frontline health workers — some of the last remaining symbols of hope — are exhausted, starved, and increasingly broken.


This Must End — Now

The forced starvation of Gaza is a war crime. There is no gray area. The Geneva Conventions prohibit the use of starvation as a method of warfare. The international community, especially those funding and arming Israel, must be held accountable.


To allow this to continue is to be complicit.


Airdrops of rice and flour are not a solution. They are a distraction. Gaza needs unrestricted humanitarian access, a ceasefire, and a full restoration of life-saving aid — not symbolic gestures amid genocide.


If food is life, then starvation is murder. And in Gaza, that murder is happening in broad daylight.


Ross Flores Del Rosario, founder of Wazzup Pilipinas, calls on every journalist, every global citizen, and every leader of conscience: Do not look away. Do not accept starvation as strategy. Demand an end to this inhumanity.

Banned Leaded Paints Proliferate Online Despite Internet Transactions Act in Effect


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(EcoWaste Coalition urges online shopping giants to conduct “house cleaning” to rid their platforms of prohibited goods)

28 July 2025, Quezon City. Despite the full enforcement last June 20 of Republic Act No. 11967, or the Internet Transactions Act, online shopping giants have yet to conduct "house cleaning" to ensure that prohibited products such as imported lead-containing paints are no longer advertised, promoted and traded using their platforms, the EcoWaste Coalition said.

The environmental watchdog group expressed utter dismay over the unrelenting sale in major e-commerce sites of imported paints with high levels of lead, a neurotoxic and endocrine disruptor banned in the production of paint, in gross violation of the law.

The importation, distribution and sale of such leaded paints, spray paints for consumer use in particular, makes a mockery of the DENR-issued Chemical Control Order (CCO) banning lead paints implemented by the local paint industry, the group pointed out.

The ban covers all types of paints and similar surface coatings, including those manufactured abroad and sold in the domestic market, with lead content in excess of 90 parts per million (ppm).




 

To demonstrate the problem, the group purchased assorted spray paints from online sellers at Lazada and Shopee for P40 to P105 each and had them screened for lead with the aid of an X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) analyzer. The products, mostly made in China and Thailand, were ordered between July 15 to 24.

Of the 23 paints purchased, 14 screened positive for lead content ranging from 850 to 81,700 ppm in defiance to the 90 ppm maximum limit. Among those analyzed to contain lead were three anti-corrosive or anti-rust primers. None of these leaded paints were manufactured or distributed by member companies of the Philippine Paint & Coatings Association, Inc., an advocate for the successful industry-wide transition to non-lead paint manufacturing.

As per XRF screening, the following paint brands have one or more colors containing violative levels of lead:

Boston Spray Paint: anti-rust substrate gray (850 ppm)

Collrfia Spray Paint: orange red (1,602 ppm)

Colorz Chisai Spray Paint: metal gray (1,967 ppm), orange red (11,410 ppm), anti-rust brown (13,240 ppm), and canary yellow (31,200 ppm)

Colorz Spray Paint: flash red (983 ppm), jade green (19,340 ppm), and medium yellow (37,800 ppm)

King Sfon Spray Paint: leaf green (38,210 ppm)

Koby Spray Paint: forest green (81,700 ppm)

Nikko Spray Paint: anti-rust primer red (4,541 ppm)

Tiger Spray Paint: orange (16,130 ppm)

Yatibay Spray Paint: blackish green (11,850 ppm)


The EcoWaste Coalition clarified that the above paint brands have other colors with lead content as previously verified through laboratory tests contracted by the group, specifically Boston Spray Paint (orange red); Collrfia Spray Paint (light green, art yellow): Colorz Chisai Spray Paint (canary yellow, orange yellow), Colorz Spray Paint (fresh green, lemon yellow); King Sfon Spray Paint (cream, gold, orange, orange red, silver red, lemon yellow, orange yellow, yellow); Koby Spray Paint (fresh green, deep red, Mars red, orange red, Suzuki red, deep yellow, medium yellow), Nikko Spray Paint (wool beige, army green, dark green, grass green, leaf green, green, orange red, light yellow, medium yellow, yellow); Tiger Spray Paint (bright red, grass green, lemon yellow); and Yatibay Spray Paint (grass green, refrigerator green, deep yellow, Isuzu desert yellow, lemon yellow).

