Streets in Gaza become gravesites as access to cemeteries blocked
DEIR AL-BALAH, Palestine (AA) – Families have turned to burying the bodies of their relatives killed in Israeli airstrikes in makeshift mass graves scattered throughout the Gaza Strip.
The burials in makeshift graves are due to the difficulty of reaching cemeteries because of the continual bombardment.
Palestinians interviewed by the media said the graves are intended to be temporary until a cease-fire is declared.
– 120 makeshift mass graves –
The head of the Euro-Mediterranean Observatory for Human Rights, Rami Abdu, said his teams have documented “more than 120 makeshift mass graves in the governorates of the Gaza Strip for burying the victims of the ongoing Israeli war.”
Abdu noted in a previous statement to the media that “people in the Strip have resorted to establishing makeshift mass graves in residential neighborhoods, courtyards of homes, streets, wedding halls, and sports stadiums, given the difficulty of accessing main and organized cemeteries.”
“We have documented more than 120 makeshift mass graves where 3 or more individuals from targeted families are buried,” he said.
Abdu explained that families turned to the option due to the “impossibility of reaching main cemeteries due to road closures, infrastructure destruction, and ongoing targeting operations.”
“Burial operations face great difficulty due to the loss of most or all family members, making burial procedures impossible. Additionally, hospitals face difficulty receiving the deceased, especially with the cessation of medical operations in Gaza City and the north,” he said.
– Unavoidable choice –
During its siege in November, the Al-Shifa Medical Complex turned into a cemetery as the administration had to bury dozens of martyrs in scattered mass graves on its premises, corridors and various facilities.
That was after bodies decomposed and the Israeli army refused to allow their removal for burial.
The Al-Shifa Medical Complex was the largest healthcare institution providing medical services in the Gaza Strip. It used to receive thousands of patients and wounded individuals daily, in addition to refugees seeking shelter before it was forcibly evacuated by the Israeli army.
On November 12, medical teams at Al-Shifa buried around 100 bodies of Palestinians who were injured in Israeli airstrikes and breathed their last breath in the hospital, according to a statement by the Director-General of the Palestinian Ministry of Health in the Strip, Munir Al-Bursh.
On November 14, the Israeli army stormed the complex after besieging it for several days. The army withdrew after 10 days, leaving extensive destruction and several casualties and injuries.
The situation was not different at the Al-Quds Hospital, affiliated with the Palestinian Red Crescent Society in Tel Al-Hawa neighborhood west of Gaza City, and at the Indonesian Hospital in the north of the Strip. Both witnessed makeshift burial operations within their premises.
“The administration decided to bury a number of martyrs whose bodies began to decompose in a small garden in the new building during the siege period,” according to a doctor from Al-Quds Hospital.
The doctor, who preferred not to disclose his name, explained that workers were forced to take the measure due to the “crowding of martyrs and the spread of the smell of decomposing bodies in the hospital corridors before its forced evacuation in November, and the army’s refusal to allow the bodies to be taken out for burial.”
In Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip, journalist Anas Al-Sharif, who works for Al-Jazeera, was forced to bury his father, Jamal Al-Sharif, 65, in the courtyard of one of the schools in the Jabalia Refugee camp. That was due to the difficulty in reaching the main cemetery in the camp because of the ongoing shelling.
Palestinians also resorted to burying war victims in makeshift graves dug inside the market of the camp, next to the shops, in squares and on streets.
On December 9, Anadolu documented the creation of a mass grave in the market square of the camp and its alleys.
Witnesses said that bodies were buried in green spaces between the two sides of the streets in the Strip.
– Graves targeted –
Journalist Adham Al-Sharif, working with a local newspaper in Gaza, said that “the only solution presented to medical staff and displaced individuals in Gaza City in light of the Israeli army’s ground incursion was to find the nearest vacant piece of land where martyrs could be buried.”
“Even this land, which turned into a cemetery for martyrs, did not escape the aggression. The army targeted an adjacent residential building, and its debris fell on the graves, burying some martyrs under the rubble and on top of the graves,” said Al-Sharif.
– 8,000 missing persons -
Mahmoud Basal, spokesperson for the Civil Defense in Gaza, said that according to reports there are more than 8000 people under the rubble of buildings destroyed by Israeli airstrikes in the southern and northern areas.
He described that “the Israeli army targets entire residential blocks throughout the Strip and destroys them over their inhabitants.”
“The bombing of these blocks makes the process of rescuing victims extremely difficult given our limited capabilities,” he said.