TOP GAZA HOSPITAL ‘AN EMPTY SHELL WITH HUMAN GRAVES’
WHO workers describe horrifying scenes at facility after Israeli siege, with partially buried remains and the stench of decomposing corpses
The World Health Organization (WHO) says Gaza’s largest hospital had been reduced to ashes by Israel’s latest siege, leaving an “empty shell” with many bodies.
WHO workers who gained access on Friday to the devastated facility described horrifying scenes of bodies only partially buried, with their limbs sticking out, and the stench of decomposing corpses.
Israeli forces pulled out of al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City on Monday after a two-week operation, during which it said it had battled Palestinian “militants” inside what was once the Palestinian territory’s most important medical complex.
A WHO-led mission finally accessed the hospital on Friday, after multiple failed attempts since March 25, the United Nations health agency said.
It found massive destruction and heard reports that patients had been “held in abysmal conditions” during the siege and several had died.
“WHO and partners managed to reach al-Shifa – once the backbone of the health system in Gaza, which is now an empty shell with human graves after the latest siege,” WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus wrote on X, formerly Twitter.
In a statement, WHO said no patients remained in the hospital, where “numerous shallow graves” had been dug just outside the emergency department and the administrative and surgical buildings.
“Many dead bodies were partially buried with their limbs visible,” it said.
During their visit, WHO staff witnessed “at least five bodies lying partially covered on the ground, exposed to the heat”, it said.
“The team reported a pungent smell of decomposing bodies engulfing the hospital compound. Safeguarding dignity, even in death, is an indispensable act of humanity,” the WHO added.
The mission, which was conducted in cooperation with other UN agencies and the acting hospital director, found that “the scale of devastation has left the facility completely non-functional”.
“Most of the buildings in the hospital complex are extensively destroyed and the majority of assets damaged or reduced to ashes,” Tedros said. “Even restoring minimal functionality in the short term seems implausible.”
WHO said the acting hospital director had described how patients were “held in abysmal conditions during the siege”.
“They endured severe lack of food, water, healthcare, hygiene and sanitation, and were forced to relocate between buildings at gunpoint,” it said. At least 20 patients reportedly died, it said, “due to the lack of access to care and limited movement authorised for health personnel”.
Tedros said efforts by WHO and other aid groups to revive basic services at al-Shifa after Israel’s first raid on the hospital last year “are now lost”.
“People are once again deprived of access to life-saving healthcare services,” he said.
Of Gaza’s 36 main hospitals, only 10 remain even partially functional, according to the WHO.
For the past six months, Israel has relentlessly bombarded the besieged, densely populated Palestinian territory, killing at least 33,137 people, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
The current Gaza war began after a cross-border attack by Hamas fighters on October 7 that resulted in the death of 1,170 people in Israel, mostly civilians, according to a tally from official Israeli figures.
Palestinian militants also took around 250 hostages, about 130 of whom remain in Gaza. The Israeli army says more than 30 are dead.
Tedros said urgent action was needed in Gaza as “famine looms, disease outbreaks spread and trauma injuries increase” among the Palestinian population.
He called for the “protection of remaining health facilities in Gaza … unimpeded access of humanitarian aid into and across the Gaza Strip” and a “ceasefire”.
He also called for a “functional deconfliction mechanism”, referring to the process of clearing aid missions in advance with the Israeli military to ensure they can go ahead safely and unhindered.
“Despite deconfliction, yesterday’s mission faced significant delays at the military checkpoint en route to al-Shifa hospital,” the WHO said.
It said that “between midOctober and the end of March, over half of all WHO missions had been denied, delayed, impeded or postponed” by the Israelis.
“As health needs soar, the lack of a functional deconfliction system is a major obstacle in delivering humanitarian aid,” it said.
ISRAEL’S OPPOSITION LEADER HEADS TO U.S. AMID GROWING TENSIONS OVER WAR
Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid left for Washington for talks with top officials, his party said, as tensions between the two governments grew over Israel’s handling of the Gaza war.
Lapid is expected to meet US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan and other officials, his centrist Yesh Atid party said on X on Saturday.
US President Joe Biden has stood by Israel through six months of devastating fighting but the killing of seven aid workers in an Israeli air strike last week appears to have brought him the closest yet to a breaking point.
In a tense 30-minute telephone call with Benjamin Netanyahu last Thursday, Biden told the Israeli prime minister that the strike was “unacceptable” and called for an “immediate ceasefire”.
The two men discussed “the need for Israel to announce and implement a series of specific, concrete and measurable steps to address civilian harm, humanitarian suffering and the safety of aid workers”, the White House said afterwards.
It added that Biden “made clear that US policy with respect to Gaza will be determined by our assessment of Israel’s immediate action”.
Even before the killing of the aid workers, Washington had voiced concern over Netanyahu’s plans for a ground offensive in the far-southern city of Rafah, which is crammed with 1.5 million civilians, many of them displaced from other parts of Gaza.
During his visit, Lapid will also meet US Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer, who last month called for a snap election in Israel to give voters a chance to get rid of Netanyahu, whom he described as one of the “major obstacles” to peace.
A month ago, Blinken and US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin received the minister in the Israeli war cabinet, Benny Gantz.
The war cabinet was created a few days after the outbreak of the Gaza war on October 7, and Gantz joined it as an opposition politician. Lapid had declined the invitation to join the war cabinet at the time.
Agence France-Presse, Deutsche Presse-Agentur