To stop the illegal trade, which poses a public health threat, the EcoWaste Coalition reiterated the urgent need to take down online product listings for lead-containing paints, block and penalize non-compliant sellers, and hold e-commerce sites liable if they fail to act to stop the illegal trade and protect the consumer interest in line with RA 11967.

The group also repeated its call on the government to nominate lead chromates for listing in the Rotterdam Convention to control the global trade of this common lead-based pigments and paints containing them. To date, three countries (Cameroon, Morocco and Switzerland) have nominated lead chromates for listing under the treaty’s Prior Informed Consent (PIC) procedure.

Reform and resolve in action: DepEd marks one year of reforms under Secretary Angara


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MAKATI CITY, 28 July 2025 — Focused on real reforms and strong resolve a year after Secretary Sonny Angara took the helm, the Department of Education (DepEd) is showing progress in its efforts to carry out President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.’s education agenda and instruction in his State of the Nation Address (SONA).


"Mula sa simula, malinaw ang layunin natin na makinig, ayusin ang kailangang ayusin, at itayo ang mga kulang. Bunga ito ng pakikinig sa mga guro, magulang, at mag-aaral sa mismong mga paaralan,” Sec. Angara said.


Strengthening Early Education
One of the biggest milestones is the expansion of the School-Based Feeding Program, which was recently launched. Starting this school year, all public Kindergarten learners will be included in the feeding program.


To support child nutrition, DepEd will also be piloting Project SIGLA to automate the monitoring of learners’ health and nutrition. At the same time, construction has begun on 328 new Child Development Centers in poorest municipalities across the country.


Supporting Teachers
DepEd has also made big changes in supporting teachers. Out of more than 21,000 new teaching positions funded in 2024, 97 percent have already been filled. The same goes for administrative staff, with 99 percent of 5,000 new positions already taken.


New ranks (Teacher IV to VII) were added to improve teacher career paths while more than 2,100 school heads are set to be reclassified into School Principal positions, moving closer to the goal of one principal for every school.


DepEd also doubled the teaching supplies allowance to ₱10,000 and issued the first-ever medical allowance for teachers. Teachers in private schools will now receive a ₱24,000 salary subsidy, a ₱6,000 increase. Paperwork for public school teachers has also been cut by more than half, making daily tasks simpler and faster.


Responding to Classroom and Connectivity Gaps
The Department is also addressing classroom shortages, working with the private sector to build 105,000 classrooms to reduce the national backlog. By August, new modular classrooms will be designed for disaster-hit areas.


DepEd is also collaborating with the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT), Department of Energy (DOE), and National Electrification Administration (NEA) to provide better connectivity and electricity supply to last mile schools. PSIP Connect, a PPP project, is also lined up to bring digital devices, solar power, and internet to remote schools.


Creating a Responsive Curriculum and Learning Recovery Strategy
The updated K to 10 curriculum now puts more focus on reading, writing, and basic math. The strengthened Senior High School curriculum, now being piloted to 900 schools nationwide, has a stronger connection to essential academic and tech-voc skills.


Major gains in foundational literacy were also observed with the number of low emerging readers dropping through the Literacy Remediation Program (LRP) and Bawat Bata Bumabasa Program (BBMP) implemented during the summer break.


Meanwhile, the Free TESDA Assessment Program now covers more learners, including those in ALS and technical-vocational programs. SHS graduates are now recognized by the Civil Service Commission as qualified for entry-level government jobs.


Improving Internal Systems
From 451 days, textbook process takes only 60 days for procurement, and 110 days for printing and delivery, under Angara’s watch. A digital registry for suppliers is also in place to improve transparency.


For partners, DepEd’s Adopt-A-School Program now has a dedicated website and a School Finder to connect donors directly with schools in need. The Department will also launch Project Bukas in August to give the public access to key DepEd data.


To support innovation, the Education Center for AI Research, or ECAIR, has been established. It will lead DepEd’s work in using digital and AI tools for learning. DepEd is also building digital tools such as Project LIGTAS for mapping school risks, and Project TALINO to find schools with urgent needs.


Secretary Angara said that while much has been done, the work is far from over: “Marami pa tayong kailangang ayusin, marami pa tayong kailangang abutin. Pero habang pinagkakatiwalaan tayo ng taumbayan, hindi tayo titigil sa paglilingkod, para sa bawat guro, bawat magulang, at bawat batang nangangarap.”


DepEd enters its second year under Angara with clearer direction: to make the education system more inclusive, more responsive, and ready for the future under the Bagong Pilipinas.


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