Israel’s Rafah operation disrupts medical services: Aid groups
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People have been displaced after the Israeli military began evacuating Palestinian civilians ahead of a threatened assault on Rafah.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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GENEVA - Aid groups said on May 6 that their medical services in Rafah have been affected by the start of Israel’s operation in the southern Gaza city
Israel carried out air strikes in Rafah
US-based medical aid group Project Hope said in a statement that it had to close its Al Shouka facility, which is in the so-called evacuation zone.
With most of Gaza’s hospitals shut, the centre had been giving basic health services to displaced people, including treatments for diarrhoea and malnutrition tests amid famine warnings.
Operating hours were reduced at other sites as staff scrambled to prepare for evacuations, the group said. “As more people flee and violence continues here, services like these will be forced to suspend indefinitely – cutting thousands off from life-saving food, medicine and other aid,” said Project Hope’s Gaza team lead Moses Kondowe, based in Rafah, warning of a spike in malnutrition and illness.
A Project Hope team of four doctors comprising two surgeons, an emergency medicine doctor and an anaesthesiologist was denied entry at the Rafah crossing, together with their medical supplies and equipment, a spokesperson told Reuters.
Another humanitarian aid group, MedGlobal, said in a statement that it had scrapped a medical mission set to enter Gaza via the Rafah crossing on May 6 due to security reasons.
The World Health Organisation has previously voiced concern that an Israeli operation in Rafah would close the Egypt-Gaza crossing, which is currently being used to import medical supplies. REUTERS

