Regional
The death toll from Gaza, explained
Real-time fatality counts from conflict zones, like Gaza, are almost never right. Here’s why we should pay attention to them anyway.
At a press conference on October 25, PBS Newshour reporter Laura Barrón-López asked US President Joe Biden a stark question. More than 6,000 Palestinian deaths had been reported in Gaza since October 7, she said. Did this suggest Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was ignoring Bidenâs message to avoid civilian deaths?
In his response, Biden questioned whether the fatality numbers, which came from the Hamas-controlled Gaza Ministry of Health, accurately captured the reality on the ground. âI have no notion that the Palestinians are telling the truth about how many people are killed,â he said.
Bidenâs remarks were met with intense anger by some commentators who found them overly dismissive of death and suffering; others noted Bidenâs own administration has been relying on those figures internally throughout and before the conflict.
Two days later, in an unusual move this early in a conflict and seemingly in response to Bidenâs remarks, Gazaâs Ministry of Health released a list containing the names and identity numbers of the nearly 7,000 people it says have died in the conflict so far.
Historically, the Gaza Health Ministryâs figures have been found largely accurate. News organizations, human rights groups, and international governments and bodies (including the United Nations) cite them in the moment; and human rights groups that have worked to verify the ministryâs data in previous conflicts have found it generally reliable. Vox reports these figures, as it reports the Israeli governmentâs stated death tolls.
For those occupying a grim corner at the intersection of political science and epidemiology, lists like these are just the beginning. âWhen weâre in the midst of something, itâs really, really hard to knowâ exactly how many have been killed, said Therese Pettersson, a senior analyst and research coordinator at the Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP), a Swedish organization that has been gathering and publishing verified data on conflict-related fatalities for 40 years and is seen as one of the worldâs most reliable sources on these types of figures. âAs time passes, information will become better.â
She says the reality is that in the early days of a conflict, fatality numbers are incredibly important, incredibly politically powerful â and, unfortunately, incredibly hard to get right. Gazan health officials, for example, have cautioned that death tolls will likely grow, given the number of people trapped under rubble.
Pettersson and other experts in this space urge people to try to balance a few truths when it comes to fatality figures reported during conflicts: Early figures are often inaccurate, and can be exaggerated for political reasons. At the same time, they give us a crucial sense of the devastating scale of loss. In previous conflicts, for instance, the UN has found Gazan health officialsâ toll accurate within 4 percentage points. And while a more precise understanding of a violent conflictâs true death toll will emerge in time, one thing is already clear: There is widespread death and suffering in Gaza as a result of the bombardment and fighting.
Although the Gaza Health Ministryâs numbers may historically be reliable, experts still view them as preliminary
Biden didnât explain why he questioned the Gaza Health Ministryâs estimate of the conflictâs death toll, although itâs possible his remarks were related to what happened after an explosion at the al-Ahli Hospital on October 17. Even if it was not directly related to Bidenâs comments, the incident at least shows how easy â and consequential â it is to make erroneous estimates and attributions around deaths related to individual incidents in the midst of a war.
In the hours following that event, news outlets worldwide reported that Israel was responsible for the blast and that it had killed more than 500 people, attributing the information to Gazaâs health ministry. But in a matter of hours, that became hotly disputed. Israel released new evidence alleging that an errant rocket from Hamas-aligned terrorist organization Palestine Islamic Jihad had caused the disaster. A rare US statement on intelligence-gathering sided with Israel; in the days since, news organizations have cast doubt on at least some of the evidence and continued to scrutinize the cause of the explosion.
Meanwhile, US estimates â although low-confidence â suggested the death toll from the hospital explosion was between 100 and 300. The health ministryâs revised final death toll was 471. The episode has been cited as a potential outlier in the health ministryâs general reliability.
But as investigative journalist David Zweig reported in a recent edition of his newsletter, the â500 deathsâ figure is actually a misquotation of the health ministry and the likely result of some mistranslated Arabic and a game of journalistic telephone.
This is all to say: There were a lot of sources of uncertainty during this incident.
