Gaza medical system at breaking point
JERUSALEM/GAZA, 3 March 2008 (IRIN) - Hospitals
in the Gaza Strip were struggling to cope with the influx of wounded
after five days of intense Israeli military activity, including a
ground incursion and repeated air strikes, which has left at least
115 Palestinians dead and over 300 wounded, according to medical
sources in the territory.
The Israeli military said the operation was meant to halt rocket
attacks on southern Israel, and that about 90 percent of those killed
were militants, however, human rights groups and medical officials
said at least a third of the dead were women and children. The UN
Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said in a statement: "Children
constitute more than half the population of Gaza and are bearing the brunt of
the crisis."
Israeli troops started to withdraw from Gaza on the morning of 3 March, but
militants continued to launch rockets which caused damage to homes and slightly
injured some Israeli civilians over the weekend (1-2 March). Two Israeli soldiers
were also killed in fighting in Gaza.
Medical sector
Aid workers said the medical system was at breaking point, noting that it had
been under pressure after earlier violence as well as the blockade on Gaza and
rolling power outages.
"We are very overcrowded, especially in the intensive care unit," Hassan
Khalaf, director of Gaza's main Shifa hospital, told IRIN. Other units in the
hospital were treating serious cases as the intensive care unit had run out of
space.
In
recent weeks non-urgent surgeries had been cancelled due to power outages, and
the latest violence has only further distanced them from treatment. One aid worker
said that eventually some non-urgent cases would become emergencies if not treated.
Some patients need to be referred for treatment outside the enclave,
which cannot offer certain surgeries. On 2 March several dozen patients
were sent to Israel and others were taken to Egypt, after the neighbouring
state agreed to open its usually sealed border with Gaza on a one-off
basis.
The Israeli Physicians for Human Rights told IRIN that over 20
patients, including the recently injured, still needed to be transferred
outside the Strip, though whether those considered militants would be
able to leave remained unclear.
The International Commi ttee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said it was
coordinating patient transfers as well as shipments of medical supplies
into the enclave. It had provided hospitals with plasma as well as other
needed materials and equipment.
Palestinians in the West Bank had answered calls to donate blood,
and the ICRC was working to bring the bags into Gaza. Khalaf from
Shifa said Gazans had been donating blood "24 hours a day".
Gaza hospitals remained in need of more items, including ventilators
and X-ray machines, to properly handle all the wounded.
Jabalya refugee camp
The Jabalya refugee camp saw the worst of the fighting. UNRWA,
the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, sent teams out following
the Israeli withdrawal to investigate the damage. A main concern for
UNRWA was that any destruction would not easily be fixed.
"We are not going to be able to repair damage to housing until
we can get construction materials into Gaza," John
Ging, UNRWA's Gaza chief, told IRIN. For the last eight months UNRWA
has not been able to fix homes damaged in internal fighting as well
as Israeli military operations due to the restrictions on importing
cement.
Ging also expressed concern for the psychological well-being of
the camp's residents, some of whom were trapped in their homes for extended
periods of time, sometimes days, during the fighting.
The Coastal Municipalities Water Utility said during the fighting
water supplies had been cut off for over 200,000 people in areas where
fighting took place.
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