As of 3 November, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health 2,326 women and 3,760 children have been killed in the Gaza Strip, representing 67 per cent of all casualties, while thousands more have been injured. This means that 420 children are killed or injured every day, some of them only a few months old.
In their joint statement, United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency (UNFPA), and the World Health Organization (WHO) also pointed to an estimated 50,000 pregnant women in Gaza, with more than 180 giving birth every day.
These women are unable to access the emergency obstetric services they need to give birth safely and care for their new-borns. With 14 hospitals and 45 primary health care centres closed, some women are having to give birth in shelters, in their homes, in the streets amid rubble, or in overwhelmed healthcare facilities, where sanitation is worsening, and the risk of infection and medical complications is on the rise.
Urgent need for humanitarian pause in Gaza
Despite the lack of sustained and safe access, UN agencies have dispatched life-saving medicines and equipment to Gaza, including supplies for newborns and reproductive health care. However, they say, much more is needed to meet the immense needs of civilians. They, therefore, called once again for an immediate humanitarian pause “to alleviate the suffering and prevent a desperate situation from becoming catastrophic.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netaniahu again rejected the call for a humanitarian pause after meeting with U.S Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Friday.