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EPAThe World Health Organization said the conditions in Gaza hospitals were “beyond the description” after a large facility was put into operation by Israeli air strike.
Spokesman D Margaret Harris told the BBC that he had observed an “attack after an attack” on hospitals and health workers, and medical supplies were critically low due to Israel’s blockade on the territory.
On Sunday, employees at Al-Ali Hospital in Gaza said the Israeli blow destroyed its laboratory and damaged its emergency ward. They did not report direct victims, but said the child had died due to interruption of care.
The Israeli military said it had hit the Command and Control Center used by Hamas to plan attack.
The hospital is governed by the English Church, whose bishops said they shared “grief, sorrow and outrage” with Palestinians over the attack and called on Israel to provide evidence to support his request.
Termination of Gaza’s fire ended when Israel resumed its air and ground campaign four weeks ago, saying that military pressure would force Hamas to release the hostages he was still holding.
Al-Ali Hospital was hit by two rockets around midnight on Sunday – The fifth road has been hit since the beginning of the war.
According to the Diocese of Jerusalem, the two -storey genetic laboratory was demolished and the pharmacy buildings were damaged. The surrounding buildings were also damaged, including the Church of St. Philip.
The diocese said the Israeli military had given a 20-minute warning to the hospital staff and patients to evacuate before the attack.
As a result of the strike, there were no casualties, but a child who had previously suffered a head injury as a result of the evacuation process, she added.
Later, WHO CEO, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Gebrees, said the UN Agency had been spoken by the Director of Al-Ali that the emergency room, the laboratory, the X-ray of Emergency Aid and the pharmacy was “destroyed”.
The hospital was forced to move 50 patients to other hospitals, but 40 critical patients could not be moved, he added.
“Hospitals are protected under international humanitarian law. Health attacks should stop. Once again we repeat: patients, healthcare professionals and hospitals should be protected.”
The Israeli Foreign Ministry said it was a “precise blow to a building used by Hamas as a center for command and control of terror” and where “no medical activity is carried out”.
He also stressed that an “early warning” was issued and that the strike was “carried out, avoiding more damage to the hospital compound, which remains surgical for prolonged medical treatment”.
Hamas condemned the attack as a “brutal crime” and rejected the claim that he was using the military facility.
On Monday, the bishop of the bishops of the Church of England said that in a statement they were “horrified that hospitals have become battlefields in Gaza” and that Israel is still not providing clear and convincing evidence to justify its claim that the hospital is being used by Hamas.
“Against this background, we call for an independent, in -depth and transparent investigation into this attack, as well as the alleged abuse of the hospital.”
The bishops also said that “the extremely limited time given to the staff and patients for the evacuation of the hospital is a more attack on the fundamental rights of man and the fundamental human dignity.”
Meanwhile, a representative of Dr. Rick Pepercorn told the BBC that Al-Ali was no longer able to receive new patients in anticipation of repair and that this would “strongly affect patients with trauma”.
“Al-Ali was a key hospital for trauma north of Vadi Gaza. This is a hospital with the only functional CT scanner north of Vadi Gaza,” he said, citing the valley that effectively divides the territory into two because it is an Israeli zone “without experience”.
Charity medical care for Palestinians also cites an orthopedic surgeon in Al-Ali that the level of care that the hospital can provide to the 40 remaining patients is “quite similar to that of Hostel.”
“We cannot perform any surgical procedures, as these patients require laboratory diagnostics, support for pharmacy and emergency referrals in the event of complications -all of which have ceased entirely due to the recent attack,” said Dr. Ahmed al -Shuraf.
EPAThe head of the MCC sub-demand in Gaza, Adrian Zimmerman, also warned that the broader shortage of medical supplies “exposes the life and well-being of Gazani, which requires the risk of health services.”
Dr Peerkorn said they managed critically low because Israel did not allow for the supplies of humanitarian aid for more than six weeks.
He added that who had stocking some supplies in their warehouses during the recent ceasefire, but that the Israeli military did not facilitate transfers between North and South Gaza.
“Last week, we had a discussion with one of the medical specialists in Al-Ali. He told us that they should use the same surgical dresses and the same surgical gloves for various operations while we have surgical gloves and dresses in our warehouse in Deir Al Balah (south of Vadi Gaza),” he recalls. “We want to bring them, but we are not facilitated.”
The Israeli military launched a campaign to destroy Hamas in response to an unprecedented cross -border attack on October 7, 2023, which killed about 1,200 people and 251 others were taken hostage.
More than 50,980 people have been killed in Gaza ever since, according to the health ministry in Hamas.
A fire stop, which began in January and lasted for two months, saw Hamas release 33 Israeli hostages – eight of them dead – and five Thai hostages in exchange for about 1900 Palestinian prisoners and a jump in the humanitarian aid entering Gaza.
Israel resumed its offensive on March 18, accusing Hamas’ refusal to accept a proposal to extend the first phase of the agreement and the release of more than 59 hostages, which he still holds, up to 24 of which are thought to be alive.
Hamas accused Israel of breaking the original deal that would have a second phase in which all other living hostages would be handed over and the war led to a constant end.
On Monday, a delegation of Hamas, led by the group’s chief negotiator, left Cairo without making any progress in negotiations with Egyptian mediators aimed at reaching a new fire termination agreement, a senior Palestinian official familiar with the BBC talks.
“There has been no breakthrough because of Israel’s refusal to commit to ending the war and withdraw from the Gaza Strip,” the employee said.
“Hamas showed flexibility with the number of hostages to be released to make progress. But Israel wants the hostages back without ending the war,” he said.
Israel said he was waiting for a response to his last proposal, sent late last week.
Of course, he has slightly reduced the number of hostages he is demanding must be released in exchange for an extension of the truce and the entry of humanitarian aid.
A group of hostage families known as the Pumpkin Forum said on Monday that Aitan Mor’s parents were told by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the government is working on a deal that will see 10 hostages – reduced by 11 or 12.