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Analysis

Responsible reporting on the real death toll in Gaza must start now

War is chaos, but careful and rigorous study and reporting of death tolls remain essential

July 3, 2025 10:50
GettyImages-2218808873
Palestinians look for survivors in the rubble of the Shaheen family home, in the Saftawi neighbourhood, west of Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip, after it was targeted in an Israeli strike on June 9, 2025. (Photo by BASHAR TALEB / AFP) (Photo by BASHAR TALEB/AFP via Getty Images)
5 min read

A fundamental fact of wars is chaos: even basic information is often kaleidoscopic, contested and fleeting.

This is true in Gaza as well, despite the territory’s small size, heavily documented population, relatively robust pre-war medical system given its development level and a massive international and media presence.

The unprecedented flow of images, videos and data out of the Strip provides an illusion of precision conveyed through metrics such as daily casualty updates, aid truck counts, targets struck or munitions used. Much more is known about the death toll in Gaza – which the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry (MoH) claims is now more than 54,000 – than in many other war zones.

Take Sudan, where aid shipments are vanishingly rare and the official casualty tally is considered a massive undercount. Or Ukraine and Russia, where both sides are broadly understood to be dishonest about military losses and where the United Nation’s Ukrainian civilian death toll does not include the multitudes killed in areas under Russian control. Or the Ethiopian region of Tigray, where the UN said only 66 children had died during the civil war but where outside analysts estimate between 300,000 and 800,000 people died – many of famine.

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