Head of UN agency for Palestinians calls for cease-fire in Gaza
LONDON (AA) – The residents of Gaza need a cease-fire now to ensure their continued survival from a siege that has deprived them of the bare necessities of life, said the head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees or UNRWA.
Philippe Lazzarini, the agency’s commissioner-general, also condemned the Israeli airstrikes in Gaza, which have been going on for 20 days, and the dire situation they have led to.
Writing in Britain’s The Guardian on Thursday, Lazarini said, “An immediate humanitarian ceasefire must be enacted to allow safe, continuous and unrestricted access to fuel, medicine, water and food in the Gaza Strip,” referring to the siege Israel has imposed on the strip for weeks now, cutting off water, electricity, and humanitarian and medical supplies.
He added: “For more than two weeks now, unbearable images of human tragedy have come out of Gaza. History will ask why the world did not have the courage to act decisively and stop this hell on earth.”
He explained: “Gaza has been described over the last 15 years as a large open-air prison, with an air, sea and land blockade choking 2.2 million people within 365 sq km. Today, this prison is becoming the graveyard of a population trapped between war, siege and deprivation.”
“Nearly 600,000 people are sheltering in 150 schools and other UNRWA buildings, living in unsanitary conditions with limited clean water, little food and medicines,” he said.
Lazzarini also condemned the Israeli military’s warnings to the residents of Gaza, saying the Israeli army has “been warning Palestinians in Gaza to move to the southern part of the strip as it bombs the north; but the strikes also continue in the south. There is nowhere safe in Gaza.”
“Mothers do not know how they can clean their children. Pregnant women pray that they will not face complications during delivery because hospitals have no capacity to receive them,” he said
Lazzarini also stressed that Hamas’ attack on Israel on October 7 “does not justify the ongoing crimes against the civilian population of Gaza, including its 1 million children.”
Nearly three weeks into the relentless campaign of Israeli airstrikes, at least 7,028 Palestinians have been killed, according to official figures.
Officials and residents of Gaza have decried the Israeli airstrikes hitting residences, hospitals, and houses of worship, acts prohibited under international rules of war.
Gaza’s 2.3 million residents have run out of food, water, medicine, and fuel, and aid convoys recently allowed into Gaza have carried only a smallGaza fraction of what is needed.