World Health Organization: child malnutrition 'particularly extreme' in
north Gaza
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[March 05, 2024]
By Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber
GENEVA (Reuters) -United Nations organisations said on Tuesday that
child malnutrition levels in northern Gaza were "particularly extreme"
and about three times higher than in the south of the Palestinian
enclave where more aid has been available.
Richard Peeperkorn, WHO representative for Gaza and the West Bank, said
that one-in-six children under two years of age were acutely
malnourished in northern Gaza.
"This was in January. So the situation is likely to be greater today,"
Peeperkorn added, referring to when the data was recorded.
UNICEF spokesperson James Elder said malnutrition rates for children
under five in northern Gaza, where access to aid has been highly limited
since the start of the war between Israel and Hamas on Oct. 7, were
three times higher than those in Rafah in the south
Elder said this showed that "when that trickle of aid can come in, it
does make a life saving difference."
At least 15 children have died over the past few days from malnutrition
and dehydration at Kamal Adwan hospital in northern Gaza, the health
ministry in Gaza said on Sunday.
Calls for Israel to do more to address the humanitarian crisis have
grown louder since the deaths of Palestinians lining up for aid in Gaza
last month.
Gaza health authorities said 118 people were killed, attributing the
deaths to Israeli fire and calling it a massacre. Israel, which says
many people were trampled or run over, has pledged to investigate.
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Children look on as Palestinians flee north Gaza, amid the ongoing
conflict between Israel and Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in the
central Gaza Strip, November 9, 2023. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem/File
Photo
Adding to hunger, there is a growing risk from infectious diseases,
with nine-in-10 children under the age of five - around 220,000 -
falling sick over the last weeks, according to Elder.
"That becomes the spiral that we are so fearful of: infectious
diseases, lack of food, a desperate lack of clean water and ongoing
bombardment and incredulously still discussion of an offensive into
Rafah, which is a city of children," Elder told reporters in Geneva,
referring to Israel's stated aim of rooting out Hamas battalions it
says are hiding there.
"Rafah has about three quarters of a million children living there,"
Elder said.
Israel last month intensified its bombardment of Rafah, where about
1.5 million people are estimated to be crammed, most of them having
fled their homes further north to escape Israel's military
onslaught.
The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has
said that a quarter of the population - 576,000 people - are one
step from famine, nearly five months after Israel's assault on Gaza
began.
(Reporting by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber; Editing by Madeline
Chambers and Sharon Singleton)
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