1. Home
  2. News & stories
  3. Gaza: Attacks on aid workers and blocks to supplies create impossible situation

Gaza: Attacks on aid workers and blocks to supplies create impossible situation

28 Feb 24 | 06 Mar 24

Gaza: Attacks on aid workers and blocks to supplies create impossible situation

One of five MSF vehicles destroyed by Israeli forces outside a clinic in November Caption
One of five MSF vehicles destroyed by Israeli forces outside a clinic in November

One month ago, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) issued provisional measures ordering Israel to prevent and punish acts of genocide and ensure that basic services and aid reach people in the Gaza Strip. 

However, the humanitarian situation for trapped Gazans remains catastrophic. 

According to local health authorities, the number of people killed in Gaza has risen to 30,000, all while there are no signs of Israeli forces attempting to limit the loss of civilian life or alleviate the suffering of people. 

“Every day it feels like we are increasingly running out of options – to treat the wounded, to get the medical supplies, or provide the water that people desperately need”

Lisa Macheiner
|
MSF project coordinator

Israel’s tightened blockade of Gaza hinders the entry of vital supplies into the Strip. 

At the same time, the provision of aid is near impossible due to Israel’s complete disregard for the protection and safety of medical and humanitarian sites and their staff, cutting people off from life-saving aid. 

This reality is making the humanitarian response in Gaza a mere illusion. 

“The stark absence of humanitarian space and lack of supplies we’re witnessing in Gaza is truly horrific,” says Lisa Macheiner, Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF) project coordinator in Gaza. 

“If people are not killed by bombs, they are suffering from food and water deprivation and dying from lack of medical care.”

Medical and humanitarian staff risking their lives

Nowhere in Gaza is safe, neither for civilians nor for those trying to provide them with essential aid.

Israel’s blatant and total disregard for the protection of Gaza’s medical facilities or humanitarian workers has made the provision of care and life-saving assistance an almost impossible task.

In the past five months, healthcare facilities have been subjected to evacuation orders and repeatedly attacked, besieged and raided. 

Medical staff and patients have been arrested, abused and killed while caring for patients. This includes five of our own staff. Several family members of MSF staff have also been killed. 

Damage sustained during the attack on an MSF shelter in Al Mawasi on the night of 20-21 February Caption
Damage sustained during the attack on an MSF shelter in Al Mawasi on the night of 20-21 February

In one of the latest instances of ruthless targeting of healthcare facilities, Nasser Hospital, the largest hospital in southern Gaza, was besieged for weeks

After a shell struck the orthopaedic department, killing and wounding several people, MSF staff were forced to flee and leave patients behind. One MSF staff member was detained at a checkpoint by Israeli forces while trying to leave the compound. 

We reiterate our call to Israeli authorities to share information about his whereabouts and to protect his wellbeing and dignity. 

Medical staff who remain inside the hospital describe a horrific situation, where patients are trapped with limited food and no electricity or running water. 

“Every evening, I say goodbye to my Palestinian colleagues. Every morning, I am afraid I won’t see them in the next morning meeting,” says Macheiner. 

“Every day it feels like we are increasingly running out of options – to treat the wounded, to get the medical supplies, or provide the water that people desperately need.”

In the late evening of 20 February, an Israeli tank shelled an MSF shelter in Al-Mawasi, killing two family members of an MSF staff and injuring seven others. Israeli forces had been clearly informed of the precise location of the shelter underscoring that nowhere in Gaza is safe and that ‘deconfliction mechanisms’ are unreliable.

Catastrophic and getting worse

North or south, humanitarian workers have no safety assurances to conduct their work and their convoys are being blocked and severely delayed at checkpoints, making it impossible to reach people in desperate need. 

The north of Gaza has been largely cut off from assistance for months, leaving people trapped and with no choice but to attempt to survive on minuscule amounts of food, water and medical supplies. Entire neighbourhoods have been bombed and destroyed. 

Although MSF has limited visibility of the overall humanitarian and health situation in the north, a few of our staff members remain trapped there.

