They’re Not Numbers: Palestinian Infants Freeze to Death amid “Israeli” Siege
Story Code : 1181125
The baby's tent was not sealed against the wind and the ground was cold, the doctors said.
On Thursday, another baby, Sila Mahmoud al-Faseeh, was found unresponsive. By the time doctors reached her, her lungs had deteriorated and she was declared dead from hypothermia.
"In the morning, when her mother was going to breastfeed her again, we found her blue, with blood coming from her mouth due to the cold," her father said in a video shared online, holding her in a white shroud with her purple lips visible against her pale face.
The baby “froze to death from the extreme cold” in al-Mawasi, said Dr Munir al-Bursh, director general of the Palestinian Ministry of Health, on X.
In another post, he described the tents in Gaza as "fridges of death", citing the deaths of two other babies due to the bitter cold.
According to Ahmed al-Farra, head of pediatrics and obstetrics at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, the infants were a three-day-old and a one-month-old baby.
The deaths underline the dire conditions in Gaza, where hundreds of thousands of displaced Palestinians are packed into derelict makeshift tents, fleeing “Israeli” shelling in different parts of the strip.
“Israeli” forces have murdered at least 45,259 Palestinians in Gaza since 7 October last year, according to the latest figures from the Palestinian health ministry published on Sunday. The majority of those killed are women and children.
Dozens more have died due to the harsh conditions imposed by the “Israeli” occupation, including starvation, lack of medical care and hypothermia.
On Tuesday, the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, Unrwa, issued a damning statement, revealing that a child is killed in Gaza every hour amid the relentless “Israeli” assault.
"They are not just numbers; they are lives lost in a short time without any justification," the agency stated, highlighting the devastating toll of ‘Israel’s’ actions.
In a post on X, the agency emphasized the harrowing plight of Gaza’s children, many of whom are physically and emotionally scarred. Those who survive endure the trauma of displacement, are deprived of education and are left scavenging for food among the ruins of their homes.
Last week, over 50 British MPs and peers signed a letter urging Prime Minister Keir Starmer to implement a medical evacuation program for injured Palestinian children in Gaza.