MSF Briefing to the UN Security Council on the Situation in Gaza

Tempo di lettura: 6 minuti

Madam President, excellencies, colleagues,
As I speak, more than 1.5 million people are trapped in Rafah. People violently forced to this strip of land in southern Gaza are bearing the brunt of Israel’s military campaign.
(BREATHE)
We live in fear of a ground invasion.
Our fears are rooted in experience. Just 48 hours ago, as a family sat around their kitchen table in a house sheltering MSF staff and their families in Khan Younis, a 120mm tank shell exploded through the walls, igniting a fire, and killing two people and severely burning six others. Five of the six injured are women and children.
We took every precaution to protect the 64 humanitarian staff and family members from such an attack by notifying warring parties of the location and clearly marking the building with an MSF flag.
Despite our precautions, our building was struck not only by a tank shell but by intense gunfire. Some were trapped in the burning building while active shooting delayed ambulances from reaching them. This morning, I am looking at photos that show the catastrophic extent of the damage and I am watching videos of rescue teams removing the charred bodies from the rubble.
This is all too familiar—Israeli forces have attacked our convoys, detained our staff, and bulldozed our vehicles, and hospitals have been bombed and raided. Now, for a second time, one of our staff shelters has been hit. This pattern of attacks is either intentional or indicative of reckless incompetence.
Our colleagues in Gaza are fearful that, as I speak to you today, they will be punished tomorrow.
Madame President, every day we witness unimaginable horror.
We, like so many, were horrified by Hamas’ massacre in Israel on October 7th, and we are horrified by Israel’s response. We feel the anguish of families whose loved ones were taken hostage on October 7th. We feel the anguish of the families of those arbitrarily detained from Gaza and the West Bank.
As humanitarians, we are appalled by violence against civilians.
This death, destruction, and forced displacement are the result of military and political choices that blatantly disregard civilian lives.
These choices could have been—and still can be—made very differently.

For 138 days, we witnessed the unimaginable suffering of the people of Gaza.
For 138 days, we have done everything we can to enact a meaningful humanitarian response.
For 138 days, we have watched the systematic obliteration of a health system we have supported for decades. We have watched our patients and colleagues be killed and maimed.
This situation is the culmination of a war Israel is waging on the entire population of the Gaza strip—
a war of collective punishment,
a war without rules,
a war at all costs.
The laws and the principles we collectively depend on to enable humanitarian assistance are now eroded to the point of becoming meaningless.

Madam President, the humanitarian response in Gaza today is an illusion—a convenient illusion that perpetuates a narrative that this war is being waged in line with international laws.
Calls for more humanitarian assistance have echoed across this Chamber.
Yet in Gaza we have less and less each day—less space, less medicine, less food, less water, less safety.
We no longer speak of a humanitarian scale-up; we speak of how to survive even without the bare minimum.

Today in Gaza, efforts to provide assistance are haphazard, opportunistic, and entirely inadequate.
How can we deliver life-saving aid in an environment where the distinction between civilians and combatants is disregarded?
How can we sustain any type of response when medical workers are being targeted, attacked, and vilified for assisting the wounded?

Madam President, attacks on health care are attacks on humanity
There is no health system to speak of left in Gaza. Israel’s military has dismantled hospital after hospital. What remains is so little in the face of such carnage. It is preposterous.
The excuse given is that medical facilities have been used for military purposes, yet we have seen zero independently verified evidence of this.
In exceptional circumstances where a hospital loses its protected status, any attack must follow the principles of proportionality and precaution.
Instead of adherence to international law, we see the systematic disabling of hospitals. This has left the entire medical system inoperable.
Since October 7th, we have been forced to evacuate nine different health facilities.
One week ago, Nasser Hospital was raided. Medical staff were forced to leave despite repeated assurances that they could stay and continue caring for patients.

These indiscriminate attacks, as well as the types of weapons and munitions used in densely populated areas, have killed tens of thousands and maimed thousands more.
Our patients have catastrophic injuries, amputations, crushed limbs, and severe burns. They need sophisticated care. They need long and intensive rehabilitation.
Medics cannot treat these injuries on a battlefield or in the ashes of destroyed hospitals.
There are not enough hospital beds, not enough medications, and not enough supplies.
Surgeons have had no choice but to carry out amputations without anesthesia, on children.
Our surgeons are running out of basic gauze to stop their patients from bleeding out. They use it once, squeeze out the blood, wash it, sterilize it, and reuse it for the next patient.
The humanitarian crisis in Gaza has left pregnant women without medical care for months. Women in labor cannot reach functional delivery rooms. They are giving birth in plastic tents and public buildings.
Medical teams have added a new acronym to their vocabulary: WCNSF— wounded child, no surviving family.
Children who survive this war will not only bear the visible wounds of traumatic injuries but the invisible ones, too—those of repeated displacement, constant fear, and witnessing family members literally dismembered before their eyes. These psychological injuries have led children as young as five to tell us they would prefer to die.
The dangers for medical staff are enormous. On a daily basis, we are making the choice to continue working, despite the increasing risks.
We are scared. Our teams are beyond exhausted.

