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Gaza: More than 200 lives lost since UN call for ceasefire
16 Jan 2009 04:22:04 GMT
Source: World Vision Middle East/Eastern Europe office (MEERO)
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A Palestinian family flees their house in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip January 8, 2009. REUTERS/Ibraheem 
Abu Mustafa (GAZA)
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A Palestinian family flees their house in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip January 8, 2009. REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa (GAZA)
World Vision MEERO, http://meero.worldvision.org
A group of leading international aid agencies including World Vision International said (Wednesday) that more than 200 lives have been lost since the UN passed its binding resolution stipulating an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and Israel which was dismissed by the conflicting parties.

World Vision and other aid agencies called on both parties to end the killings and heed Ban Ki Moon's appeal – as he arrives in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory - for an immediate ceasefire that will end the civilian suffering and endangerment and allow local and international aid agencies to provide desperately needed relief safely and without impediment. The international community must throw its full weight behind Ban Ki Moon's efforts and ensure that the UN resolution is promptly enforced.

Since the UN Security Council called for a ceasefire on 8th January there have been:
'Putting an end to violence and civilian casualties is not a option, it is an obligation', says Charles Clayton, National Director for World Vision Jerusalem. 'We cannot stress enough that the current situation in the Gaza Strip needs to be addressed without further delay. Too many people have died already.'

The agencies – Save the Children, Oxfam International, World Vision Jerusalem, Christian Aid, CARE International – added that the three-hour 'lull' in the fighting, which is now only restricted to Gaza City, detracts attention away from the immediate need to reach a durable ceasefire that would allow aid agencies to carry out much needed humanitarian work throughout the Gaza Strip, including reaching communities that have been completely cut off by the conflict. The slim window of time each day is not nearly enough to address the dire humanitarian situation on the ground. Moreover, some fighting usually continues during the 'lulls' so humanitarian workers and the civilian population risk their lives moving around the Gaza Strip.

'With shelters overflowing, food shortages, inadequate facilities and the general sense of panic and abandonment felt, we must be allowed to sufficiently assist the needy population of the Gaza Strip at once', says David Bourns, Country Director for Save the Children.

Last week, CARE International staff were forced to flee a food distribution site as heavy bombing began to fall in the area. Distributions of food take at least five hours per delivery, and a daily delivery of medical supplies took 11 hours last week – far longer than the three-hour lull. Even with an increase in the number of workers packing and dispatching, the needs of clinics and hospitals can't be met in the short time frame.

World Vision has begun a substantial relief operation to bring food and blankets to 50,000 people who are in extreme need. This whole process will be jeopardized unless the organisation is given safe and unfettered access into Gaza. The sequence of delivering aid from border to warehouse and from warehouse to the population is currently a big gamble in lives and material.

Despite the danger to staff and the children and families they are trying to reach, Save the Children has distributed food rations to 20,000 people - more than half of them children - since Sunday, January 4. Food distribution involves large quantities of supplies and vehicles and requires hours to complete efficiently. Reaching vulnerable people is complicated by the fact that families are often fearful to venture out to distribution sites. Save the Children has also warned that the number of supply trucks entering Gaza is entirely insufficient given the extraordinary need created by the conflict.

Oxfam International said that it is impossible to effectively circulate internally within Gaza Strip during the 3-hour lull. Oxfam's seven staff members in Gaza, a majority of who have themselves been displaced due to the violence, are also struggling to deliver urgently-needed food to thousands of civilians in such a tight space of time. Oxfam's local health partners are providing emergency medical care to victims of the conflict, under extraordinarily difficult circumstances with the Palestinian health system on the brink of collapse.

'On the best days, the lulls are barely long enough to distribute a minimum of aid to the people who need it. In most cases, it's simply not sufficient time to provide adequate assistance for such a devastated and desperate civilian population. It's akin to putting a band-aid on a bullet wound when surgery and life support is what is needed,' said John Prideaux-Brune, Country Director for Oxfam Great-Britain.

//Ends

For more information please contact:
Michael Robin Bailey (Oxfam International): +972 (0) 223 30 14
David Bourns (Save the Children): +972 (0) 54 313 4280
Allyn Dhynes (World Vision Jerusalem): +972 (0) 54 749 509
Hanan Elmasu (Christian Aid): +44 (0) 793 2022715
Martha Myers (CARE International): +972 (0) 54 779 773


[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]


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[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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A man holds a flag during a protest, against Israeli attacks on Gaza, in front of the de-facto Israeli embassy in Taipei January 16, 2009. Israel unleashed its heaviest shelling of ...



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