A mother carries a young child in her arms while another young child walks behind her, passing in front of a demolished building in Gaza.
Palestine

EU governments’ hypocrisy fuelling suffering in Gaza

The hypocrisy and inaction of the European Union and its Member States have allowed Israel to freely continue its massacre of Palestinians in Gaza with total impunity, said Doctors Without Borders (MSF) during a press conference held in Brussels yesterday. MSF reiterated its call for impartial, needs-based aid to be facilitated into the Gaza Strip at scale, the protection of civilians, and the immediate restoration of a sustained ceasefire. European governments must act decisively to expedite this.

For more than 20 months, Israeli authorities and forces have inflicted a punishing campaign, including large-scale forced displacement, ethnic cleansing against Palestinians in Gaza. On a daily basis, our teams witness patterns consistent with genocide through deliberate actions by Israeli forces – including mass killings, the destruction of vital civilian infrastructure, and blockades choking off access to food, water, medicines, and other essential humanitarian supplies. Israel is systematically destroying the conditions necessary for Palestinian life. Gaza’s homes, hospitals, markets, water networks, roads, and power grids have been demolished, not by disregard but by design.

The European Union (EU) and European governments have the political, economic, and diplomatic means to exert real pressure on Israel to stop this assault and open Gaza’s border crossings to unhindered humanitarian aid. These are not theoretical instruments. They can be effectively mobilised in defence of international law and to protect civilians.

 

Press conference in Brussels “The war in Gaza is one of the most egregious, deadly and ruthless wars waged on a people of our time,” says Christopher Lockyear, MSF Secretary General. “It is an orchestrated massacre of Palestinian people. It is purposeful ethnic cleansing.”
Christopher Lockyear, Secretary General of Doctors Without Borders (MSF), speaks during a press conference at the Residence Palace International Press Centre in Brussels. He is seated at a desk with microphones in front of him, gesturing with his hands while addressing the media.

“Stopping this requires political courage, legal responsibility, and moral commitment,” says Lockyear. “The scale of suffering in Gaza demands more than empty rhetoric.”

Aid has been weaponised, used as leverage, conditioned, or blocked entirely. Since the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation launched its activities on 27 May, as part of the US-Israeli scheme to instrumentalise aid, hundreds of Palestinians have been treated in hospitals, and scores have been killed, after being shot at these aid distribution sites while waiting to receive the basic necessities for survival.  

“The imposed system of aid delivery is not only a failure, but it is dehumanising and dangerous,” says Lockyear. “It exposes thousands of Palestinians to unnecessary risks, leading to bloodshed that can be avoided if humanitarian organisations are allowed to provide aid impartially and safely, at the necessary scale that is so desperately need in Gaza.” 
 

Rubble and destroyed buildings in the Al-Shifa neighbourhood near the MSF clinic in Gaza City, June 2024.
General view of destroyed buildings in Al-Shifa neighbourhood, in the vicinity of MSF clinic, in Gaza City. June 2024.
MSF

Today, Nasser hospital, southern Gaza’s main referral hospital for thousands of patients in the area, is barely able to continue working, due to repeated evacuation orders and movement restrictions on staff and patients. In recent weeks, MSF teams admitted over 500 patients requiring medical care to the hospital, while supporting the hospital’s medical staff to respond to repeated mass casualty influxes from constant bombings and attacks. 

“Humanitarian organisations have set up makeshift hospitals to fill the gap, but they can in no way replace regular hospitals,” says Lockyear. “The remaining hospitals must be protected, and the entry of aid facilitated. Failure to do so will cost yet more lives.” 
 

A child in Gaza sits on a mat, playing with toys. The child has visible bandages on parts of their body, indicating recent injuries.
A 4-year-old child lost her mother and two siblings in an Israeli airstrike that struck their tent in Al-Mawasi, Khan Younis. She was severely burned as a result of the strike and is a patient of the MSF burn unit in Nasser hospital. Her prolonged healing process is hindered by the lack of proper nutrition and protein; unavailable due to the two months long Israeli siege of Gaza strip.Nasser hospital, Khan Younis, Gaza. May 2025.
Nour Alsaqqa/MSF

MSF, like many organisations, has repeatedly called for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire, unfettered humanitarian access, and respect for international humanitarian law – including the protection of medical staff and facilities.

Several governments continue to express concerns about the horrific situation in Gaza, but their statements that invoke concern with adherence to IHL are shrouded in hypocrisy as they continue to send the arms that kill and maim the children we treat.

“What people are experiencing in Gaza is beyond unbearable: it must stop now,” says Lockyear. “As this military onslaught against a besieged people rages on, the hypocrisy of EU states who speak but don’t act, is more obvious by the day.” 


Notes to editors

Since October 2023, MSF staff and patients in Gaza have been forced to leave at least 18 different health facilities and have endured 50 violent incidents, which include airstrikes against hospitals, tank shells being fired at agreed deconflicted shelters, ground offensives into medical centres, and convoys fired upon. Eleven of our colleagues have been killed.