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UNRWA ban might eliminate more kids in Gaza, UNICEF states

Israel's decision to prohibit the U.N. relief company UNRWA could result in the deaths of more kids and represent a form of cumulative punishment for Gazans if fully implemented, U.N. companies stated on Tuesday.

A law passed by Israel on Monday to prohibit the U.N. Palestinian refugee firm from operating inside Israel has actually raised concerns about its ability to supply relief in Gaza after over a year of war. The company, which employs thousands of people in Gaza, offers nearly the entire population of the seaside enclave with fundamental products and requires gain access to through Israel.

If UNRWA is unable to run, it'll likely see the collapse of the humanitarian system in Gaza, said UNICEF spokesperson James Senior citizen, who has actually worked extensively in Gaza given that the Oct. 7 war began. So a choice such as this unexpectedly means that a new way has actually been found to eliminate children.

Palestinian health authorities' information reveal that over 13,300 kids whose identities have been confirmed have been killed in the Gaza war. Much more are believed to have died from illness due to a collapsing medical system and food and water shortages.

Other U.N. agencies explained UNRWA's work as important.

The World Health Company's Tarik Jasarevic said that about a third of the health care employees helping with the continuous polio vaccination project for kids in Gaza work with UNRWA. UNRWA has about 1,000 health employees in Gaza, he included.

In reaction to a question about whether the restriction represented a form of cumulative punishment against Gazans, U.N. humanitarian workplace spokesperson Jens Laerke stated: I believe it is a fair description of what they have decided here, if carried out, that this would add to the acts of cumulative punishment that we have seen imposed on Gaza.

Collective penalty, which amounts to a war crime, is a. term describing sanctions or harassment versus a group taken. in retaliation for acts by specific members of that group.

Israel states it makes all possible efforts to avoid civilian. casualties and accuses Palestinian militant group Hamas of. deliberately basing its fighters in residential areas and using. civilians as human guards.

Explaining the ban, Israeli officials pointed out the participation. of UNRWA staffers in the Oct. 7, 2023 attack by Hamas on. southern Israel which triggered the Gaza war. The U.N. said in. August that nine UNRWA personnel may have been involved in the. attacks and fired them.

The head of the International Company for. Migration, Amy Pope, said IOM could not replace UNRWA in Gaza. but that it could offer more relief to those in crisis.

(source: Reuters)