Gaza – The World Health Organization chief has warned that a dire lack of fuel could have a “catastrophic” impact on already devastated health services in the war-ravaged Gaza Strip.
Desperate fuel shortages have been a constant problem in the besieged Palestinian territory, facing intense Israeli bombardment since Hamas’s deadly October 7 attack inside Israel sparked the ongoing war.
“Further disruption to health services is imminent in Gaza due to a severe lack of fuel,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said late Thursday on X.
Dr. Wissam Al-Sakani, public relations and media coordinator of Kamal Adwan Hospital, speaks to the lack of fuel and dire situation they face. Located in the northern Gaza Strip, Kamal Adwan is the only hospital providing pediatric healthcare in the area, and it is losing at pic.twitter.com/hNAgnp9G7K
— Eye on Palestine (@EyeonPalestine) July 1, 2024
The UN health agency cautioned that only 90,000 litres of fuel entered Gaza on Wednesday. The health sector alone needs 80,000 litres daily.
This is forcing WHO and its partners working in Gaza “to make impossible choices”, Tedros said.
Gaza is completely sealed off and everything that enters it is controlled by the Israelis.
Fuel, which has been particularly difficult to get in amid Israeli fears it could benefit Hamas fighters, is vital to keep hospital generators running, as well as humanitarian and emergency vehicles.
Urgent plea
WHO said its partners were directing limited fuel supplies to “key hospitals”, including the Nasser Medical Complex and Al Amal Hospital in Khan Yunis and the Kuwaiti field hospital in Rafah.
Fuel was also going to 21 ambulances run by the Palestinian Red Crescent.
This was “to prevent services from grinding to a halt”, Tedros said.
He pointed out that the European Gaza Hospital in Khan Yunis had been out of service since Tuesday, and warned that “losing more hospitals in the Strip would be catastrophic.”
Tedros’s comments came after the Nasser Hospital, the only major one still functioning in Gaza, released an urgent plea for fuel needed to keep operating its ICU, the Al Quds daily reported.
Gaza’s Ministry of Health warns that in a few hours, the electricity generators at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, southern Gaza will stop working due to a lack of fuel. pic.twitter.com/cAkc7w4uGt
— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) July 4, 2024
The hospital had said most of its wards were out of service, and warned it now faced the risk of power outages.
The situation was especially dire after hundreds of sick and wounded patients were moved to Nasser after being evacuated from the now defunct European hospital.
The Kuwaiti field hospital also warned that it would go out of service unless it received fuel to power its generators, Al Quds reported.
‘Completely obstructed’
Since Israeli forces seized the main Rafah crossing in May, aid and especially fuel into Gaza has slowed to a trickle.
WHO said that the limited deliveries of fuel into Gaza via the nearby Kerem Shalom crossing, “combined with insecurity and challenging routes, have further eroded our ability to maintain fuel supplies for health and humanitarian operations”.
Hostilities in Rafah in the south had meanwhile “completely obstructed access to the main fuel storage facility”, Tedros said.
“We again issue an urgent appeal for the Rafah crossing to be reopened and for a sustainable flow of fuel, food, water and medical supplies to be permitted into Gaza,” he said.
Palestinian journalist Yousef Faris witnessed the death of a baby in Gaza’s depleted hospital due to the Israeli occupation blockade.
Faris wrote, “Gaza’s healthcare sector is in complete collapse, suffering from shortages of medicine, fuel, staff, equipment, and laboratory… pic.twitter.com/hM6m55qxFd
— Quds News Network (@QudsNen) July 3, 2024
Hamas’s October 7 attack that sparked Gaza’s deadliest war resulted in the deaths of 1,195 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.
Hamas militants also seized 251 hostages, 116 of whom remain in Gaza including 42 the army says are dead.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 38,011 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.
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Source: AFP
Picture: Pixabay
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