Gaza a 'nightmare' for mothers with no 'normal-sized babies' — UN official

Dominic Allen, UN Population Fund representative for Palestine, reports a dire humanitarian crisis transcending catastrophic proportions in Gaza, with everyone "gaunt, emaciated, hungry" and exhausted from relentless daily battle for survival.

Safaa Salah, who gave birth to a baby girl after a difficult delivery on the night of the Israeli attack resulting dozens of Palestinians killed, is seen with her newborn baby in a makeshift tent in Rafah, Gaza / Photo: AA
AA

Safaa Salah, who gave birth to a baby girl after a difficult delivery on the night of the Israeli attack resulting dozens of Palestinians killed, is seen with her newborn baby in a makeshift tent in Rafah, Gaza / Photo: AA

The humanitarian situation in Israel-besieged Gaza is a complete "nightmare" for mothers and babies, with doctors reporting small and sickly newborns, stillbirths, and women forced to undergo C-sections without adequate anesthesia, a UN official has said.

"I'm personally leaving Gaza this week terrified for the one million women and girls of Gaza... and most especially for the 180 women who are giving birth every single day," Dominic Allen, UN Population Fund (UNFPA) representative for the state of Palestine, said in a news conference in occupied Jerusalem on Friday.

"Doctors are reporting that they no longer see normal-sized babies," Allen said after visiting hospitals still providing maternity services in the north of Gaza, where need is especially great.

"What they do see though, tragically, is more stillborn births... and more neonatal deaths, caused in part by malnutrition, dehydration and complications."

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The numbers of complicated deliveries are roughly twice what they were before the war with Israel began — with mothers stressed, fearful, underfed and exhausted — and caregivers often lacking necessary supplies.

"We have had reports of insufficient anesthetic being available" for Caesarean sections, "which again is unthinkable."

"Those mothers should be wrapping their arms around their children," he said. "Those children should not be wrapped in a body bag."

Allen said Israeli authorities had refused to allow in some UNFPA supply shipments, such as kits for midwives, or had removed supplies like flashlights and solar panels.

'Really broke my heart'

"It's a nightmare which is much more than a humanitarian crisis," he said. "It is a crisis of humanity... beyond catastrophic."

What he saw while driving through Gaza, he said, "really broke my heart."

Everyone he passed or spoke to, Allen said, "was gaunt, emaciated, hungry" and exhausted from the daily struggle to survive.

At one military checkpoint, he said, he saw a boy who appeared to be about five years old walking with his hands held high, clearly frightened, as his slightly older sister followed behind , holding a white flag.

Israel's bloody onslaught on Gaza has killed at least 31,490 people in Gaza, most of them women and children, according to the health ministry.

Meanwhile, office of Israel's bloodthirsty Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he had okayed a plan to attack the Rafah city on the southern edge of the shattered Palestinian enclave where more than half of its 2.3 million residents are sheltering after five months of war.

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