Lifesaving supplies in Gaza continue to run dangerously low, nearly four weeks into the total aid blockade and deadly bombardment of the enclave by Israel, UN humanitarians said on Friday.

According to local health authorities in Gaza, 830 people were killed between 18-23 March, including 174 women and 322 children. A further 1,787 were injured.

โ€œThe acts of war that we see bear the hallmarks of atrocity crimes,โ€ said Jens Laerke, spokesperson for the UN aid coordination office, OCHA. โ€œHundreds of children and other civilians have been killed in health and Israeli airstrikes. Intensely populated areas hospitals are once again battlegrounds; patients killed in their beds, ambulances shot at, and first responders killed.โ€

It has been 10 days since Gazans woke up to renewed Israel bombing, abruptly ending the two-month ceasefire.

โ€œIt has been 10 days of witnessing – because the UN remains on the ground in Gaza – a callous disregard for human life and dignity,โ€ Mr. Laerke maintained.

Household possessions are moved by truck in Gaza. UNICEF photo
Household possessions are moved by truck in Gaza. UNICEF photo

No to evacuations

Maryse Guimond, UN Women Representative for the Occupied Palestinian Territory, relayed testimonies of Palestinians in Gaza who say they will not heed new evacuation orders issued by the Israeli military, on the grounds that โ€œthere are no safe places anywayโ€.

Speaking from Amman, she added: โ€œIt is a situation of pure survival and survival of their families because, as they say, there is simply nowhere to goโ€ฆโ€

โ€œAs a woman recently said to us from Deir al Balah, โ€˜My mother says death is the same whether in Gaza City, or in Deir al Balah; we just want to return to Gaza.โ€™โ€

Echoing those concerns, Dr. Margaret Harris, spokesperson for the UN World Health Organization (WHO) said that the situation โ€œis as bad as it ever wasโ€. A new ceasefire is needed immediately for the sake of all Gazans, she insisted.

โ€œWe knew it was bad before the ceasefire, when we were constantly begging to be allowed to do our job just to help the ordinary people. No, they can’t keep going.โ€

Healthcare in the enclave is also suffering from the aid blockade, with supplies dwindling dangerously low since the cut-off began on 2 March.

โ€œThe key supplies now for safe labour and deliveryโ€ฆwill be running out soon,โ€ said Dr Rik Peeperkorn, WHO representative in the OPT.

A dozen ambulances have also been put out of action through lack of fuel, the veteran humanitarian medic said, speaking from Jerusalem.

Collective punishment warning

Sparked by Hamas-led terror attacks in Israel, the war in Gaza has devastated the enclave and prompted widespread international condemnation over its impact on civilians, who should be spared from violence in times of war.

โ€œNothing can justify the collective punishment of the Palestinian people,โ€ OCHAโ€™s Mr. Laerke insisted.

โ€œInternational law is clear, it prohibits indiscriminate attacks, obstruction of life saving aid, destruction of infrastructure indispensable for civilian survival and hostage-taking.

โ€œThe International Court of Justiceโ€™s provisional measures on the application of the Genocide Convention remain in place; yet the alerts that we issue in report after report reveal an utter lack of respect for the most basic principles of humanity.โ€