Gaza: UN
agencies voice alarm
at worsening
situation, call
for urgent action
10 July 2006 – United Nations
humanitarian agencies
working in
the occupied Palestinian
territory are
alarmed at developments
following
Israel’s incursion into
Gaza, where
innocent civilians including
children have
been killed in actions that
have brought
increased misery to hundreds
of thousands
of people and will wreak
far-reaching harm
on Palestinian society.
“An already alarming
situation in Gaza,
with poverty rates at
nearly 80 per cent
and unemployment at
nearly 40 per
cent, is likely to deteriorate rapidly,
unless immediate and
urgent action
is taken,” they said in a
joint statement
issued at the weekend.
refugees, warned that
Gaza is on the brink of a public health disaster. Since the Israeli strike on Gaza’s only power plant
on 28 June, the entire strip is without electricity for between 12 and 18 hours
every day.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan
has voiced increasing alarm in several statements in recent days, calling on
both sides to “pull back from the brink,” and for an immediate halt to the
“disproportionate use of force by Israel” as well as the release of an Israeli
Army Corporal captured by Palestinian militants and the cessation of rocket
fire into Israel.
UNRWA warned that the water utility is now relying on its own backup generators and its daily operation has been cut by two thirds leading to shortages and a critical situation at sewage plants. With restrictions on humanitarian supply lines there is now a backlog of over 230 containers of food awaiting delivery at the border crossing.
The World Health
Organization (WHO) said the public
health system is facing an unprecedented crisis, with the current stock of fuel
for back-up generators likely to run out within two weeks. In the last week,
there has been a 160 per cent increase in cases of diarrhoea compared with the
same period last year and the agency predicts that 23 per cent of the essential
drug list will be out of stock within a month.
The World Food Programme
(WFP) estimated that in June 70 per
cent of the Gaza population was already unable to cover their daily food needs
without aid. Flour mills, food factories and bakeries, reliant on electricity,
are being forced to reduce production, while lack of refrigeration is resulting
in high food losses. It called for a humanitarian corridor to ensure the
arrival for relief items.
The UN Children’s Fund
(UNICEF) said children are living in
an environment of extraordinary violence, insecurity and fear and the ongoing
fighting is hurting them psychologically. Caregivers say children are showing
signs of distress and exhaustion, including a 15 to 20 per cent increase in
bedwetting, due to shelling and sonic booms.
The Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)
noted that while Israel has legitimate security concerns, international
humanitarian law requires that the principles of proportionality and
distinction between civilians and combatants be respected at all times. The prohibition on targeting civilians
is also being violated by Palestinian armed groups, launching missiles from the
Gaza Strip into Israel, and must therefore end, it added.
The Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) is calling for the continuous and unimpeded access for relief aid and
fuel supplies and for Israel to repair the damage done to the power station.
OCHA fears the humanitarian situation could easily deteriorate, with continued
Israeli military operations and artillery shelling, which could damage
remaining infrastructure and essential services.
“Unless urgent action is taken, we are facing a humanitarian crisis that will have far reaching consequences for the communities we work in and the institutions we work through,” the joint statement concluded.
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