Over 100 newborns on incubator at risk after Israel cuts Gaza fuel: UN

Power is a significant concern in the seven specialist units in Gaza treating premature babies, providing essential assistance for breathing and critical support, especially in cases where their organs have not fully developed.

Premature babies, intensive care and kidney patients' lives under threat after Gaza’s sole power plant operations halted over an Israeli ban on fuel imports into the Palestinian territory of Gaza. / Photo: AA
AA

Premature babies, intensive care and kidney patients' lives under threat after Gaza’s sole power plant operations halted over an Israeli ban on fuel imports into the Palestinian territory of Gaza. / Photo: AA

The lives of at least 120 newborn babies on incubators in the besieged Gaza's hospitals are at risk as fuel runs out in the besieged enclave, the UN children's agency has warned.

More than 1,750 children have already been killed by Israeli strikes launched against Gaza in retaliation for the October 7 Hamas attacks, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry.

Hospitals face a dire lack of medicines, fuel and water not only for the thousands wounded in more than two weeks of Israeli offensive in Gaza but also for routine patients.

"We have currently 120 neonates who are in incubators, out of which we have 70 neonates with mechanical ventilation, and of course this is where we are extremely concerned," said UNICEF spokesman Jonathan Crickx on Sunday.

Power is one of the main worries for the seven specialist wards across Gaza treating premature babies to help with breathing and provide critical support, for example when their organs are not developed enough.

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Fuel shortage hampers relief efforts

Israel ordered a complete blockade of the territory after the Hamas attacks, in which the resistance group killed 1,400 people, according to Israeli officials.

Amid widespread electricity cuts, the World Health Organization warned on Thursday that hospitals had already run out of fuel for generators.

The WHO said that about 1,000 people needing dialysis will also be at risk if the generators stop.

Twenty aid trucks crossed from Egypt into Gaza on Saturday but there was no fuel in the consignment.

Israel fears that fuel could help Hamas, although the limited supplies still in Gaza were being diverted to keep the generators for medical equipment running.

"If they (babies) are put in mechanical ventilation incubators, by definition, if you cut the electricity, we are worried about their lives," the UNICEF spokesperson told AFP.

The Health Ministry in Gaza said on Saturday that 130 premature babies were in danger of dying due to the lack of fuel.

Around 160 women give birth each day in Gaza, according to the UN Population Fund, which estimates there are 50,000 pregnant women across the territory of 2.4 million people.

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Israel's siege on Gaza forces doctors to make life-and-death decisions

Alarming number of child casualties

While Israel says its strikes are aimed at Hamas, which perpetrated the worst attack against Israel since its creation in 1948, children make up a huge proportion of the 4,385 dead reported by the Gaza-based health ministry.

Whole families, including pregnant women, have been killed in strikes and each day parents can be seen in devastated streets carrying the bodies of infants in white shrouds.

Doctors at Najjar hospital in Rafah spoke on Thursday of how they had tried in vain to save an unborn infant from a woman killed in an air strike on her family's home.

Hours earlier, eight children were killed as they slept in a house in Khan Younis in southern Gaza.

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