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Gaza aid access ‘shrinking’: WHO

GENEVA: The World Health Organisation warned on Tuesday its ability to provide aid and support struggling hospitals in Gaza was “shr­inking”, despite international dem­ands for more aid to be allowed in.

WHO staff described desperate scenes of seriously injured patients, including young children, begging for food in hospitals — which have seen most of their health workers flee for their own safety.

“We’re seeing this humanitarian catastrophe unfold before our eyes,” Sean Casey, a WHO emergency medical coordinator, told reporters in Geneva via videolink from the Gaza Strip.

“We’re seeing the health system collapse at a very rapid pace,” he warned.

The Israeli army has claimed the operation is entering a new phase, involving troop reductions and more targeted operations in the territory’s centre and south.

But Casey said that on the ground, he had “not seen the lowering of the intensification”.

“What we are still seeing […] is a huge number of casualties related to hostilities, so shrapnel injuries, gunshot wounds, crush injuries from buildings that collapse. That’s still happening every single day.”

‘Recipe for disaster’

The United Nations says the Israeli aggression had left around 85 per cent of Gaza’s population of 2.4 million and left civilians in the besieged Palestinian territory at risk of famine and disease.

A UN Security Council resolution last month demanded that more aid be let in but the WHO said its access had only got worse.

“We’ve seen the shrinking of humanitarian space,” Casey said.

Israel has implied the United Nations is largely to blame for the lack of aid reaching those in need in Gaza. But Casey insisted the WHO and other UN organisations were “constantly trying to reach the areas in greatest need”.

“Every day we line up our convoys, we wait for clearance (from the warring parties) and we don’t get it,” he said. “And then we come back and we do it again the next day.”

The WHO has been unable to reach northern Gaza for the past two weeks, and has been forced to cancel six planned missions there.

The organisation said that only 15 of Gaza’s 36 hospitals are even partially functioning, most of them in the south. The agency has long described desperate scenes in the few barely functioning hospitals remaining in the north, facing severe shortages of food, clean water, medicines and fuel.

And it warned that the situation was increasingly dire in the middle and south of the densley populated territory.

“Hostilities and evacuation orders in neighbourhoods of the middle area and Khan Yunis… are affecting access to hospitals for patients and ambulances, and making it incredibly complex for WHO to reach those hospitals to provide supplies and fuel,” said Richard Peeperkorn, WHO’s representative for the Palestinian territories.

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