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UN alarmed by Gaza war's toll on children, 'catastrophic' hunger
By AFP - Jun 26,2024 - Last updated at Jun 26,2024
A girl sits by the retrieved bodies of victims killed in the aftermath of overnight Israeli bombardment at the Asma school run by UNRWA, in the Shati camp for Palestinian refugees west of Gaza City, on June 25, 2024 (AFP photo)
GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories — UN agencies sounded the alarm about war-torn Gaza on Tuesday, saying that 10 children a day are losing one or both legs and half-a-million Palestinians suffer "catastrophic" hunger.
There was no let-up in Israel's bombardment of the Gaza Strip and fighting against the Palestinian fighter group Hamas over the October 7 surprise attack, as it maintained the siege on the territory's 2.4 million people.
Palestinian officials said one strike killed 10 members of Qatar-based Hamas political chief Ismail Haniyeh's family, including his sister.
Israel's military did not immediately confirm the strike, which the civil defence agency in Hamas-ruled Gaza said hit the family's house in the northern Al Shati refugee camp, leaving some bodies trapped under the rubble.
The military said its forces struck Hamas operatives "inside school compounds" in Al Shati and another area of northern Gaza overnight, accusing them of involvement in the October 7 attack and "in holding hostages captive".
Civil defence agency spokesman Mahmud Basal told AFP: "There are 10 martyrs and several wounded as a result of the strike, including Zahr Haniyeh, sister of Hamas political bureau chief Ismail Haniyeh."
Haniyeh lost three sons and four grandchildren in a strike in April, when Israel’s military accused them of “terrorist activities”.
At the time, the Hamas chief said about 60 of his relatives had died in the Gaza war.
The reported strike came three days after Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the “intense phase” of the war was winding down, but that the war would continue.
Philippe Lazzarini, head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, in a briefing in Geneva warned of the war’s dire impact on children in Gaza.
“Basically we have every day 10 children who are losing one leg or two legs on average,” Lazzarini told reporters.
Citing figures from the UN children’s agency UNICEF, he said that figure “does not even include the arms and the hands, and we have many more” of these.
“Ten per day, that means around 2,000 children after the more than 260 days of this brutal war,” Lazzarini said.
He said amputation often takes place “in quite horrible conditions”, sometimes without anaesthesia.
The UN’s Rome-based World Food Programme, meanwhile, said a new report “paints a stark picture of ongoing hunger”.
The latest Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) partnership said its March warning of imminent famine in the north of the Palestinian territory had not materialised.
“However, the situation in Gaza remains catastrophic and there is a high and sustained risk of famine across the whole Gaza Strip,” the report said, warning against complacency.
It said around 495,000 people — around 22 per cent of the territory’s population, according to the UN — are still facing “catastrophic levels of acute food insecurity”.
Another 745,000 people are classified as in a food security emergency.
Looking at Israel’s longer-term strategy, National Security Adviser Tzachi Hanegbi said Tuesday that striking Hamas was not enough, and that an “alternative” leadership must take the helm in Gaza.
“Hamas cannot be made to disappear, as it’s an idea,” Hanegbi told a conference in the Tel Aviv suburb of Herzliya about the Islamist militant group.
“Therefore you need an alternative idea, not just damage to its military capabilities. And the alternative is local leadership that is prepared to live alongside Israel.”
Meanwhile, in a politically volatile ruling that could upend Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition, Israel’s top court said the government “must act” to draft ultra-Orthodox Jewish men to military service.
Students of Jewish seminaries have historically been granted sweeping exemptions from the otherwise mandatory service, but calls within Israel for more ultra-Orthodox men to join army ranks have swelled during the war, which has seen mass mobilisation.
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