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All but one of the hospitals in the north of Gaza have stopped functioning, according to the UN, as Israel’s war against Hamas deepens a humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian enclave.
Hospitals in Gaza have gradually been forced to stop operating over the past two weeks as Israeli forces advance deep into the enclave and severely restrict supplies of fuel, water and food to the besieged territory.
The World Health Organization warned on Monday that al-Shifa hospital, the largest medical facility in Gaza, was “nearly a cemetery”, while a doctor at al-Ahli, the only hospital still working in the north of the strip, said that surgery on “all injuries up to the moderate level” was being done without anaesthesia as supplies were on the “verge of depletion”.
“The pain experienced by the patients during the surgical interventions without anaesthesia is beyond what humanity on this earth can endure,” Fadel Naim, a doctor from the hospital, wrote on social media platform X.
The UN’s humanitarian arm said 32 patients — including three premature babies — had died at al-Shifa since Saturday as a result of the loss of power and “dire conditions” at the hospital. Mohamed Abu Silmeyeh, director of the hospital, warned on Saturday that medics were having to wrap babies in cellophane to keep them alive after incubators stopped working due to the lack of power.
Israel claims that al-Shifa is a significant site for Hamas’s operations because it sits on top of the armed group’s underground infrastructure that the Israeli military intends to destroy. Doctors at the Gaza City hospital have denied the claim, and said thousands of patients, medical personnel and civilians were sheltering there.
The desperate situation in Gaza’s hospitals has been a source of tension between Israel and its allies, with the US, France and other western nations increasingly pushing Israel to exercise restraint in operations near medical facilities.
US President Joe Biden said on Monday that the US had spoken to Israel about the topic and that hospitals “must be protected” He added: “My hope and expectation is that there will be less intrusive action relative to hospitals.”
Israel bombarded Gaza and launched a ground invasion after Hamas militants from the coastal strip carried out the deadliest-ever attack on Israel last month, killing more than 1,200 people, according to Israeli officials. Israel’s military said on Tuesday that an Israeli soldier held hostage in Gaza had died, after Hamas issued a video of her alive as well as images of what it said was her body after she had been killed in an Israeli air strike.
Israel’s assault had killed more than 11,000 people, including more than 4,500 children and more than 3,000 women, in Gaza as of Sunday night, according to health officials in the enclave.
However the Gaza health ministry said it was having “significant difficulties” in compiling the data due to communications blackouts in the territory and it estimated that a further 3,000 citizens were missing or under the rubble of buildings destroyed in fighting.
The ministry on Monday described al-Shifa as being under a “complete siege”, saying there were more than 100 bodies that were beginning to decompose and there was “the smell of corpses” everywhere.
It said that 8,000 displaced people were sheltering at al-Shifa, but there was no food or fresh water.
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