Gazans living in ‘unbearable’ conditions: UNRWA

Above, mourners pray over the bodies of four civil defense volunteers killed during the Israeli bombardment of the Nuseirat refugee camp on June 28, 2024. (AFP)
Short Url
  • Louise Wateridge: ‘Today, it has to be the worst it’s ever been. I don’t doubt that tomorrow again will be the worst it’s ever been’

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories: Gazans are forced to live in bombed-out buildings or camp next to giant piles of trash, a United Nations spokeswoman said Friday, denouncing the “unbearable” conditions in the besieged territory.
Louise Wateridge from UNRWA, the UN agency supporting Palestinian refugees, described the “extremely dire” living conditions in the Gaza Strip.
“It’s really unbearable,” she told reporters in Geneva, via video-link from central Gaza.
Wateridge, who returned Wednesday after four weeks outside the territory, said that even in that time the situation had “significantly deteriorated.”
“Today, it has to be the worst it’s ever been. I don’t doubt that tomorrow again will be the worst it’s ever been,” she said.
Nearly nine months into the war between Israel and Hamas, Wateridge said the Gaza Strip had been “destroyed.”
She said she had been “shocked” on returning to Khan Yunis in central Gaza.
“The buildings are skeletons, if at all. Everything is rubble,” she said.
“And yet people are living there again.
“There’s no water there, there’s no sanitation, there’s no food. And now, people are living back in these buildings that are empty shells,” with sheets covering the gaps left by blown-out walls.
With no bathrooms, “people are relieving themselves anywhere they can.”

Meanwhile, the health ministry in Gaza said Saturday that at least 37,834 people have been killed during nearly nine months of war between Israel and Palestinian militants.
The toll includes at least 69 deaths over the past 48 hours, a ministry statement said, adding that 86,858 people had been wounded in the Gaza Strip since the war began when Hamas militants attacked Israel on October 7.