“The situation in the north of Gaza is catastrophic and getting worse,” says one MSF nurse in the north.

“There are no hospitals for even basic treatment, and the pharmacies are empty of drugs. My children have been sick for weeks because of the lack of clean water and proper food, and they are getting worse.”

At MSF's out-patient department in Batil refugee camp Gandhi Pant, a nurse, escorts a patient with a possible appendicitis to a waiting ambulance. 

Batil is one of three camps in South Sudan’s Upper Nile State sheltering at least 113,000 refugees who have crossed the border from Blue Nile state to escape fighting between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the SPLM-North armed group. Refugees arrive at the camp with harrowing stories of being bombed out of their homes, or having their villages burned. The camps into which they have poured are on a vast floodplain, leaving many tents flooded and refugees vulnerable to disease. Mortality rates in Batil camp are at emergency levels, malnutrition rates are more than five times above emergency thresholds, and diarrhea and malarial cases are rising.

Help us prepare for the next emergency

According to the United Nations, between 1 January and 12 February, half of the missions planned by humanitarian organisations to deliver aid and undertake assessments in the areas north of Wadi Gaza were denied access by the Israeli authorities. 

The World Food Programme is the latest humanitarian organisation forced to halt life-saving assistance to northern Gaza, saying the conditions do not allow for the safe distribution of food.

Disrupted supplies

As part of Israel’s complete and inhumane siege of Gaza, the severing of aid supplies has plunged some two million people in Gaza into desperation. 

The number of trucks entering the Strip dropped from an average of 300-500 trucks per day before the war, to an average of just 100 trucks between 21 October and 23 February. On 17 February, only four trucks were allowed into Gaza. 

“Every second that supplies are delayed, and every time an item is blocked, more devastating and unacceptable suffering is caused”

Lisa Macheiner
|
MSF project coordinator

Prolonged and unpredictable administrative procedures for aid deliveries to Gaza are impeding access to life-saving equipment and supplies for healthcare facilities. 

It can take up to one month for supplies to enter Gaza as each box in each truck is submitted for screening. If Israeli authorities reject even one single item during the screening process, the entire cargo shipment must be returned to Egypt. With no official list of restricted items, MSF has consistently been denied the import of power generators, water purifiers, solar panels and various types of medical equipment.

“Every second that supplies are delayed, and every time an item is blocked, more devastating and unacceptable suffering is caused,” says Macheiner. 

“These supplies mean the difference between life and death for many people.” 

MSF staff distributing clean water to displaced people in Rafah Caption
MSF staff distributing clean water to displaced people in Rafah

In Rafah, southern Gaza, some 1.5 million forcibly displaced people are living in horrific conditions. 

They lack the basics needed to survive. Women are forced to use scraps of clothing as sanitary pads, and people are living in muddy tents without mattresses or warm clothing.

“People with chronic conditions such as cancer, diabetes or epilepsy have barely any access to drugs and medicine,” says Dr Hossam Altalma, an MSF doctor who works in the Al-Shaboura clinic. 

“People are desperate and willing to pay any price to get medication.”

MSF teams continue to provide humanitarian and medical care in Gaza where possible, including surgery, post-operative care, maternity care, mental health support and water distribution. But this is all a drop in the ocean in comparison to people’s needs. 

MSF calls once again for an immediate and sustained ceasefire, meaningful safety assurances for humanitarian workers, and the end to the inhumane blockade to ensure people receive life-saving assistance.

“People in Gaza cannot endure any more suffering,” continues Macheiner. 

“They have lost all sense of safety, whether from the constant threat of being killed by bombs at night or the uncertainty of finding their next meal or drink of water.” 

MSF and the Israel – Hamas conflict

An unprecedented humanitarian crisis is unfolding in Gaza. MSF teams have worked to treat the wounded and supply overwhelmed hospitals as indiscriminate airstrikes and a state of siege threaten millions of men, women and children.

Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is horrified by the events that began on Saturday 7 October – both the brutal mass killing of civilians perpetrated by Hamas in Israel, and by the massive attacks on Gaza now being pursued by the Israeli military.