The Manila Times

The world must not abandon the mothers of Gaza

- BY NATALIA KANEM IPS Dr. Natalia Kanem is the UNFPA’s executive director.

– As millions of children and families celebrate their mothers today, my thoughts turn to the pregnant women and new mothers our teams at the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the UN’s sexual and reproducti­ve health agency, support in more than 130 countries. And I hold in my heart all those who, tragically, will never live to see their newborns.

More than 800 women a day — one woman every two minutes — needlessly die from entirely preventabl­e complicati­ons of pregnancy and childbirth. The situation is particular­ly dire for women and girls caught up in the world’s escalating crises and conflicts. Globally, more than half of all maternal deaths take place in countries affected by humanitari­an crises or fragility.

In the Gaza Strip, women face appalling conditions before, during and after giving birth. At the moment when new life is beginning, what should be a moment of joy is being overshadow­ed by death, destructio­n and despair. Severely limited access to health services and emergency obstetric care put the lives of women and newborns at risk.

Today, major hospitals lie in ruins across Gaza, and not a single health facility is fully operationa­l following more than 440 attacks on health care since the war began last October.

At the Al-Helal Al-Emirati Maternity Hospital, one of Gaza’s few remaining health facilities and now the main facility for pregnant women in Rafah, as of this writing, there are only five beds for deliveries and around 60 deliveries every day. Women hoping to give birth on the ward are told to bring their own mattresses and pillows.

“We are delivering babies nonstop,” says midwife Samira Hosny Qeshta. “We tell the woman who has just given birth: we need the bed. Get up and sit on a chair.”

Most women have had no prenatal care, she says. They just arrive at the hospital hoping for the best. Many are suffering from infections due to the unhygienic living conditions in the overcrowde­d camps, where hundreds of people may share a single toilet, and there is a lack of clean water and hygiene supplies.

“We live in a tent, and every time it rains, the tent floods, and our beds

get wet,” says Suhad. She is nine months pregnant and scheduled for a Caesarean section. Hours later, she will be back in the tent.

“It will be extremely difficult after the birth,” she says. “From the physical pain to the ice cold — and there are no clothes for the baby. What has she done to be born into a situation like this?”

Even if their babies are delivered safely, thousands of women like Suhad face the inevitable question: What next? How will they keep their newborn clean, warm, fed, alive?

Many of these mothers are themselves too dehydrated and malnourish­ed to breastfeed their children, and there is no formula to be had.

The UNFPA has delivered reproducti­ve health kits that have made safe births possible for more than 20,000 women in Gaza. We have set up a mobile maternity clinic in Rafah, with two more on the way. Hundreds of UNFPA-trained midwives are supporting pregnant women and new mothers unable to access a health clinic or hospital.

We have also distribute­d hygiene supplies, diapers, baby clothes, blankets and other essential items to thousands of new mothers. Yet all of this is just a drop in an ocean of need.

The world must not abandon the mothers of Gaza. They, their newborns, and all civilians must be protected and their needs met. Hospitals and health workers must never be targets.

From time immemorial, cultures across the globe have honored the sacredness of motherhood. On this Mother’s Day, let us pay tribute to that sacred bond by rememberin­g all the women who create, protect and nurture life, even under the most catastroph­ic circumstan­ces.

The mothers in flooded tents or fleeing bombs. The mothers of hostages still waiting for their families to be made whole. The mothers and newborns fighting for their lives in overcrowde­d hospital wards without adequate medicines or supplies.

They need life-saving health services and support. They need dignity. Above all, they need peace. This war must end now.

 ?? UNFPA PHOTO VIA IPS ?? Palestinia­n women gather at one desk of the Al-Helal Al-Emirati maternity hospital in the city of Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, in this undated photo.
UNFPA PHOTO VIA IPS Palestinia­n women gather at one desk of the Al-Helal Al-Emirati maternity hospital in the city of Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, in this undated photo.

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