Geneva: The United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) Tuesday said that Gaza has become “a graveyard for children” following intensive Israeli bombing that has killed at least 8500 including nearly 3,500 kids.
“Our gravest fears about the reported numbers of children killed becoming dozens, then hundreds, and ultimately thousands were realised in just a fortnight. The numbers are appalling; reportedly more than 3,450 children killed; staggeringly this rises significantly every day,” the organisation said in a statement. “Gaza has become a graveyard for thousands of children. It’s a living hell for everyone else,” UNICEF Spokesperson James Elder said in the statement.
“From the earliest days of the unprecedented hostilities in the Gaza Strip, UNICEF has been forthright on the need for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire, for the aid to flow and for children abducted to be released. Like many others, we have pleaded for the killing of children to stop...And yet the threats to children go beyond bombs and mortars," he said.
Elder said that more than one million children in Gaza also have a water crisis. Gaza’s water production capacity is a mere 5 per cent of its usual daily output. "Child deaths – particularly infants - to dehydration are a growing threat. This is what one of my UNICEF colleagues, Nesma, who lives and works in Gaza said. She has two children, 4yr old Talia, and 7yr old Zain: It breaks my heart to see children around me strive for a cup of clean water and cannot find it. Zain keeps asking for regular water. She means safe drinking water, not salty water which is the only option right now and is making 7yr old Zain and many other children sick," the spokesperson said.
“And then there is the trauma. When the fighting stops, the cost to children and their communities will be borne out for generations to come. Before this latest escalation, more than 800,000 children in Gaza – three quarters of its entire child population – were identified as needing mental health and psychosocial support. That’s before this latest nightmare," he said in the statement.
“The same UNICEF colleague, Nesma, who spoke of her 7yr old desperately asking for clean water, explained the trauma her 4yr old is going through. Four year old Talia is showing severe symptoms of stress and fear, and is now self-harming, such as ripping her hair off and scratching her thighs until they bleed. And yet as her mother explains: I don’t have the luxury to think about my children’s mental health. I keep telling myself, ‘Nesma, keep them alive.’ And when all of this ends, I will provide them with mental support and medical care," the UNICEF spokesperson said.
“And so we say again, on behalf of Talia and Zain, and the other 1.1m children in Gaza living through a nightmare: We need an immediate humanitarian ceasefire. And all access crossings into Gaza must be opened for the safe, sustained and unimpeded access of humanitarian aid, including water, food, medical supplies, and fuel. “And if there is no ceasefire, no water, no medicine, and no release of abducted children? Then we hurtle towards even greater horrors afflicting innocent children," he added.