Tragic yet entirely avoidable surge in the number of children dying, warns UNICEF
The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) warned on Tuesday of a rising but entirely avoidable number of children dying in Gaza due to restricted access to water and sanitation, after six weeks of aerial bombardment by Israeli forces in response to the 7 October Hamas terror attacks on southern Israel that claimed 1,200 lives and some 240 hostages.
“If children’s access to water and sanitation in Gaza continues to be restricted and insufficient, we will see a tragic yet entirely avoidable surge in the number of children dying,” said UNICEF spokesperson James Elder. “It's also important to know it's starting to rain in Gaza. Now combined, children face a serious threat of mass disease outbreak. This, of course, would be lethal.”
Mr. Elder noted that the emergency threshold of a minimum amount of water per day is 15 liters, to drink, to cook, to clean and prevent waterborne and other infectious diseases.
Having control of fuel and access to water was to control whether thousands of children will live or die, Mr. Elder insisted
“More than 5,350 Palestinian children have already been reportedly killed,” he continued. “Now, the death toll among children is sickening. Grief is becoming embedded in Gaza. So, this then is a stark warning without sufficient fuel, without sufficient water, conditions for children will plummet.”
At least 30 Israeli children are still being held hostage “somewhere in this hellscape”, the UNICEF official continued. “They must be released. It's abhorrent to think of their fear, to think of the torment that their families are enduring. It has to end.”
Alluding to the joint UN mission that over the weekend evacuated 31 premature and low birthweight babies from Al-Shifa Hospital in northern Gaza to Al-Emarati Maternity Hospital in southern Gaza and then to Egypt, Mr. Elder said that “Al-Shifa is rightly a focus of premature babies, one of society's most vulnerable miracles. But of course, whilst the world is waiting for images or whatever it is, of tunnels out, of Shifa, it's very important to remember that we have an average of just over 100 children, 100 boys and girls, are still being reportedly killed every single day, everywhere else across Gaza, which of course is the exact opposite of a miracle.”
Amid warnings that no hospitals in the Gaza Strip are operating normally, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday that it is preparing for the evacuation in three hospitals in the besieged enclave. The evacuation request is indicative of the desperation felt by hospital staff who fear for their lives and have become unable to care for the patients due to the lack of fuel, water and food.
“The hospitals should be the only, the last safe place where people can go to because taking away a hospital from an area doesn't only mean the physical evacuation of the patients and the doctors and the nurses,” said Christian Lindmeier, WHO spokesperson. “It means robbing the entire population of that area of the last resort to go to, to seek healthcare. The last resort of humanity. When you're injured, when you have a regular disease, when you have asthma, or when you have shrapnel and bullet wounds or crush injuries from the ongoing war.”
The WHO spokesperson explained that such evacuations were extremely complicated and dangerous, requiring coordination with Israeli Defense Forces and with Hamas “to get to a safer place inside Gaza”. The evacuation teams will “need time, they need preparation, they need specialized equipment, they need safe passage”, Mr. Lindmeier said.
As the WHO continues to make plans to evacuate the remaining 200 patients and 50 health staff from Al-Shifa hospital, it noted that “there are estimated 50,000 pregnant women” in Gaza. “Most of them will be giving birth without any skilled attendants in hospital and that translates again to about 180 babies born every single day.”
Of these 180 newborns, more than 20 will require specialized care, just like the infants from the Al-shifa hospital in Gaza City, said the WHO. The original number of infants was 33 but two died before the evacuation “because of the lack of care available to them”.
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