Omar Shakir of Human Rights Watch, which has been monitoring human rights abuses in Gaza for three decades, told the Guardian the group has âgenerally found the data that comes out of the ministry of health to be reliable.â
As one of the parties involved in the conflict, Hamas would arguably be incentivized to claim a large number of civilian casualties due to Israeli strikes (more on that below). However, the group has less control over Gazaâs Ministry of Health than it does over political and security agencies in Gaza, according to an Associated Press report. Health ministry employees come from a mix of factions, including Hamas but also the secular nationalist Fatah party, and some are independent. Hamas does not pay their salaries, nor, they say, does it influence the casualty figures they report.
Pettersson said that, historically, the UCDP has trusted Gazan authorities â âbut we have also been able to verify their reports with, for example, reports from [the human rights information organization] Bâtselem or other types of news reports.â But at the moment, thereâs scant news media coverage happening within Gaza due to low electricity supplies and communications services, as well as the danger of working in the area. While there is limited cross-referencing from independent media, what does exist confirms widespread suffering. AP reporters, for instance, have âviewed large numbers of bodies at the sites of airstrikes, morgues and funerals.â
Notably, Israeli fatalities due to this conflict have been covered to an extraordinarily fine degree of detail by many different media outlets, making its casualty numbers much easier to corroborate, said Pettersson. The imbalance of information may be due in part to the imbalance in functioning communication infrastructure â Israelâs is still working, while Gazaâs has been fragile or, at times, completely out (a 34-hour communications blackout last weekend was blamed on a shutdown of phone and communication by Israel). It may also be related to the fact that while active violence leading to death has for the most part stopped in Israel, it remains ongoing in Gaza. An additional factor: Working as a journalist in Gaza is both currently and historically more dangerous than it is in Israel, due to frequent air attacks and Hamasâs history of harassing and using violence against journalists who attempt to report on its activities. At least 30 journalists have been killed in Gaza since this most recent conflict began, many in Israeli airstrikes.
Whatever the reasons, the result is that Israelâs casualties have been easier to verify down to the individual than Gazaâs.
There are good reasons to be skeptical of fatality numbers that emerge during conflict
Fatality numbers released early in the course of violent conflict are often inaccurate, said a number of experts who spoke with Vox. Thatâs partly because theyâre hard to get. Violent conflict often destroys much of the infrastructure that would normally make it possible to reliably count deaths, said Paul Spiegel, a physician and director of the Center for Humanitarian Health at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Morgues and health care facilities, generally important sources of reliable casualty information, may be understaffed or too physically damaged to keep good records (although AP reporters spoke with hospital administrators in Gaza who said they record identifying information on every wounded person occupying a bed and every dead body arriving at a morgue, which feeds into a central database).
Additionally, active or impending conflict often prevents human rights organizationsâ field staff â the people who would typically verify the numbers and identities of the dead in a disaster setting â from being safely able to do their work.
Thereâs another important reason that early figures are worth double-checking: Theyâre liable to be exaggerated, either upward or downward, by parties whose political aims may be aided by death counts that skew one way or another.
âWarring parties themselves have some interest in portraying the conflict in a certain way,â said Pettersson. In most conflicts, parties benefit from minimizing publicly reported deaths of their own fighters, while maximizing publicly reported deaths of their civilians. âIâm not saying that [Hamas] is exaggerating â we donât know that really, itâs hard to know anything. But there is an interest to do that, to make it sort of fit into the narrative of Israel being the aggressors and Hamas and Gazaâs civilians being the victims,â she said.
The Israeli side would have this incentive too. âEach side will have reasons, usually political in nature, to either minimize or overemphasize,â Spiegel said.
Historically â in conflicts in 2008, 2014, and 2021 â the health ministryâs fatality numbers closely matched death tolls resulting from independent research by United Nations humanitarian agencies. The current conflict is far more complex than those prior conflicts were, and far fewer nongovernmental agencies are currently able to do that independent verification work in Gaza. However, it is reasonable to expect that when organizations like Bâtselem verify deaths in the future, they will find numbers similar to what the ministry is now releasing â if not higher, given how many people remain unaccounted for.
