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World / Middle East

Those still in north Gaza 'scavenging among the rubble': UNRWA

Published: 25 Nov 2024 - 08:36 pm | Last Updated: 25 Nov 2024 - 08:37 pm
A Palestinian family rests on the rubble of a building west of Gaza City, on November 25, 2024. (Photo by Omar Al-Qattaa / AFP)

A Palestinian family rests on the rubble of a building west of Gaza City, on November 25, 2024. (Photo by Omar Al-Qattaa / AFP)

AFP

Jerusalem: With an intensive Israeli military operation in Gaza's besieged north in its 50th day, remaining residents are left "scavenging among the rubble" for food, UNRWA spokeswoman Louise Wateridge told AFP.

The Israeli army announced it would intensify operations in the ravaged north of the territory on October 6, with troops encircling the northern city of Jabalia and adjacent areas at the time.

Speaking to AFP from Gaza City, where many of the north's residents have fled since the operation began, Wateridge gave insights gleaned from speaking to displaced Palestinians and colleagues from the UN agency for Palestinian refugees.

She said UNRWA estimates that between 100,000 and 130,000 people have fled north Gaza since the beginning of the operation, which Israel said aims to keep Hamas militants from regrouping in the area.


A displaced boy covers his head with a pan as he runs from the rain past building rubble at the Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on November 24, 2024. (Photo by Eyad Baba / AFP)

What is the current situation? "There is no access to food, no access to drinking water. Eight of the UNRWA water wells that were in Jabalia, they stopped functioning weeks ago. They've been damaged, destroyed, they've run out of fuel.

"There was very horrific reports of continued strikes on hospitals, on shelters where people are.

"Here in Gaza City, I'm meeting people who have fled for their lives and they're showing me these appalling videos where they're running through the streets, they're navigating, you know, the rubble.

"There are bodies of children around them, there are bodies of people who have been killed everywhere that they have to walk and step over to get out.

"Fifty days of siege, it's unfathomable, the destruction, the death, the pain, the suffering that that will cause.

"I met some children just in the last few days, you can hear the planes going over, you can hear the drones and they freeze, they completely freeze, they don't have anything to say, their teeth start chattering, they're absolutely paralysed by fear from these experiences that they've had over the last few weeks."

What is life like there?"(There are) around 65,000 people in these besieged areas. We hear that they are scavenging from residential buildings, scavenging among the rubble, trying to find any old tins of canned food, any kind of source of food that's already in these residential buildings or among the rubble.

"It was around this time last year that there were reports from northern Gaza that was cut off and people were going around, our colleagues were going around eating animal food to stay alive. So, people are just eating anything that they can find at this point and it really is complete survival.

"Hearing these stories of people's families under the rubble and fleeing and having to leave them behind, people are traumatised, people who haven't managed to escape, they're absolutely traumatised."

What about those in Gaza City?"(There are) around 100,000 to 130,000 more people forcibly displaced from Jabalia, from Beit Hanoun, from these besieged areas.

And... they're arriving (in Gaza City) to charcoal buildings, blown out buildings, it's raining, it's cold, it's freezing.

"They don't have mattresses, they don't have tarps, they don't have tents, they don't have blankets, families are crying, begging because their children don't have clothes, they don't have warm clothes, babies don't have anything to keep them warm.

"It's beyond appalling, the conditions people are forced to live in here. So they're among the rubble, they're in these facilities that should be protected by international law.

"Horrific stories of tanks arriving, of strikes on the schools, and then people being forced to go back and shelter there because they simply don't have anywhere else to go."