| Joint statement by CARE International and Save the Children on the Humanitarian Crisis in Gaza |
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Agencies Call for Immediate Open and Unhindered Access for Aid and International Non-Governmental Organizations into Gaza Since the escalation of violence, the agencies have not been allowed to send any staff and have been limited in sending aid into Gaza. Additional humanitarian workers are required to support the aid workers already in Gaza, who have been working throughout the conflict under extremely difficult conditions. Most of the population has been without basic services and supplies for nearly a month. The agencies are stressing that the essential supplies needed to respond to the scale of the crisis, including food, water, medical supplies, hygiene kits and reconstruction materials, are not available in sufficient supply in Gaza’s local markets. The agencies applaud the statements of John Holmes, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and United Nations Emergency Relief Coordinator, regarding the urgent need for humanitarian access, and ask him to negotiate a removal of this barrier to effective humanitarian action during his visit to the region to assess the humanitarian situation on Thursday, January 22. “Gaza’s devastation has not only been caused by the recent three-week conflict. Humanitarian aid organizations have been denied access to the Gaza Strip since November 4, and this is utterly impeding our ability to respond to the humanitarian disaster we are faced with today,” said Martha Myers, Country Director for CARE International in the West Bank and Gaza. “The 18-month blockade of Gaza has left the population weakened and completely unprepared to recover from the current crisis without outside help.” “The threat of violence may be diminished, but the children of Gaza are no less vulnerable. Indeed the health and well-being of an even greater number of children are at risk,” said Annie Foster, Team Leader for Save the Children’s emergency response in Gaza. “We need to move quickly to get life-saving aid to babies, children and their families. Open access into Gaza will allow us to ramp up our relief operations.” The organizations also renewed their call for a permanent and negotiated ceasefire, paving the way for a durable peace that will benefit all children and families both within Gaza and Israel.
Save the Children is the leading, independent organization creating real and lasting change for children in more than 100 countries around the world. The agency which has worked in Gaza since 1953, has reached nearly 40,000 Gazans, half of them children, with food parcels, hygiene kits, baby kits, plastic carpets (for under mattresses), and bottled water since the conflict started on Dec. 27. Media Contacts:
CARE: Juliette Seibold,
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
, +972.547797730 (local mobile in Jerusalem), +972.2.2954949 (office)
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