Madam President, this must stop.
We, along with the world, are closely watching how this Council and its members have approached the conflict in Gaza.
Meeting after meeting, resolution after resolution, this body has failed to effectively address this conflict. We have watched members of this Council deliberate and delay while civilians die.
We are appalled by the willingness of the United States to use its powers as a permanent Council member to obstruct efforts to adopt the most evident of resolutions: one demanding an immediate and sustained ceasefire.
Three times this Council has had an opportunity to vote for the ceasefire that is so desperately needed and three times the United States has used its veto power, most recently this Tuesday.
A new draft resolution by the United States ostensibly calls for a ceasefire. However, this is misleading at best.
This Council should reject any resolution that further hampers humanitarian efforts on the ground and leads this Council to tacitly endorse the continued violence and mass atrocities in Gaza.
The people of Gaza need a ceasefire not when “practicable,” but now. They need a sustained ceasefire, not a “temporary period of calm.” Anything short of this is gross negligence.
The protection of civilians in Gaza cannot be contingent on resolutions from this Council which instrumentalize humanitarianism to blur political objectives.
The protection of civilians, of civilian infrastructure, of health workers and health facilities, falls first and foremost on the parties to the conflict.
But it is also a collective responsibility—a responsibility which rests with this Council and its individual members, as parties to the Geneva Conventions.
(PAUSE)
The consequences of casting international humanitarian law to the wind will reverberate well beyond Gaza.
It will be an enduring burden on our collective conscience.
This is not just political inaction—it has become political complicity.
(PAUSE)
Two days ago, MSF staff and families were attacked and died in a place they were told would be protected.
Today our staff are back at work, risking their lives once again for their patients.
What are you willing to risk?
We demand the protections promised under International Humanitarian Law.
We demand a ceasefire from both parties.
We demand the space to turn the illusion of aid into meaningful assistance.
What will you do to make this possible?
Thank you, Madam President.

source

Maurizio Barra

Sono nato a Torino, il 19 Febbraio 1968. Ho alle spalle un'educazione direi Umanistica di base, avendo frequentato il Liceo Classico Valsalice e Lingue e Lettere Moderne all'Università. Grande passione per tutto ciò che è una tastiera, dal pianoforte o simili, ai PC, di cui peraltro amo anche il touch. Inoltre, un'altra mia grande passione, è lo sport e mi ha molto coinvolto, siccome ho lavorato molto su di me negli anni, passando attraverso varie fasi, nelle quali sono ingrassato moltissimo e poi sono diventato assai magro, dunque, siccome più volte ho dovuto intervenire su di me, ho voluto approfondire questo discorso ed ho conseguito il Master CFT come Personal Fitness Trainer presso Issa Italia. La voglia e l'interesse ad approfondire tante tematiche e la curiosità olistica, alle volte giocano brutti scherzi, perchè si rischia di iniziare tutto e concretamente di non riuscire a concludere nulla. Bisogna in teoria scegliere cosa fare da grande, il fatto è che io sono già ben cresciuto ed ora mi sento assai coinvolto dall'ambito tecnologico e dunque spero, soprattutto, di essere un intermediario tra i vedenti, diciamo, o comunque tra tutti e proprio chi è non vedente come me, sia per mostrare quante cose si possono fare in autonomia, sia per avvicinare (e qui mi appello a sviluppatori, amanti di softwares etc...) la facilità e l'accesso all'uso completo della tecnologia anche da parte degli stessi non vedenti, che comunque si devono spesso scontrare con grafici, pagine poco accessibili e continui escamotage, per fare cose che, con il famoso click, in teoria si risolvono subito e questo poi non è sempre vero; in sostanza lo scopo o l'idea sono quelli di avvicinare i vedenti, sviluppatori di apps e siti, a renderle più accessibili, metendo dunque a disposizione la mia conoscenza delle Tecnologie Assistive (Assistive Tecnologies) di cui mi ritengo un buon conoscitore. Non parliamo poi delle Apps Mobili ed anche di quel mondo, davvero meraviglioso ed il cui approccio per me è stato direi facile, ma mi rendo conto che non è così per tutti. Quindi, spero, nel tempo, di mettere a disposizione la mia modestissima ed umile e piccola esperienza, mantenendo vivo ogni nuovo possibile fronte di apprendimento e confronto e conoscenza, tutti utili e sempre necessari, non si smette mai di imparare e neanche di confrontarsi. Dunque, spero di avervi con me, sempre più numerosi, lungo questo nuovo cammino! Inoltre, siccome la tecnologia non è soltanto procedure, tutorials su come usare un sistema operativo o su come riparare PC, ma offre anche molti strumenti di consultazione, visione, ascolto, cercherò di condividere con voi le mie impressioni e quindi files, contenuti multimediali o altro, non avranno soltanto attinenza tecnologica, ma qualcosa a che fare con la rete l'avranno. Anzi, sono benvenuticommenti, suggerimenti e proposte. Con il trascorrere del tempo, il sito ha preso la direzione informativa. Pur essendo da solo a gestire tutta questa mole di notizie, prometto di dare sempre il massimo per fornire tutte le notizie il più possibile aggiornate in tempo reale, relative a tantissime categorie: Mondo, Cronaca, Economia, Politica, Tecnologia, Scienza, Medicina, Spettacoli, Cinema, Musica, Cultura, Calcio e sport, Regione Piemonte, tutto, ma proprio tutto, sulla Juventus e molto, molto altro. Grazie a tutti!

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