Displaced Palestinians protest in front of a headquarters affiliated with the United Nations(UNRWA), demanding the provision of flour and hunger relief in Gaza Strip, on November 17, 2024.

Images by The World Food Programme

Gaza Crisis Deepens as Newborns Succumb to Cold and Hunger Prevails

The humanitarian crisis in Gaza continues to worsen as newborn deaths, debilitating hunger, and escalating violence highlight the devastating conditions faced by the population. Recent reports from the United Nations and humanitarian agencies underscore the dire need for aid and justice amidst ongoing turmoil.

Newborn Deaths Stun Humanitarian Agencies

Four newborns and infants in Gaza have died from hypothermia, according to reports from the Palestinian Ministry of Health and UNICEF’s Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa, Edouard Beigbeder. These tragedies, deemed preventable, shed light on the extreme fragility of Gaza’s health and living conditions.

“Temperatures are expected to drop further in the coming days, and more children’s lives could be lost to the inhumane conditions they are enduring,” said Beigbeder. Families displaced by Israel’s prolonged offensive are sheltering in makeshift tents ill-equipped to provide protection from the freezing weather.

The catastrophe is compounded by widespread malnutrition, severely restricted access to healthcare, and dwindling resources. Beigbeder warned that many families and children in Gaza face daily threats from both environmental elements and ongoing attacks.

Hunger Crisis Grips the Population

The scale of hunger in Gaza is unprecedented, with over 90% of the population enduring crisis levels of food insecurity. The World Food Programme (WFP), responsible for providing emergency food relief, has declared that only a third of the required aid has reached the enclave.

“Hunger is everywhere,” the WFP stated in a social media post, attributing the shortfall to the restricted access for aid convoys. While an average of 65 truckloads of assistance have entered Gaza daily in recent months, the inflow is grossly insufficient to meet the overwhelming humanitarian needs.

Both WFP and UNICEF have called for the immediate opening of all access crossings to ensure that life-saving supplies make it to those most in need. The inability to deliver adequate food, shelter, and medical supplies has left hundreds of thousands of displaced individuals, including vulnerable children, in desperate conditions.

Journalists Killed in Airstrike

Amid the humanitarian catastrophe, the United Nations Human Rights Office condemned the killing of five journalists by Israeli forces on Thursday. The journalists were traveling in a clearly marked press vehicle near Al Awda hospital when an airstrike struck their van.

While the Israeli military claimed the journalists were affiliated with Palestinian armed groups, the UN reiterated that such allegations do not strip journalists of their civilian protections under international law. The Office has called for an impartial investigation into the killings and underscored the urgent need to protect civilians and journalists in conflict zones.

“These deaths are not just tragic; they represent a gross violation of international humanitarian law,” the Office stated.

Calls for Immediate Action

The unfolding humanitarian disaster in Gaza underscores the urgent need for international intervention. With preventable deaths mounting, hunger surging, and civilian lives under persistent threat, agencies are calling for decisive action.

UNICEF, WFP, and other organizations on the ground have urged global leaders to facilitate unimpeded aid delivery and ensure the protection of all civilians, including children and members of the press. Without immediate measures, the situation in Gaza could become even more catastrophic in the coming days.

For the millions trapped in this escalating crisis, time is running out.

Keywords: Gaza crisis, humanitarian aid, rising violence, hunger, Middle East conflict

#GazaCrisis #HumanRights #UNAction

+ posts

Leave a comment