IQNA

Gaza’s Rafah Becoming ‘Increasingly Desperate’ UN Warns

14:31 - May 21, 2024
News ID: 3488438
IQNA – The UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process warned about the deteriorating situation in Gaza, particularly in the southern city of Rafah, amid the Israeli regime’s military offensive.

People desperate in Rafah, southern Gaza, amid Israeli regime’s attacks

 

Emphasizing the urgency of resuming peace talks, Tor Wennesland on Monday highlighted the desperate situation in Rafah at a UN Security Council session.

Saying that the situation in the city is "becoming increasingly desperate and dangerous for the already besieged population," he urged all parties to "redouble all efforts and return to the negotiating table immediately and in good faith."

Wennesland expressed deep concern for the civilians and hostages in Rafah, noting that "if (ceasefire) talks do not resume, I fear for the worst for the beleaguered and terrified civilians in Rafah, for the hostages held in unimaginable conditions for more than 225 days, and for an overstretched humanitarian operation that remains on the brink in the (Gaza) Strip."

Noting the "rapidly worsening" security situation in Rafah since the start of Israel’s military operation, he said "these events have had a significant impact on humanitarian operations and access."

"The so-called expanded humanitarian area in al-Mawasi lacks adequate shelter, food, water and sewage infrastructure," Wennesland added.

He also warned that a larger-scale operation "will further undermine efforts to scale up the entry of humanitarian goods and their safe distribution to desperate civilians."

Echoing Wennesland, Edem Wosornu, director of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs' Operations and Advocacy Division, said, "To be frank, we are running out of words to describe what is happening in Gaza. We have described it as a catastrophe, a nightmare, as hell on earth. It is all of these, and worse."

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Drawing attention to the massive displacement crisis, Wosornu said: "Since October 2023, 75% of the population in the Gaza Strip – or 1.7 million people – has been forcibly displaced within Gaza, many of them up to four or five times."

Calling for the need to guarantee the right of forcibly displaced Gazans to voluntarily return, she stressed that "the Rafah ground incursion is magnifying impediments to an already fragile and beleaguered aid operation."

She concluded by calling for a ceasefire and halt to the ground incursion in Rafah "that will fully protect civilians, create the conditions for humanitarians to provide assistance at the required scale, and stem the endlessly deepening toll of this travesty in Gaza."

 

Source: Anadolu Agency

 

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