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Red Cross urges unhindered aid access to flood-hit and freezing Gaza

By AFP - Jan 08,2025 - Last updated at Jan 08,2025

Palestinian father Tayseer Obaid who was displaced with his family from the north of the besieged Gaza Strip, prepares to dig a trench in his tent in an attempt to protect his children from the cold and Israeli strikes (AFP photo)

 

GENEVA — The Red Cross called Wednesday for safe and unhindered access to Gaza to bring desperately needed aid into the war-torn Palestinian territory wracked by hunger and where babies are freezing to death.

 

Heavy rain and flooding have ravaged the makeshift shelters in Gaza, leaving thousands with up to 30 centimetres of water inside their damaged tents, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said.

 

The dire weather conditions were "exacerbating the unbearable conditions" in Gaza, it said, pointing out that many families were left "clinging on to survival in makeshift camps, without even the most basic necessities, such as blankets".

 

Citing the United Nations, the IFRC highlighted the deaths of eight newborn babies who had been living in tents without warmth or protection from the rain and falling temperatures.

 

Those deaths "underscore the critical severity of the humanitarian crisis there", IFRC Secretary-General Jagan Chapagain said in a statement.

 

"I urgently reiterate my call to grant safe and unhindered access to humanitarians to let them provide life-saving assistance," he said.

 

"Without safe access, children will freeze to death. Without safe access, families will starve. Without safe access, humanitarian workers can't save lives." 

 

Chapagain issued an "urgent plea to all the parties... to put an end to this human suffering. Now". 

 

The IFRC said the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) was striving to provide emergency health services and supplies to people in Gaza, with an extra sense of urgency during the cold winter months.

 

But it warned that "the lack of aid deliveries and access is making providing adequate support all but impossible". 

 

It also lamented the "continuing attacks on health facilities across the Gaza Strip", which it said meant people were unable to access the treatment they need.

 

"In the north of Gaza, there are now no functioning hospitals," it said.

 

The IFRC stressed that the closure of the main Rafah border crossing last May had had a dramatic impact on the humanitarian situation, warning that "only a trickle of aid is currently entering Gaza".

 

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