News Flash
GENEVA, June 17, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - The World Health Organization on Tuesday
pleaded for fuel to be allowed into Gaza to keep its remaining hospitals
running, warning the Palestinian territory's health system was at "breaking
point".
"For over 100 days, no fuel has entered Gaza and attempts to retrieve stocks
from evacuation zones have been denied," said Rik Peeperkorn, the WHO's
representative in the Palestinian territories.
"Combined with critical supply shortages, this is pushing the health system
closer to the brink of collapse."
Peeperkorn said only 17 of Gaza's 36 hospitals were currently minimally to
partially functional. They have a total of around 1,500 beds -- around 45
percent fewer than before the conflict began.
He said all hospitals and primary health centres in north Gaza were currently
out of service.
In Rafah in southern Gaza, health services are provided through the Red Cross
field hospital and two partially-functioning medical points.
Speaking from Jerusalem, he said the 17 partially functioning hospitals and
seven field hospitals were barely running on a minimum amount of daily fuel
and "will soon have none left".
"Without fuel, all levels of care will cease, leading to more preventable
deaths and suffering."
Hospitals were already switching between generators and batteries to power
ventilators, dialysis machines and incubators, he said, and without fuel,
ambulances cannot run and supplies cannot be delivered to hospitals.
Furthermore, field hospitals are entirely reliant on generators, and without
electricity, the cold chain for keeping vaccines would fail.
The war was triggered by an unprecedented Hamas attack on Israel on October
7, 2023, which resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, according to official
Israeli figures.
The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said on Monday that 5,194 people have
been killed since Israel resumed strikes on the territory on March 18
following a truce.
The overall death toll in Gaza since the war broke out on October 7, 2023 has
reached 55,493 people, according to the health ministry.
"People often ask when Gaza is going to be out of fuel; Gaza is already out
of fuel," said WHO trauma surgeon and emergency officer Thanos Gargavanis,
speaking from the Strip.
"We are walking already the fine line that separates disaster from saving
lives. The shrinking humanitarian space makes every health activity way more
difficult than the previous day."