UN Palestinian refugee agency calls for unimpeded flow of aid to Gaza

Update UN Palestinian refugee agency calls for unimpeded flow of aid to Gaza
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Palestinians inspect the debris after an Israeli strike near an United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) school in Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip on October 21, 2023. (AFP)
Update UN Palestinian refugee agency calls for unimpeded flow of aid to Gaza
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A general view during a vote at a meeting of the United Nations Security Council on the conflict between Israel and Hamas at UN headquarters in New York, US, Oct. 16, 2023. (Reuters)
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Updated 24 October 2023
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UN Palestinian refugee agency calls for unimpeded flow of aid to Gaza

UN Palestinian refugee agency calls for unimpeded flow of aid to Gaza
  • UN General Assembly to discuss conflict triggered by the attack by Hamas militants on Israel

GENEVA: The United Nations Palestinian refugee agency on Tuesday called for an unimpeded flow of humanitarian assistance to Gaza, trapped in a humanitarian crisis after two weeks of intense Israeli attacks.

“We call for an unimpeded and continuous flow of humanitarian assistance and medical assistance to continue coming into Gaza,” said Tamara Alrifai, spokesperson for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

“The trucks that have come in so far are just a trickle in the face of the immense needs of people on the street.”

The UN General Assembly will meet Thursday to discuss the conflict triggered by the attack by Hamas militants on Israel, the body’s president announced in a letter to member states.
The Security Council has so far failed to agree on a resolution concerning the war, but a number of states — including Jordan on behalf of an Arab group of nations, Russia, Syria, Bangladesh, Vietnam and Cambodia — formally requested General Assembly President Dennis Francis to schedule the meeting.
Last week, the UN Security Council, regularly divided on the Israeli-Palestinian issue, rejected a Russian draft resolution calling for a “humanitarian pause.”
Only five of the 15 member states had supported the text, which condemned all violence against civilians and all terrorist acts, but did not name Hamas, an unacceptable omission to the United States, the United Kingdom and France.
Washington then vetoed a second resolution put forward by Brazil as the text did not mention Israel’s right to defend itself.
Twelve out of 15 Council members voted in favor of that resolution, which also condemned the “heinous terrorist attacks by Hamas,” while Russia and the United Kingdom abstained.
The United States was the only vote against, but as one of the body’s five permanent members its vote counts as a veto.
The Security Council will meet to discuss the issue Tuesday ahead of the General Assembly’s gathering Thursday at 10:00 am (1400 GMT).


Gaza’s girls cut off their hair for lack of combs

Gaza’s girls cut off their hair for lack of combs
Updated 6 sec ago
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Gaza’s girls cut off their hair for lack of combs

Gaza’s girls cut off their hair for lack of combs
The tent clinic she set up with a small team began by treating children, but has by necessity become a practice for whole families
Even the medication that is available is often unaffordable; a tube of simple burn ointment can now cost $53

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza: When girls complain to Gaza paediatrician Lobna Al-Azaiza that they have no comb, she tells them to cut off their hair.
It’s not just combs. Israel’s blockade of the territory, ravaged by 10 months of war, means there is little or no shampoo, soap, period products or household cleaning materials.
Waste collection and sewage treatment have also collapsed, and it’s easy to see why contagious diseases that thrive on overcrowding and lack of cleanliness — such as scabies or fungal infections — are on the rise.
“In the past period, the most common disease we have seen was skin rashes, skin diseases, which have many causes, including the overcrowding in the camps, the increased heat inside the tents, the sweating among children, and the lack of sufficient water for bathing,” the doctor said.
Azaiza used to work at Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahia until Israeli tanks separated the north of the besieged enclave from the south.
Like most of Gaza’s medics, she has adapted and continues to treat patients, walking to work past her own ruined house, demolished by an Israeli strike.
The tent clinic she set up with a small team began by treating children, but has by necessity become a practice for whole families, most of whom have also been ordered or bombed out of their homes, like the vast majority of Gaza’s 2.3 million people.
Even the medication that is available is often unaffordable; a tube of simple burn ointment can now cost 200 shekels ($53).
International aid deliveries have been dramatically reduced since Israel seized control of the Rafah border crossing from Egypt, exacerbating a humanitarian crisis.
Israel denies responsibility for delays in getting urgent humanitarian aid in, saying that the UN and others are responsible for its distribution inside the enclave.
Azaiza has little doubt where the immediate solution lies:
“The border crossing must be opened so that we can bring in medications, as most of the current ones are ineffective: zero effect, there is no effect on the skin diseases that we see.”

