Skin diseases afflict Gaza's children as war drags on without end
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[August 09, 2024]
By Mahmoud Issa
GAZA (Reuters) - Like thousands of Gaza children, Yasmine Al-Shanbari,
3, is not only suffering from the upheaval of war all around them. She
is ravaged by skin disease and no relief is in sight, with medicine
scarce and few hospitals functioning in the Israeli-besieged enclave.
The 10-month-old war between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas
has left the Gaza Strip with no clean running water, a shortage of aid
and medicine and raw sewage everywhere, giving rise to skin diseases and
other afflictions.
Red scratchy patches have spread all over Yasmine's face and her father
feels helpless as she sits in his lap in a burnt-out, crowded school
where they have taken shelter in the Jabalia urban refugee camp in north
Gaza.
Tiny little insects were visibly flitting around her face, while piles
of garbage rotted in the high summer heat outside.
"The disease she has on her face has been there for almost 10 days now
and hasn't gone away," said her father, Ahmed Al-Shanbari. "We did not
leave out any medicine to give to her, hoping it will clear up from her
face."
The death toll continues to climb in Gaza, with almost 40,000
Palestinians killed, according to Gaza authorities.
Hamas, the Palestinian Islamist group that rules Gaza, set off the war
when its militants stormed over the border into Israel on Oct. 7,
killing 1,200 people and taking over 250 hostage, according to Israeli
tallies.
Skin diseases are not the only illnesses that are creeping into one of
the most densely populated places on earth.
"Yesterday, we were talking about hepatitis, and today we are talking
about contagious skin diseases. Every day there are new diseases
spreading among children," said Doctor Wissam al-Sakani, spokesman for
Kamal Adwan Hospital.
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Ammar Al-Mashhrawi, a Palestinian boy with a skin infection, waits
to be examined by a doctor, amid Israel-Hamas conflict, in Jabalia
in the northern Gaza Strip August 5, 2024. REUTERS/Mahmoud Issa/File
Photo
The World Health Organization (WHO)
has sounded the alarm that Hepatitis A and polio are also spreading
among children.
"U.N. agencies warned of the high risk of the further spread of
infectious diseases in Gaza, amid chronic water scarcity and no way
to adequately manage waste and sewage," it said in a report earlier
this month.
"The waste management system in Gaza has collapsed. Piles of trash
are accumulating in the scorching summer heat. Sewage discharges on
the streets while people queue for hours just to go to the toilets."
Israel denies responsibility for delays in getting urgent
humanitarian aid into Gaza, says the U.N. and others are responsible
for its distribution once inside the enclave.
Ammar al-Mashharawi, a 2-year-old toddler, also has a fiery red rash
all over his face and body in Kamal Adwan Hospital, which was struck
by Israeli missiles in May.
"Look at the child, his whole body is like this. We have been to
more than one hospital to find medicine for him," said Ammar's
father Ahmed as he held his wailing son while medical staff checked
him.
"We adults manage somehow, but the children, God help them, have no
food or medicine. The situation is indescribable," Ahmed added.
(Reporting by Mahmoud Issa; writing by Nayera Abdallah; editing by
Michael Georgy and Mark Heinrich)
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