Israel’s ecocide in Gaza sends this message: even if we stopped dropping bombs, you couldn’t live here | George Monbiot

The Guardian 1 min read 6 hours ago

<p>Consider the annihilation of agricultural land alongside the genocide – and grasp the chilling totality of this attempt to eliminate all life</p><p>A landless people and a peopleless land: these, it appears, are the aims of the Israeli government in Gaza. There are two means by which they are achieved. The first is the mass killing and expulsion of the Palestinians. The second is rendering the land uninhabitable. Alongside the crime of genocide, another great horror unfolds: ecocide.</p><p>While the destruction of buildings and infrastructure in Gaza is visible in every video we see, less visible is the parallel destruction of ecosystems and means of subsistence. Before the 7 October atrocity that triggered the current assault on Gaza, about <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/nov/21/gaza-food-production-decimated-70-per-cent-farmland-hit">40% of its land</a> was farmed. Despite its extreme population density, Gaza was <a href="https://wedocs.unep.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.11822/45739/environmental_impact_conflict_Gaza.pdf?sequence=3&amp;isAllowed=y">mostly self-sufficient</a> in vegetables and poultry, and met much of the population’s demand for olives, fruit and milk. But last month the UN reported that just 1.5% of its agricultural land now remains both <a href="https://dppa.un.org/en/just-15-cent-of-gazas-agricultural-land-remains-accessible-and-undamaged">accessible and undamaged</a>. That’s roughly 200 hectares – the only remaining area directly available to feed more than 2 million people.</p><p>George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/sep/27/israel-ecocide-gaza-bombs-agricultural-land-genocide">Continue reading...</a>
Read original The Guardian