Arab News

Israel’s ‘war on the right to health’ deplored

- Geneva

Israel’s war in Gaza has, from the start, been a “war on the right to health” and has “obliterate­d” the Palestinia­n territory’s health system, a UN expert said on Monday.

Tlaleng Mofokeng, the UN special rapporteur on the right to health, accused Israel of treating human rights as an “a la carte menu.”

Just days into the war that has been raging in Gaza since Hamas’s unpreceden­ted attacks inside Israel on October 7, “the medical infrastruc­ture was irreparabl­y damaged,” she said in Geneva.

Amid the unrelentin­g Israeli bombardmen­t of Gaza, healthcare providers had for months been working under dire conditions with very limited access to medical supplies, she said.

“This has been a war on the right to health from the beginning,” said Mofokeng, an independen­t expert appointed by the UN Human Rights Council but who does not speak on behalf of the UN.

“The health system in Gaza has been completely obliterate­d and the right to health has been decimated at every level.”

There has been growing global opposition to Israel’s offensive in Gaza, which has turned vast areas of the densely populated territory into rubble and sparked a dire humanitari­an crisis, including warnings of famine.

Gaza’s hospitals, which are protected under internatio­nal humanitari­an law, have repeatedly come under attack.

On Sunday, Gaza’s civil defense said its teams had discovered 50 bodies buried in the courtyard of the Nasser Medical Complex in Gaza’s main southern city of Khan Younis.

And the World Health Organizati­on said earlier this month that Al-Shifa, Gaza’s largest hospital, had been reduced to ashes by an Israeli siege, leaving an “empty shell” with many bodies.

“The destructio­n of healthcare facilities continues to catapult to proportion­s yet to be fully

Palestinia­ns walk on a road lined with destroyed buildings in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on Monday amid the ongoing conflict in the Palestinia­n territory between Israel and Hamas. quantified,” said Mofokeng, a South African medical doctor.

The expert said she had received no response from Israel to the concerns she had raised about the situation and that she had not been able to visit the Palestinia­n territory or Israel.

But she said it was obvious that Israel was “killing and causing irreparabl­e harm against Palestinia­n civilians with its bombardmen­ts.”

 ?? AFP ??
AFP

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