Rocket fired from Gaza falls in sea off Tel Aviv: Israeli army

Rocket fired from Gaza falls in sea off Tel Aviv: Israeli army
Updated 37 min 35 sec ago
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Rocket fired from Gaza falls in sea off Tel Aviv: Israeli army

Rocket fired from Gaza falls in sea off Tel Aviv: Israeli army
  • A projectile that was identified crossing from the Gaza Strip fell in the maritime space in central Israel
  • Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades said it fired two M90 rockets at Tel Aviv

TEL AVIV: A rocket fired from the war-torn Gaza Strip fell in the sea off Israel’s Tel Aviv on Tuesday, Israel’s army said, as Hamas militants announced their first attack on the city in months.
“A short while ago, a projectile that was identified crossing from the Gaza Strip fell in the maritime space in central Israel,” an army statement said, as an AFP journalist reported hearing a boom in the city at the same time.
The army added that “simultaneously, an additional projectile that did not cross into Israeli territory was identified.”
Hamas armed wing, the Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, said it fired two M90 rockets at Tel Aviv, their first attack on the Israeli commercial hub since May.
“Al-Qassam Brigades bombarded the city of Tel Aviv and its suburbs with two M90 missiles in response to the Zionist massacres against civilians and the deliberate displacement of our people,” a statement by the group said.
The attack came with Israel on high alert for an attack by Iran and its proxies following the killings of senior figures from Hamas and Hezbollah, the Lebanese armed group.


Tens of thousands in Sudan risk death if world does not step up response, says IOM

Tens of thousands in Sudan risk death if world does not step up response, says IOM
Updated 13 August 2024
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Tens of thousands in Sudan risk death if world does not step up response, says IOM

Tens of thousands in Sudan risk death if world does not step up response, says IOM
  • IOM has received just 21 percent of the support it needs to provide crucial aid to the Sudanese
  • “The international community is not doing enough,” Refaat said

BERLIN: The International Organization for Migration (IOM) urged countries to step up their donations in response to the world’s largest displacement crisis in Sudan, warning on Tuesday that inaction could cost tens of thousands of lives.
The IOM has received just 21 percent of the support it needs to provide crucial aid to the Sudanese, already plagued by conflict and now facing hunger, disease and floods, Mohamed Refaat, who leads the IOM’s Sudan mission, told a briefing.
“The international community is not doing enough,” Refaat said.
“Without an immediate massive and coordinated global response, we risk witnessing tens of thousands of preventable deaths in the coming months,” he added.
Some one in five people have been displaced in Sudan, with 10.7 million people internally displaced and 2.3 million having fled across borders, according to the IOM.
A conflict in Sudan that erupted in April 2023 has unleashed waves of ethnic violence and created famine-like conditions across the country.


Israeli strikes on Gaza leave children without parents and parents without children

Israeli strikes on Gaza leave children without parents and parents without children
Updated 13 August 2024
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Israeli strikes on Gaza leave children without parents and parents without children

Israeli strikes on Gaza leave children without parents and parents without children
  • More than 10 months into its war with Hamas, Israel’s relentless bombardment of the isolated territory has wiped out extended families
  • It has left parents without children and children without parents, brothers or sisters

