Kuwait Times

Gaza pregnancy perils ‘worse than hell’

Pregnant women ‘afraid of giving birth’ as food scarcity, lack of safe space persist

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GAZA: Forced to flee her home by Zionist bombardmen­t, Asmaa Ahmed gave birth in the middle of the night in a Gaza City school that had no electricit­y. The doctor arrived just in time, working by the light of a mobile phone and clamping the umbilical cord with whatever medical staff could find.

“I was very, very afraid to lose the baby,” 31-yearold Ahmed told AFP, recounting how her son Faraj came into the world four months ago. Baraa Jaber, the nurse who assisted in the delivery, said she was scared too. “It was very late and at this time the occupation could bomb anyone moving in the streets,” she said.

Ahead of Internatio­nal Women’s Day on March 8, aid workers and medics said Gaza’s around 52,000 pregnant women — a World Health Organizati­on estimate — are among those endangered by the collapse of the health system amid the ongoing war. And their troubles don’t end with a successful delivery.

New mothers confront the stark challenge of keeping infants alive in the besieged territory bereft of basics like food and water, to say nothing of heated tables for neonates and incubators. The fast-deteriorat­ing conditions have struck fear into the hearts of pregnant women like 21-year-old Malak Shabat, who has sought refuge in the southern Gaza city of Rafah after moving several times to escape Zionist air strikes. “I’m so afraid of giving birth,” said Shabat, whose due date is fast approachin­g.

‘No doctors, no bed’

The Zionist entity’s ongoing military campaign in Gaza has killed at least 30,631 people, mostly women and children, according to the territory’s health ministry. The entity claims it’s in response to an attack staged by Palestinia­n group Hamas on the south of the entity on October 7 that resulted in the deaths of around 1,160 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.

The health system has been devastated by the Zionist five-month assault, with the United Nations reporting last month that there were no fully functionin­g hospitals left, and just 12 of 36 working at some capacity. Restrictio­ns that the UN blames on the Zionist military mean that most aid convoys are halted.

The UN Population Fund (UNFPA) says it has 62 palettes of material to assist childbirth blocked outside Rafah on the border with Egypt. There are only five rooms dedicated to childbirth at the Emirati maternity hospital in Rafah, a city where nearly 1.5 million Palestinia­ns have sought refuge.

Among them is Samah al-Helou, who arrived in Rafah in the last month of her pregnancy but struggled to get the care she needed. “They said that I would need a tiny surgery during childbirth. It was delayed for two weeks because there were no doctors, no bed and no operating room,” she said. Finally, she was able to give birth to her son Mohammed, but the hospital discharged her the next day to make room for emergency patients, meaning she had to return to a tent for the displaced.

“It was very cold; the situation was severe. I felt I was going to lose my son,” she said. “Our life here in the tent is harsh and worse than hell.” Raphael Pitti, a French doctor who recently completed an aid mission in southern Gaza, said such quick discharges are routine. “When women give birth, they get back on their feet and their family comes to pick them up,” he said.—AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? RAFAH: A pregnant Palestinia­n woman displaced from northern Gaza hangs clothes in a warehouse where she is taking shelter in Rafah.
— AFP RAFAH: A pregnant Palestinia­n woman displaced from northern Gaza hangs clothes in a warehouse where she is taking shelter in Rafah.

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