UN / UNFPA GAZA PRESSER

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Nestor Owomuhangi, United Nations Population Fund representative in Palestine, said that Gaza today is “a population holding its breath, suspended between survival and uncertainty.” UNIFEED
Description

STORY: UN / UNFPA GAZA PRESSER
TRT: 03:09
SOURCE: UNIFEED
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS

DATELINE: 05 DECEMBER 2025, NEW YORK CITY

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Shotlist

FILE - NEW YORK CITY

1. Wide shot, exterior, United Nations

05 DECEMBER 2025, NEW YORK CITY

2. Wide shot, speakers, journalists, press room
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Nestor Owomuhangi, representative in Palestine, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA):
“The ceasefire is a breath, but one cannot live on a single breath and her words capture Gaza today: a population holding its breath, suspended between survival and uncertainty. The sky is quieter, but the trauma remains loud. The ceasefire was desperately needed, but it is not an end to the war for women and girls, not physically, emotionally or economically.”
4. Wide shot, speakers, journalists, press room
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Nestor Owomuhangi, representative in Palestine, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA):
“More than 57,000 households in Gaza are now headed by women. Many of them are deeply vulnerable, with no income to support their children. And now winter rains, and flooding are adding a new layer to suffering.”
6. Wide shot, speakers, journalists, press room
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Nestor Owomuhangi, representative in Palestine, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA):
“People no longer ask for homes, education or proper food. They ask for a tent, a small heater for the night. Their expectations have collapsed as devastating as any destroyed building.”
8. Wide shot, speakers, journalists, press room
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Nestor Owomuhangi, representative in Palestine, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA):
“The maternal health sector: we need to rebuild and equip the health facilities that have been destroyed. We must ensure a steady and reliable flow of medicines and suppliers. We also need to rebuild the health workforce, and we must restore referral pathways so women can once again move safely through the system and receive the lifesaving care they need.”
10. Wide shot, speakers, journalists, press room
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Nestor Owomuhangi, representative in Palestine, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA):
“Currently, UNFPA supports 22 health facilities, which is about 11 percent of the entire health system, which includes 5 hospitals. We are supporting 14 women and girls’ safe spaces, two shelters and nine youth hubs. In 2026 we plan to double this number. But even weeks after a ceasefire, access remains a problem, with only three crossings open and never at the same time, as well as continued red tape imposed to bring in supplies. We are still seeing huge delays in deliverance”
12. Wide shot, speakers, journalists, press room
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Nestor Owomuhangi, representative in Palestine, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA):
“We need predictable, sustained, safe, humanitarian access through all crossings to all parts of Gaza, especially the North Gaza. Without this, recovery cannot gain momentum.”
14. Wide shot, speakers, journalists, press room

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Storyline

Nestor Owomuhangi, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) representative in Palestine, said that Gaza today is “a population holding its breath, suspended between survival and uncertainty.”

Addressing the press today (5 Dec) Owomuhangi cited a Palestinian woman and said, “The ceasefire is a breath, but one cannot live on a single breath.’”

He added, “The sky is quieter, but the trauma remains loud. The ceasefire was desperately needed, but it is not an end to the war for women and girls, not physically, emotionally or economically.”

He reported, “More than 57,000 households in Gaza are now headed by women. Many of them are deeply vulnerable, with no income to support their children. And now winter rains, and flooding are adding a new layer to suffering.”

He highlighted, “People no longer ask for homes, education or proper food. They ask for a tent, a small heater for the night. Their expectations have collapsed as devastating as any destroyed building.”

He said, “The maternal health sector: we need to rebuild and equip the health facilities that have been destroyed. We must ensure a steady and reliable flow of medicines and suppliers. We also need to rebuild the health workforce, and we must restore referral pathways so women can once again move safely through the system and receive the lifesaving care they need.”

He said, “Currently, UNFPA supports 22 health facilities, which is about 11 percent of the entire health system, which includes 5 hospitals. We are supporting 14 women and girls’ safe spaces, two shelters and nine youth hubs. In 2026 we plan to double this number. But even weeks after a ceasefire, access remains a problem, with only three crossings open and never at the same time, as well as continued red tape imposed to bring in supplies. We are still seeing huge delays in deliverance”

He stated, “We need predictable, sustained, safe, humanitarian access through all crossings to all parts of Gaza, especially the North Gaza. Without this, recovery cannot gain momentum.”

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3511476
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3511476