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip: Reem Abu Hayyah, just three months old, was the only member of her family to survive an Israeli airstrike in the Gaza Strip late Monday. A few miles (kilometers) to the north, Mohamed Abuel-Qomasan lost his wife and their twin babies — just four days old — in another strike.
More than 10 months into its war with Hamas, Israel’s relentless bombardment of the isolated territory has wiped out extended families. It has left parents without children and children without parents, brothers or sisters.
And some of the sole survivors are so young they will have no memory of those they lost.
The Israeli strike late Monday destroyed a home near the southern city of Khan Younis, killing 10 people. The dead included Abu Hayyah’s parents and five siblings, ranging in age from 5 to 12, as well as the parents of another three children. All four children were wounded in the strike.
“There is no one left except this baby,” said her aunt, Soad Abu Hayyah. “Since this morning, we have been trying to feed her formula, but she does not accept it, because she is used to her mother’s milk.”
The airstrike that killed Abuel-Qomasan’s wife and newborns — a boy, Asser, and a girl, Ayssel — also killed the twins’ maternal grandmother. As he sat in a hospital, stunned into near-silence by the loss, he held up the twins’ birth certificates.
His wife, Joumana Arafa, a pharmacist, had given birth by Cesarean section four days ago and announced the twins’ arrival on Facebook. On Tuesday, he had gone to register the births at a local government office. While he was there, neighbors called to say the home where he was sheltering, near the central city of Deir Al-Balah, had been bombed.
“I don’t know what happened,” he said. “I am told it was a shell that hit the house.”
The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the strikes.
The military says it tries to avoid harming Palestinian civilians and blames their deaths on Hamas because the militants operate in dense residential areas, sometimes sheltering in and launching attacks from homes, schools, mosques and other civilian buildings.
But the army rarely comments on individual strikes, which often kill women and children. Gaza’s Health Ministry says nearly 40,000 Palestinians have been killed since the start of the war, without saying how many were fighters.
Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted around 250 in the Oct. 7 attack into southern Israel that ignited the war. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has often said that “they killed parents in front of their children and children in front of their parents” to illustrate the brutality of the attack, most recently in his address to the US Congress last month.
Israel’s offensive has left thousands of orphans — so many that local doctors employ an acronym when registering them: WCNSF, or “wounded child, no surviving family.” The United Nations estimated in February that some 17,000 children in Gaza are now unaccompanied, and the number is likely to have grown since.
The Abu Hayyah family was sheltering in an area that Israel had ordered people to evacuate from in recent days. It was one of several such orders that have led hundreds of thousands to seek shelter in an Israeli-declared humanitarian zone consisting of squalid, crowded tent camps along the coast.
The vast majority of Gaza’s population have fled their homes, often multiple times. The coastal strip, which is just 25 miles (40 kilometers) long by about 7 miles (11 kilometers) wide, has been completely sealed off by Israeli forces since May.
Around 84 percent of Gaza’s territory has been placed under evacuation orders by the Israeli military, according to the United Nations.
Many families have ignored the evacuation orders because they say nowhere feels safe, or because they are unable to make the arduous journey on foot, or because they fear they will never be able to return to their homes, even after the war.
Abuel-Qomasan and his wife had heeded orders to evacuate Gaza City in the opening weeks of the war. They sought shelter in central Gaza, as the army had instructed.


Red Cross hopes Sudan talks will pave way for aid surge

Red Cross hopes Sudan talks will pave way for aid surge
Updated 13 August 2024
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Red Cross hopes Sudan talks will pave way for aid surge

Red Cross hopes Sudan talks will pave way for aid surge
GENEVA: Red Cross chief Mirjana Spoljaric said Monday she hopes this week’s scheduled talks on the Sudan conflict will result in solid humanitarian steps and remove obstacles blocking a ceasefire.
The United States last month invited Sudan’s warring sides to hold ceasefire talks in Switzerland, more than a year after fighting broke out between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).
Spoljaric, the president of the International Committee of the Red Cross, described the situation in Sudan as a “humanitarian disaster.”
“We are not part of these talks, but I do hope that they will find agreements that will allow us to increase humanitarian assistance, that will allow us to have more access to affected populations, especially in the north of Darfur the situation is extremely concerning,” she told a press conference at the ICRC headquarters in Geneva.
She called for “very concrete humanitarian steps that will help build the trust, and will help remove some of the immediate obstacles for a ceasefire agreement.”
The ICRC chief was speaking at an event marking the 75th anniversary of the Geneva Conventions — the international treaties governing humanitarian treatment in armed conflicts.


War has raged since April 2023 between the Sudanese regular army under Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and the RSF, led by his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.
The conflict in Sudan has left tens of thousands dead and displaced more than 10 million people, according to the UN.
A recent UN-backed report said nearly 26 million people, or slightly more than half of the population, were facing high levels of “acute food insecurity.”
Previous negotiations in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, have failed to end the fighting.
A Sudanese delegation arrived in Jeddah on Friday for talks with US mediators on conditions for the government’s participation in this week’s planned ceasefire negotiations in Switzerland.
Spoljaric called on both parties to “remain at the table until they have found an agreement on how to increase” the ICRC’s operational space in Sudan.
The organization’s access to civilians is limited due to the lack of necessary security agreements.
“What we need is the parties to come together to agree on very concrete steps to ease these restrictions and to improve the security for us as humanitarians to operate,” Spoljaric said.