UNICEF warns children in Gaza face catastrophic situation as Israel's genocidal attacks rage on
especiales
The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has expressed concerns about the “catastrophic situation” of Palestinian children in the besieged Gaza Strip, which has been under a genocidal Israeli bombing campaign for over three weeks.
UNICEF spokesperson Toby Fricker said the number of children killed in Gaza is catastrophic. “The situation for children is horrific,” he said an interview with Al Jazeera TV channel on Sunday, calling for the protection of Gaza hospitals from relentless Israeli airstrikes, the establishment of safe humanitarian corridors, and the continuous and sustainable delivery of humanitarian aid to the people in the coastal enclave.
In another interview with France 24, Fricker said the scale of the humanitarian crisis in Gaza is “staggering.” The Gaza children, he noted, are petrified about the situation that they are living through in the densely-populated territory.
The Gaza Strip has been the scene of Israel’s acts of violence including massacre, demolition of sacred places and suppression of the local media. This is while people in the Gaza Strip strive to keep their resistance alive under fire.
Israel waged the bloody war on the Gaza Strip on October 7 after the Palestinian Hamas resistance movement launched the surprise Operation Al-Aqsa Storm against the occupying entity.
Since the start of the war, the Tel Aviv regime has been committing war crimes in Gaza, killing at least 8,069 Palestinians, mostly women and children, and injuring over 22,000 others. It has also imposed a “complete siege” on the territory, cutting off fuel, electricity, food and water to the more than two million Palestinians living in the coastal sliver.
Additionally on Sunday, the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) top prosecutor urged Israel to make “discernible efforts” to make sure civilians get basic food and medicines. Speaking at a news conference in Egypt, Karim Khan said impeding aid to Gaza could be a crime under ICC jurisdiction.
“There should not be any impediment to humanitarian relief supplies going to children, to women and men, civilians,” he emphasized. “They are innocent, they have rights under international humanitarian law,” Khan said, warning that curtailing those rights give rise to criminal responsibility under the ICC’s Rome Statute.
Add new comment