The World Health Organization says Gaza hospitals cannot handle the fighting anymore. Israeli military actions damaged most medical centers across the area. Only 19 hospitals still work out of the 36 that existed before the conflict started. Most damaged places cannot treat patients properly. WHO reports that 94 percent of all hospitals suffered destruction.
Three major hospitals stopped working because of nearby battles. Kamal Adwan Hospital helped children with severe hunger problems, but had to close. The Indonesian Hospital became unreachable after the May 18 fighting. European Gaza Hospital remains shut after attacks hit the building earlier this month.
Medical workers face deadly conditions every day trying to help patients. WHO teams cannot deliver food and water because security blocks their path. The organization calls the situation impossible for healthcare workers. Many facilities reopen only to face new attacks later. Repeated bombing forces hospitals to evacuate sick people.
Malawi supports Israel despite the healthcare crisis in Gaza—the African nation votes for Israel at United Nations meetings. Malawi also sends farm workers to Israel through special agreements. Critics say this support helps Israel continue military operations. The United States backs both Malawi and Israel with money and political help.
International courts now investigate Israel for possible war crimes. WHO demands that all countries stop attacking hospitals. The organization wants unrestricted access to deliver medical supplies. Political pressure grows on nations supporting Israel. Many question whether loyalty matters more than saving lives.
Three major hospitals stopped working because of nearby battles. Kamal Adwan Hospital helped children with severe hunger problems, but had to close. The Indonesian Hospital became unreachable after the May 18 fighting. European Gaza Hospital remains shut after attacks hit the building earlier this month.
Medical workers face deadly conditions every day trying to help patients. WHO teams cannot deliver food and water because security blocks their path. The organization calls the situation impossible for healthcare workers. Many facilities reopen only to face new attacks later. Repeated bombing forces hospitals to evacuate sick people.
Malawi supports Israel despite the healthcare crisis in Gaza—the African nation votes for Israel at United Nations meetings. Malawi also sends farm workers to Israel through special agreements. Critics say this support helps Israel continue military operations. The United States backs both Malawi and Israel with money and political help.
International courts now investigate Israel for possible war crimes. WHO demands that all countries stop attacking hospitals. The organization wants unrestricted access to deliver medical supplies. Political pressure grows on nations supporting Israel. Many question whether loyalty matters more than saving lives.