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Gaza conflict: How children's lives are affected on every level

Gaza
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Children living in Gaza have never known anything but overcrowding, shortages, conflict and danger.

It's been 18 years since the then Israeli prime minister, Ariel Sharon, moved all Israel's settlers and military personnel out of the Gaza Strip. The country's official narrative then became that they were no longer an occupying force.

But two years later, following the election of Hamas, the Israeli government on the entire Gaza Strip. So today's 18-year-olds have suffered in a state of privation for pretty much their whole lives.

Relocation of settlers and soldiers and the imposition of the did not release Israel from its responsibility under international law towards the civilian population in Gaza. According to the , Israel is still "bound by certain obligations under the law of occupation". As detailed in of the fourth Geneva convention, this includes ensuring that the population of Gaza receives food, medicines and other basic goods.

But over recent days the Israeli government has so that even commodities essential for survival are denied to the civilian population. As researchers on the protection of in Gaza, we—the authors of this article—are receiving messages from families that they are surviving on bread and contaminated water.

The world is learning, almost in real time, about the impact on the children of Gaza of the latest siege-like conditions imposed by Israel in the wake of Hamas' attacks. The lack of water and food is inevitably affecting the young more immediately and more severely than adults.

Those children who fall sick or are injured seek treatment in a collapsing health system, with . Those still functioning must manage an impossible level of demand along with a drastic shortage of medicine. In such circumstances many children are vulnerable to severe harm and death.

The toll of war

But it would be a mistake to assume that even prior to the current tightening of the blockade, children in Gaza enjoyed healthy lives. Within the densely populated Gaza Strip, the health needs of children have grown exponentially due to the conditions of the Israeli blockade.

Regular exposure to direct military attacks affects both the physical and mental health of the young. Older children will have experienced including the current one in their brief lifetimes (2008-9, 2012, 2014, 2021, 2022 and 2023).

Since Israel imposed its blockade in 2007 up until the current war, Defense for Children International—Palestine (DCIP), a Palestinian human rights organization specifically focused on child rights, has counted killed in Gaza by Israeli military attacks. These wars have also created long-term threats to children's survival and well-being. In the aftermath of each war, Israel has to Gaza via the main commercial crossing for , generators and water.

Without these materials, it has been impossible to clear the debris fully, and to rebuild homes, schools, hospitals and public spaces. The lack of reconstruction poses severe risks to children playing outside.

A conducted by the UN Environment Program following the 2008-9 war highlighted the serious health issues due to the debris that would particularly affect children. Polluted water supplies, contaminated soil, extensive rubble, including exposed metal rods, have all created grave risk for the young.

Crumbling infrastructure

Blockade has also made it impossible to develop vitally needed infrastructure. The provision of and adequate sewage and waste disposal requires massive investment to meet the needs of the population. Meanwhile, the and shortage of sanitation structures mean that the sea in Gaza is highly contaminated by sewage and poorly treated wastewater.

With very few safe public play spaces for children, the beach is one place that many have turned to for relief. According to a by the RAND Corporation, however, water-related diseases are a primary cause of child and infant mortality in Gaza.

Some children require complex medical care that is not available in Gaza. Under international law, children's access to adequate medical care is the responsibility of Israel. According to human rights organizations, for children to access necessary care in Israel are routinely denied.

The need for rehabilitative support for disabled children grew in 2018 and 2019 when thousands of children and youth participated in demonstrations during the "". Israeli forces with live and rubber bullets, killing 46 and injuring nearly 8,800 children. Many children who sustained life-altering injuries, including loss of limbs, were not granted permits to leave Gaza to receive the rehabilitative care they required.

Palestinian doctors, nurses, other , and civil society organizations have spent 16 years doing their utmost to provide for the health and well-being of Palestinian children in Gaza under blockade.

Despite multiple evacuation orders from the Israeli military in the past week, continue to work around the clock to save lives. Yet health workers and facilities are . Meanwhile DCIP is reporting that in the past week more than 1,000 Palestinian children .

It must be understood that Israel's actions in the last week—termed as by UN human rights officials—are an extension of 16 years of killing both children's bodies and their hopes through its blockade.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Gaza conflict: How children's lives are affected on every level (2023, October 18) retrieved 30 September 2025 from /news/2023-10-gaza-conflict-children-affected.html
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