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Nearly 40 tiby newborn babies are under the care of exhausted medics at Gaza's Al Shifa hospital, which is besieged by Israeli tanks battling Hamas fighters, and lacks electricity, water, food, medicines and equipment.
Dr. Mohamed Tabasha, head of the paediatric department at Al Shifa Hospital, said on Monday: 'Yesterday I had 39 babies and today they have become 36. I cannot say how long they can last. I can lose another two babies today, or in an hour.'
The premature babies, who weigh less than 1.5 kg (3.3 pounds) each and in some cases only 700 or 800 grams, should be in incubators where the temperature and humidity can be regulated according to their individual needs.
Instead, they had to be moved to ordinary beds over the weekend because of a shortage of electricity, said Tabasha. They were placed side by side, surrounded by packets of nappies, cardboard boxes of sterile gauze and plastic bags.
'I never expected in my life that I would put 39 babies side by side on a bed, each with a different disease, and in this acute shortage of medical staff, of milk,' said Tabasha.
The infants are too cold, and the temperature is not stable because of power cuts, he said. In the absence of infection control measures, they are transmitting viruses to each other and they have no immunity.
He said there was no longer any way of sterilising their milk and bottle teats to the required standard. As a result, some had contracted gastritis and were suffering from diarrhoea and vomiting, which meant an acute risk of dehydration.
At least three Palestinians have been killed and 20 others injured after an Israeli air strike hit Bani Suhaila, a town east of Khan Younis in the Gaza Strip, health officials on Monday said.
Harrowing pictures showed children covered in blood being treated by medics at the Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis after the airstrikes.
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U.S. and international forces in northeastern Syria were attacked with drones and rockets at least four times in the past 24 hours, though there were no casualties and only minor damage, a U.S. military official said on Monday.
U.S. forces came under attack three times on Sunday evening, including near the Al Omar Oil field and at a U.S. base at al-Shaddadi, the official told Reuters.
Multiple drones were fired at U.S. forces at the Rumalyn Landing Zone on Monday morning, the official said. One drone was shot down but another damaged four tents, the official added.
The attacks came after the U.S. carried out two air strikes on Sunday against facilities it said were used by Iran-aligned groups, its third set of strikes in Syria in as many weeks.
The hospitals in northern Gaza were no longer functioning amid fuel shortages and intense combat, with the death toll inside the territory's largest facility rising, the Hamas-run health ministry said Monday.
The IDF says it has killed 21 Hamas terrorists who it claims were 'embedded' among civilians at the al Quds hospital in Gaza City.
It said in a statement:
The shooting was carried out by a terrorist squad that had embedded itself within a group of civilians at the entrance of the hospital.
After the terrorists fired RPGs, they returned to hide in the hospital... During the incident, about 21 terrorists were killed and there were no casualties to our forces.
This incident is another example of Hamas’s continued abuse of civilian structures, including hospitals, to carry out attacks.
Jordan's King Abdullah rejects any plans by Israel to occupy parts of Gaza or to create security zones within the enclave, state media said on Monday.
Greta Thunberg today came under fire over her pro-Palestine stance in Germany, where the local chapter of climate movement Fridays for Future distanced itself from the climate protester's views on the Israel-Hamas war.
Thunberg, wearing the Palestinian black and white scarf, had urged 'ceasefire now' at a climate protest in Amsterdam on Sunday before a man grabbed her microphone and said, 'I've come for a climate demonstration, not a political view'.
Thunberg had accused 'the people in power of not listening' to the 'voices of those who are being oppressed' in the Gaza Strip during her speech in front of tens of thousands of climate protesters.
Her comments in Amsterdam marked 'the end of Greta Thunberg as a climate activist,' said Volker Becker, the president of the German-Israel Society DIG, adding that 'from now: Israel hater is the main job' for the Swedish activist.
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Israeli forces today reached the gates of Gaza City's main hospital under which the IDF has insisted Hamas terrorists have their headquarters in makeshift tunnels.
Scores of Israeli soldiers and tanks have now surrounded the sprawling Al Shifa hospital where thousands of patients and civilians remain trapped in what could be a pivotal moment in the bloody war.
Israeli forces appear ready to enter the hospital where they have consistently insisted that Hamas terrorists are hiding in underground tunnels beneath the building and using the patients as shields.
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The U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees said Monday that Israel's navy struck one of its facilities in southern Gaza, despite sharing coordinates with warring parties.
The agency, known as UNRWA, said Sunday's strike caused 'significant damage' to its guesthouse in Rafah, adding that no casualties were reported since U.N. staff left the facility 90 minutes before the attack.
There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military.
'This recent attack is yet another indication that nowhere in Gaza is safe. Not the north, not the middle areas and not the south,' said UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini.
At least 32 hospital patients from Gaza's Al Shifa hospital have died over the past three days, the spokesman for the Palestinian health ministry, Ashraf Al Qidra, said on Monday.
The dead include three premature babies, Al Qidra added.
Operations in Al Shifa hospital complex, the largest in the Palestinian enclave, were suspended on Saturday after it ran out of fuel.
Ireland's deputy premier has announced he is to travel to Israel and the Palestinian territory later this week.
Israel said it was poised to impose quiet on the Lebanese front as hostilities spiked on Sunday, with Hezbollah wounding civilians in a cross-border missile attack and the Israeli Air Force bombing sites linked to the Iranian-backed group.
The EU's humanitarian aid chief called Monday for 'meaningful' pauses in the fighting in Gaza and urgent deliveries of fuel to keep hospitals working in the territory.
Israel's military said it would observe a 'self-evacuation corridor' Monday, allowing people to move from Al-Shifa southward, but admitted the area was still the scene of 'intense battles.'
The Israeli army on Monday announced the death of two additional soldiers in northern Gaza, raising to 44 the number killed in the Palestinian territory since October 7.
An army spokesperson told AFP that 44 were killed "inside Gaza during the war" that began when Hamas militants stormed Israel's southern border.
Pictured: Doctors examine injured patients with a phone torch amid fuel shortages at the Indonesian Hospital in Jabalia, northern Gaza.
Thousands of people remained trapped in Gaza's largest hospital Monday, where evacuations have been hampered by fierce fighting between Israeli and Hamas forces.
The largest hospital in Gaza has ceased to function and fatalities among patients are rising, the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) said, as fighting between Israeli forces and Hamas continued just outside the facility where incubators lay idle with no electricity.