Israel-Hamas war: Aid stuck at Gaza border as Israeli siege strains hospitals and water supplies

Aid stuck at Gaza border as Israeli siege strains hospitals and water supplies
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Hospitals in the Gaza Strip face collapse as water, power and medicine near depletion, while hundreds of thousands of Palestinians face dwindling food supplies as Israel maintains punishing air strikes in retaliation for the deadly rampage by Hamas.

Thousands of patients’ lives are at risk, UN officials said, and mediators are struggling to reach a ceasefire deal to let in aid waiting at the Egyptian border.

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More than a week after Israel stopped entry of essential supplies, all eyes are on the Rafah crossing between the Gaza Strip and Egypt. Trucks carrying badly needed aid have waited there for days unable to pass through, and Israeli air strikes last week forced the shutdown of Gaza’s only connection to Egypt.

Egyptian state TV and Gaza media reported that Israel struck the crossing again on Monday. Egypt’s foreign minister Sameh Shoukry said Israel “has not taken a position” on allowing access. The Israeli government did not respond to a request for comment.

As Israel prepares a likely ground offensive into the Gaza Strip that would mean deadly house-to-house fighting, fears rose over the conflict spreading. Israel evacuated towns near its northern border with Lebanon, and Hamas militants in Gaza continue to fire rockets into Israel.

Speaking to the Israeli Knesset on Monday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned Iran and Hezbollah: “Don’t test us in the north. Don’t make the mistake of the past. Today, the price you will pay will be far heavier,” referring to Israel’s 2006 war with Hezbollah, which operates out of Lebanon.

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Soon after he spoke, the Knesset floor was evacuated as a rockets headed towards Jerusalem, part of a steady stream of attacks militants have launched from Gaza into Israel. Sirens in Tel Aviv warning of incoming rockets prompted staff to duck into stairways for cover as visiting US secretary of state Antony Blinken met Israel’s defence minister.

This has become the deadliest of the five Gaza wars for both sides. At least 2,778 have been killed and 9,700 wounded in the Gaza Strip, according to the Heath Ministry there, and more than 1,400 Israelis have been killed, the vast majority civilians in Hamas’s October 7 assault.

Relatives and friends mourn a young Palestinian man on October 16, 2023 in Gaza City, Gaza. (Photo by Ahmad Hasaballah/Getty Images)Relatives and friends mourn a young Palestinian man on October 16, 2023 in Gaza City, Gaza. (Photo by Ahmad Hasaballah/Getty Images)
Relatives and friends mourn a young Palestinian man on October 16, 2023 in Gaza City, Gaza. (Photo by Ahmad Hasaballah/Getty Images)

The Israeli military said on Monday that at least 199 hostages had been taken back to Gaza, higher than previous estimates. The military did not specify whether that number includes foreigners.

The head of Israel’s Shin Bet security service, in charge of monitoring militant groups, took responsibility for failing to avert Hamas’s surprise attack. As agency head, “the responsibility for that is on me”, Ronen Bar said. “There will be time for investigation — now is a time for war,” he wrote in a letter to Shin Bet workers and their families.

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The combination of air strikes that pulverise entire neighbourhoods, depleting supplies, and Israel’s mass evacuation order for the north of the Gaza Strip threw the tiny territory’s 2.3 million people into upheaval.

Palestinians rush with a body brought out from under a collapsed building following an Israeli airstrike in Rafah, in the southern part of Gaza Strip, on October 16, 2023. (Photo by SAID KHATIB/AFP via Getty Images)Palestinians rush with a body brought out from under a collapsed building following an Israeli airstrike in Rafah, in the southern part of Gaza Strip, on October 16, 2023. (Photo by SAID KHATIB/AFP via Getty Images)
Palestinians rush with a body brought out from under a collapsed building following an Israeli airstrike in Rafah, in the southern part of Gaza Strip, on October 16, 2023. (Photo by SAID KHATIB/AFP via Getty Images)

More than a million have fled their homes, and 60% of them are in the approximately eight-mile area south of the evacuation zone, according to the UN.

The Israeli military says it is trying to clear away civilians for their safety ahead of a major campaign against Hamas in the northern Gaza Strip, where it says the militants have extensive networks of tunnels and rocket launchers. Much of Hamas’s military infrastructure is in residential areas.

Those fleeing northern Gaza still face the threat of air strikes in the south. Before dawn on Monday, a strike hit a building in the town of Rafah where three displaced families who fled Gaza City were sheltering. At least 12 people were killed and nine others remained missing, said survivors from the al-Masry, al-Akhras and Hamouda families.

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More than 400,000 displaced people in the south were crowded in schools and other facilities of the UN agency for Palestinians, UNRWA, but the group cannot provide them aid, leaving them to search for water and food. UNRWA said it has only a litre of water a day for each of its staff trapped in the territory.

Hundreds of thousands more displaced people have moved in with family members, packing dozens into homes. With taps dry, many have resorted to drinking dirty or sewage-filled water, risking the spread of disease.

“Gaza is running out of water, and Gaza is running out of life,” said UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini, calling for an immediate lifting of the siege.

For a third day, Israel’s military announced a safe corridor for people to move from north to south between the hours of 8am and noon. It said more than 600,000 people have already left the Gaza City area.

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In northern Gaza, unknown numbers remain, either unwilling or unable to leave.

UNRWA said 170,000 people were sheltering at its schools in the north when the order to leave came, but it could not evacuate them and does not know if they remained. More than 40,000 have crowded in the grounds of Gaza City’s al-Shifa Hospital and surrounding streets, hoping it will be safe from bombardment.

UNRWA said on Monday it received reports that the Hamas-run Ministry of Health removed fuel and medical equipment from its evacuated compound in Gaza City.

Hamas urged people to ignore the evacuation order, and the Israeli military on Sunday released photos it said showed a Hamas roadblock preventing traffic from moving south. Hospitals in the Gaza Strip are expected to run out of generator fuel in the next 24 hours, the UN said.

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Four hospitals in northern Gaza are no longer functioning and 21 have received Israeli orders to evacuate. Doctors have refused, saying it would mean death for critically ill patients and babies on ventilators.

The medical aid group Doctors With Borders said many of its personnel decided to stay in the north to treat wounded. They had run out of painkillers, and staff reported “wounded screaming in pain”, it said.

Israel has said the siege will not be lifted until Hamas releases all the captives, but the country’s water ministry said supplies had been restored at one “specific point”, outside the southern town of Khan Younis. Aid workers in Gaza said they had not yet seen evidence the water was back.

The World Health Organisation said assistance for 300,000 patients was awaiting entry through Rafah. On the Gaza side of the crossing, crowds of Palestinians with dual citizenship waited anxiously, sitting on suitcases or crouched on the floor, some comforting crying children.

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