Situation in Gaza 'getting worse by the hour' - WHO
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[December 05, 2023]
By Emma Farge and Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber
GENEVA (Reuters) -A World Health Organization official in Gaza said on
Tuesday the situation was deteriorating by the hour as Israeli bombing
has intensified in the south of the Palestinian enclave around the
cities of Khan Younis and Rafah.
"The situation is getting worse by the hour," Richard Peeperkorn, WHO
representative in Gaza, told reporters via video link. "There's
intensified bombing going on all around, including here in the southern
areas, Khan Younis and even in Rafah."
Peeperkorn said the humanitarian aid reaching Gaza was "way too little"
and said the WHO was deeply concerned about the vulnerability of the
health system in the densely populated enclave as more people move
further south to escape the bombing.
"We will witness the same pattern of what happened in the north," he
said, referring to an area of northern Gaza that was heavily bombed and
nearly cut off from humanitarian supplies.
"That cannot happen ... I want to make this point very clear that we are
looking at an increasing humanitarian disaster."
Thomas White, Director of Affairs at the U.N. Palestinian agency in
Gaza, said a population of more than 600,000 had been ordered to move to
escape bombardment.
"Rafah that normally has a population of 280K and already hosting around
470K IDP (internally displaced people) will not cope with a doubling of
its IDP population," White wrote on social media platform X.
James Elder, spokesperson for the United Nations children's agency
UNICEF, said the areas of Gaza designated as safe by Israel were nowhere
near meeting basic requirements, warning an absence of sanitation and
shelter have created a "perfect storm" for outbreaks of disease.
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Palestinians gather at the site of an Israeli strike, amid the
ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group
Hamas, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, December 4, 2023.
REUTERS/Fadi Shana
"It's a safe zone when you can guarantee the conditions of food,
water, medicine and shelter," he told reporters via video link from
Cairo after visiting Gaza.
"I've seen for myself these are entirely, entirely absent... These
are tiny patches of barren land or they're street corners. They're
sidewalks. They're half-built buildings. There is no water."
He added: "Only a ceasefire is going to save the children of Gaza
right now," and called the Israeli approach to creating these zones
"callous and cold".
The WHO's Peeperkorn said the agency had complied with an Israeli
order to remove supplies from warehouses in Khan Younis. He said WHO
had been told the area would "most likely become an area of active
combat in the coming days."
"We want to make sure that we can actually deliver essential medical
supplies," he said.
WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Monday appealed to Israel to
withdraw the order. Israel denied asking for the evacuation of
warehouses.
(Reporting by Emma Farge and Gabrielle Tétraut-Farber; Editing by
Rachel More and Janet Lawrence)
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