Meanwhile, combatant fatalities, if publicized instantaneously, provide information that can be used by an opposing side to determine whether they are correctly targeting battle stations, said Pettersson.
The list published by the Gaza Ministry of Health did not distinguish between combatants and civilians, though it has previously stated that nearly two-thirds of those killed are women and children.
The interest warring parties have in manipulating real-time fatality data is not unique to this conflict. In the ongoing war between Ukraine and Russia, something very similar has often played out, said Pettersson. But the dynamic capitalizes on the way we try to understand these kinds of complex events. âThatâs also how our brains work,â she said. âWhoâs the bad guy and whoâs the good one?â
Early fatality numbers can have important political consequences
Public opinion that gets mobilized by early conflict-related casualty data can have real and significant impact on how the conflict itself plays out, said Lawrence Gostin, who directs the OâNeill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown Law.
âPublic opinion in Berlin, London, Paris, and Washington matters a lot in terms of what political leaders will do,â whether thatâs sending aid or other assistance to the region, or voting for certain actions that affect the conflict in the United Nations Security Council.
The series of events that followed the al-Ahli Hospital explosion may be one of the best recent examples of how public opinion about fatalities in a conflict can change the course of that conflict. The explosion took place hours before President Biden was set to arrive in the region to meet with Israeli and Arab leaders. But public protests against Israel erupted worldwide; citing anger at Israelâs supposed role in the blast, Arab leaders canceled their planned summit. That meant delaying important conversations about the logistics of delivering humanitarian aid to Gaza and, potentially, about paths toward peace in the region.
To capitalize on the dynamic at work in episodes like this one, people with strong allegiances to warring parties may share data about their casualties before it has been confirmed. Thatâs why itâs so important, when news breaks of a fresh wave of violence in a larger conflict, to be aware that early numbers may be colored by bias â especially when theyâre not corroborated by other, independent media sources.
Even imperfect fatality figures can be helpful
Over time, Pettersson says, the exact details of a conflictâs lethality come to light. But when can the general public feel confident that has happened?
In the early days of a conflict, the UCDP begins gathering fatality data from open-source materials, including news media, nongovernmental agencies, Telegram, and whatever Twitter is going by. It publishes these on the 20th of each month as âcandidate event datasets.â
The UCDP isnât usually able to verify that data until much later â generally a month or more after events have taken place, said Pettersson. Typically, theyâll work to verify the deaths by going back to the primary source that reported each death, whether thatâs a journalist, a warring party, or a witness.
Often, this verification takes place in partnership with organizations that are verifying deaths with primary sources on the ground in the conflict area. In Gaza, the UCDP often works with Bâtselem â which maintains a database of conflict-related deaths â to complement and triangulate data. But it uses data from other sources, too, including Reuters, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Crisis Group, and a range of smaller organizations.
The end result is a list of verified organized violence-related fatalities differentiated by combatants and civilians. Because its definitions are rather strict, the list inevitably underestimates deaths attributable to any given conflict. The UCDP publishes this data annually.
(Importantly, UCDP doesnât count deaths that result indirectly from the conflict, like deaths due to conflict-related famine or sanitation problems. Not because theyâre not relevant, said Petterson â itâs just not what her organization does.)
Thereâs some debate over whether feverish media coverage of early fatality estimates is ultimately helpful to people suffering from violent conflict.
On one hand, these numbers help us get a sense of the scale of the tragedy unfolding in a war-torn region. We donât need precise figures to know that when many people are dying, many more are suffering. Early casualty numbers are âat the top of the pyramid,â said Gostin: When a conflict kills a large number of people early on, that signifies a much larger number of people who are extraordinarily vulnerable and need immediate humanitarian aid. Right now, over 1.4 million people are displaced in Gaza, according to the UN.
Indeed, these figures may be important for determining how much help an area needs. Some guidelines for providing humanitarian aid use estimates of early mortality in certain age groups to determine the urgency of the response needed, said Spiegel.
Still, itâs not always clear that ceaseless, real-time media coverage of evolving conflicts best serves individuals in war zones. âItâs not always good to have this instant sort of information flow,â especially if that information isnât verified, said Pettersson. âWe donât know how true it is â and then we react on it.â