UN humanitarians on Tuesday warned about the situation in Gaza, describing it as "the collapse of the last lifelines keeping people alive," reported Xinhua.
They reported that amid the continuing hostilities, UN aid depots were destroyed, relief workers' residences and the hungry seeking food were fired on, and some starving people were reportedly collapsing in the streets.
Local health authorities reported that in just the past 24 hours, more than a dozen children and adults died from hunger. Hospitals have received people with severe exhaustion caused by a lack of food, said the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
"This is on top of continued reports of people being shot, killed or injured while simply trying to find food — food that is only being allowed into Gaza in quantities that are far too small," OCHA said.
The office said local authorities report that hospitals are overwhelmed, and some facilities reported a shortage of intravenous fluids. Due to a lack of fuel, the Nasser Medical Complex and the oxygen unit supplying hospitals in southern Gaza are at risk of shutting down.
UN facilities in Deir al-Balah were struck even though their locations were shared with relevant parties to the conflict, said the humanitarians.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said the agency's operations were compromised by the destruction of a warehouse, located within the evacuation zone, and an attack on a facility sheltering staff and their families.
The attack fits a broader pattern of systematic destruction of health facilities, said the WHO, and in a statement, the agency strongly condemned the attack and demanded continuous protection of its staff and the immediate release of the detained staff member.
Jorge Moreira da Silva, executive director of the United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS), reported that the UNOPS premises in Deir al-Balah were also hit, causing structural damage, cutting off power from both their generator and solar panels, and leaving the site with no running water. He said it is the same location that was hit by tank fire in March, which killed a UNOPS staffer.
OCHA said the teams tracking population movements were affected and unable to report on the families displaced from Deir al-Balah. Some have been newly displaced, while others came under heavy bombardment and faced communication blackouts due to cable damage.
According to the office, 88 percent of Gaza is either subject to displacement orders or located within Israeli militarized zones. The remaining 12 percent is already overcrowded and underserved.
The UN hub for humanitarian operations remains in Deir al-Balah, with staff spread across dozens of premises, all of which have shared coordinates with relevant parties to the conflict, said OCHA.
- Israeli
- Genocide
- Gaza
Source: www.dailyfinland.fi