UN decries systematic blocking of aid to north Gaza hospitals

Published January 13, 2024
A man carries away an injured girl following an Israeli strike on the Bureij refugee camp, in Gaza Strip.—AFP//File
A man carries away an injured girl following an Israeli strike on the Bureij refugee camp, in Gaza Strip.—AFP//File

GENEVA: Israel is consistently blocking humanitarian convoys into northern Gaza, making it increasingly difficult to bring desperately-needed fuel and other aid to hospitals there, the United Nations said on Friday.

After planning aid missions to the north, UN agencies said their convoys were subjected to slow and unpredictable inspections and then a near-systematic refusal from the Israeli side to proceed.

“Operations in the north (are) increasingly more complicated,” Andrea De Domenico, head of the UN aid agency OCHA’s office in the occupied Palestinian territories.

Speaking from Jerusalem to a virtual press briefing, he described how detailed coordination was required with a network of checkpoints, and “the Israelis have systematically, or quasi-systematically, refused” to let them through.

In recent days, he said, the agency had had three missions partially approved out of 21 requested.

Lucia Elmi, special representative for the UN children’s agency UNICEF in the Palestinian territories, also lamented that “we can’t get sufficient aid in”.

“The inspection process remains slow and unpredictable, and some of the materials we desperately need remain restricted, with no clear justification,” she said.

‘Inhumanity’

De Domenico said the Israeli military was particularly wary about allowing fuel into the north, especially to hospitals.

“They have been very systematic to not allow us to support hospitals, which is something that is reaching a point of a level of inhumanity that for me is beyond comprehension,” he said.

The UN’s World Health Organisation said it had finally on Thursday managed to reach Al Shifa hospital in the north for the first time in over two weeks, after seven failed attempts.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on X that the mission allowed for the delivery of desperately-needed aid, including 9,300 litres of fuel.

He hailed “the team reported that Al Shifa, previously Gaza’s premier hospital, has (partially) re-established services”.

The hospital, which WHO described as “a death zone” after it largely ceased operations following attacks and occupation by Israeli troops in November, now has 60 medical staff, Tedros said.

It also has “a surgical and medical ward with 40 beds, an emergency department, four operating theatres, basic emergency obstetric and gynaecological services”.

Hospitals, protected under international humanitarian law, have repeatedly been hit by Israeli strikes in Gaza since the Hamas raid on Oct 7.

‘Disaster of epic proportions’

Only 15 of Gaza’s 36 hospitals are even partially functioning, most of them in the south. The UN has long described desperate scenes in the few barely functioning hospitals remaining in the north, facing severe shortage of food, clean water, medicine and fuel.

While the partial resumption of services at Al Shifa was good news, Tedros emphasised that it meant “the consumption of fuel is much higher, and the need for medical supplies is increasing”.

Elmi, the Unicef representative, stressed the urgency of allowing more aid through, especially for Gaza’s children.

“Children in Gaza are running out of time, while most of the life-saving humanitarian aid they desperately need remains stranded between insufficient access corridors and protracted layers of inspections,” she said.

“Mounting needs and a constrained response is a formula for a disaster of epic proportions.”

Published in Dawn, January 13th, 2024

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