GENEVA / GAZA GRIFFITHS HUMANITARIAN
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STORY: GENEVA / GAZA GRIFFITHS HUMANITARIAN
TRT: 03:06
SOURCE: UNTV CH
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 15 NOVEMBER 2023, GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
1. Wide shot, exterior, UN Flag Alley
2. SOUNDBITE (English) Martin Griffiths, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs / Emergency Relief Coordinator, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA):
“We need to make sure in our truck convoys that we respect the new needs that winter gives us of shelter, of course. I think the problem for the people of Gaza hasn't changed very much since the beginning, in the sense that what they're now seeing is what they expected to see in a horrific way, a horrific situation in which they have no escape and in which they're being asked to move still in conditions of danger.”
3. Wide shot, exterior, UN Flag Alley
4. SOUNDBITE (English) Martin Griffiths, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs / Emergency Relief Coordinator, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA):
“We need at least a couple hundred thousand litres to get us moving again. We have had agreements in those negotiations for such a replenishment, but they haven't achieved final approval at the highest levels of the Israeli authorities. So we need that decision made.”
5. Wide shot, exterior, UN Flag Alley
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Martin Griffiths, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs / Emergency Relief Coordinator, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA):
“This is why we've talked about a humanitarian ceasefire. We need to have time in safety for the private sector to operate, to get those trucks in, to let those stocks to be replenished, to let those shops to be opened again for the people of Gaza. That's just as important as our operations, if not more.”
7. Wide shot, exterior, UN Flag Alley
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Martin Griffiths, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs / Emergency Relief Coordinator, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA):
“Our role and our pledge and our message is we are right there sitting in front of those people on the borders of Gaza in Rafah, ready to go at the right scale if we get the means to do so. We have plans how to do this. We have plans which do not include having people moved into so-called safe zones. We have plans to try to reach people where they are. It is a standard way of operation in a place, in a crisis like this."
9. Wide shot, exterior, UN Flag Alley
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Martin Griffiths, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs / Emergency Relief Coordinator, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA):
“Look, Hamas must not, should not, use a place like a hospital as a shield for their presence. That is as strong a statement under humanitarian law as is the statement that the hospitals should not become a place of - a war zone - of danger. We find these two issues equally important and equally understandable for both sides.
11. Wide shot, exterior, UN Flag Alley
12. SOUNDBITE (English) Martin Griffiths, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs / Emergency Relief Coordinator, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA):
“Our concern on the humanitarian side is for the welfare of the patients of that hospital, which is, of course, in great peril at the moment; we have no fuel to run it. The babies have no incubators; they are newly born. Some are dead already. We can't move them out. It's too dangerous. Our concern is for the patients of a hospital that doesn't function. I understand the Israelis’ concern for trying to find the leadership of Hamas; that's not our problem. Our problem is protecting the people of Gaza from what's being visited upon them.”
The UN’s top emergency relief official today (15 Nov) condemned reported raids on Gaza’s embattled Al-Shifa hospital by the Israeli military, highlighting the need for humanitarian pauses to help deliver lifesaving support to civilians.
Speaking in Geneva five weeks since war erupted in Gaza following Hamas’s attacks in Israel on 7 October that left 1,200 dead and some 240 hostages taken by Hamas fighters, Martin Griffiths underscored growing international concern for the plight of patients in the Gaza City hospital who are too sick to be moved.
"Our concern on the humanitarian side is for the welfare of the patients of that hospital, which is, of course, in great peril at the moment; we have no fuel to run it,” he said.
The UN Emergency Relief Coordinator’s comments followed warnings from the UN World Health Organization (WHO) that the patients at Al-Shifa had needs that were “well beyond basic care,” while images reportedly from the facility showed medics trying to keep newborns warm in swaddling blankets because power for incubators had failed.
In a tweet on Wednesday, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus wrote that the UN agency had lost touch once more with medical personnel at Al-Shifa and that there was deep concern for the safety of patients.
“The babies have no incubators,” Griffiths said. “Some are dead already. We can't move them out. It's too dangerous. Our concern is for the patients of a hospital that doesn't function. I understand the Israelis’ concern for trying to find the leadership of Hamas; that's not our problem. Our problem is protecting the people of Gaza from what's being visited upon them.”
With the onset of the first winter rains in Gaza making the need for shelter increasingly urgent, UN officials highlighted how this would be reflected in humanitarian aid deliveries from the Rafah border crossing point with Egypt.
The UN Humanitarian Affairs Coordination Office OCHA also reported on Wednesday that displaced people staying in makeshift tents outside the shelters in southern Gaza for lack of room are now suffering from the heavy rains and flooding.
But a lack of fuel continues to prevent aid trucks from reaching those most in need.
“We need at least a couple of hundred thousand litres to get us moving again. We have had agreements in those negotiations for such a replenishment, but they haven't achieved final approval at the highest levels of the Israeli authorities. So we need that decision made.”
Five weeks since the start of the latest Gaza-Israel conflagration, Griffiths described the displacement ordeal linked to the Israeli military’s evacuation order for those in the north of the enclave as “a horrific situation in which they have no escape and in which they're being asked to move still in conditions of danger.”
He added: “This is why we've talked about a humanitarian ceasefire. We need to have time in safety for the private sector to operate, to get those trucks in, to let those stocks to be replenished, to let those shops to be opened again for the people of Gaza. That's just as important as our operations, if not more.”
In a message of solidarity and hope from the UN to all those caught up in “this genuinely…global crisis”, Griffiths insisted that Gazans’ needs were “front and foremost” in the Organization’s thoughts – just as they were among the international community which has seen a push for de-escalation at peace talks in Paris, Riyadh and elsewhere in recent days.
“There's a huge amount of political leverage, interest, and will to bring this to a conclusion,” he said before insisting that “our role and our pledge and our message is, we are right there sitting in front of those people on the borders of Gaza in Rafah, ready to go at the right scale if we get the means to do so. We have plans how to do this. We have plans which do not include having people moved into so-called safe zones. We have plans to try to reach people where they are. It is a standard way of operation in a place, in a crisis like this."