The continuing violence came despite an immediate
ceasefire call for the remainder of Ramadanfrom the
Security Council on Monday,
prompting urgent appeals from UN aid agencies for the resolution
to be respected immediately, to prevent more people dying.
Speaking from Rafah in southern Gaza, UN Children’s Fund
spokesperson James Elder said that 13,750 children have now been
killed according to Gaza’s health authorities, amid Israeli
airstrikes and bombardment launched in response to Hamas-led
terror attacks on Israel on 7 October.
Citing reports of “a double-digit number of children killed
overnight”, Mr. Elder noted that this had happened “only hours
after the (Security Council) resolution was passed”.
Khan Younis flattened
The southern Gazan city of Khan Younis “barely exists anymore”,
the UNICEF spokesperson added,
before describing the “utter annihilation” of constant Israeli
bombardment which has left an unreported number of children and
families buried under the rubble of their homes.
“In my 20 years with the UN I have never seen such devastation,
it’s just chaos, ruin, debris and rubble every single direction,
everywhere I look,” he said, reporting on his latest aid mission
to the north.
Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis – “such a critical place for
children with the wounds of war” - is now no longer even
operational, the UNICEF official reported, adding that only
one-third of Gaza’s hospitals are “partially functional”
now.
North in crisis
Further north, where a UN World Food Programme (WFP) aid mission
secured the passage of 96 trucks carrying relief supplies on
Monday - for the first time in five days – Mr. Elder described
seeing people making “that universal signal of hand to mouth,
desperately asking and seeking for food”.
This is despite the fact that hundreds of trucks containing
lifesaving humanitarian aid remain over the border in Egypt, UN
agencies have pointed out.
Citing respected food insecurity analysis published recently
warning of Gaza’s “catastrophic decline into imminent famine”,
the UNICEF official also noted that the agency’s own data
indicated that one in three children under two years old now
suffer from acute malnutrition. Before the conflict, fewer than
one in 100 children under five were malnourished, Mr. Elder said.
“This speaks to utter deprivation, this speaks to the
devastation of things children rely on – water and
health systems – but it also speaks to what the numbers speak to,
which is a lethal lack of food and nutrition aid still not
getting to the north.”
Before the war, around 500 commercial and humanitarian trucks
reached the enclave every day, but the average today is around
one-third of that number but there have also been periods of
“weeks where nothing got into the north”, the UNICEF official
added.
Health crisis
Echoing deep concerns about the desperate scenes unfolding in
Gaza, UN World Health Organization (WHO) spokesperson Tarik
Jazarevic reported that most patients at Al Amal hospital in the
south have now left the facility.
Media reports indicated that an evacuation order for the facility
was issued by the Israeli military, amid intense hostilities in
the west of Khan Younis. The situation is also believed to be
dire in northern Gaza’s Al Shifa Hospital which was also the
target of an Israeli military raid, but WHO does not have access
there, Mr. Jasarevic said.
“You have health workers dying, you have hospitals that are under
siege, you have people who are looking for shelter in these
places and if you can’t get a shelter at a hospital where else
can you go?” he told journalists in Geneva.
Media reports indicated airstrikes overnight into Tuesday near
the southernmost city of Rafah where some 1.5 million people now
shelter, many after being uprooted from their homes elsewhere in
the enclave.
The UN aid coordination, OCHA, also urged Israel to
lift its ban on aid deliveries to the north by UNRWA, the UN
agency for Palestinian refugees, echoing earlier calls by the UN
Secretary-General.
“We need to dispel this notion that their obligation of getting
aid in somehow stops with getting a few trucks - a fraction of
what is needed - across the border and then once it’s in there as
I have seen reported, then it’s not our problem any more, it’s
the UN humanitarian agencies’ problem. That is not correct.”
He added: “You cannot claim to adhere to these international
provisions of law when you block UNRWA food convoys, when you
just last week denied five missions to the north, when we have
now reports of Israeli attacks on warehouses and the police that
are supposed to help secure this aid inside Gaza.”