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Lords slam MPs for ‘grotesque inaccuracy’ over Gaza baby death claim

The UN was forced to correct the figure after it was cited by humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher in a BBC interview, but not before it was repeated in Parliament

May 23, 2025 14:07
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Lord Polak urged MPs to "put that record straight" regarding the false claim that 14,000 babies in Gaza are expected to die in 48 hours
6 min read

Two members of the House of Lords have raised the alarm over what they describe as the “grotesque inaccuracy” of a widely repeated claim that 14,000 babies in Gaza could die from malnutrition within 48 hours.

The claim, initially made by a UN official and repeated this week by 13 Members of Parliament, has since been corrected by the UN, which clarified that the figure – based on a report by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) Partnership – refers to cases of severe acute malnutrition over the next year, not deaths within two days.

Conservative peer Lord Polak and crossbencher Lord Walney both voiced concern in the Lords about the continued circulation of the claim.

The original comment, made by the UN’s humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, was widely reported in national media and cited in Parliament. The BBC has since issued a clarification, noting that Fletcher’s remark misrepresented the IPC report, which projects the number of children aged six months to five years at risk of “severe malnutrition” by March next year, rather than by the end of the week. The number is a projection and would not take into account any increase in the supply of aid between now and then. Israel has since resumed a flow of aid into Gaza.