Gaza: 160,000 more children vaccinated against polio in southern Gaza

More than 160,000 children were vaccinated in southern Gaza on Thursday, the first day of a polio vaccination campaign there, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) said on Friday.

UN agencies and partners in the Strip will continue to vaccinate “as many Gazan children as possible” during the agreed humanitarian pauses, before moving to the north of the war-shattered enclave, UNRWA added.

Thousands of families visited health centers to get their doses from UN medical teams, UNRWA reported. In southern Gaza, more than 152,000 children were vaccinated in Khan Younis city, nearly 8,800 in Rafah and another 1,000 elsewhere in the south.

The promising development follows the successful completion of the first phase of the vaccination campaign in central Gaza earlier this week, which saw more than 187,000 children under 10 receive protection from polio. To date, combined coverage for central and southern Gaza now stands at 354,786 children.

Wennesland: Stop West Bank violence  

While war continues to rage in Gaza, ongoing deadly clashes in the occupied West Bank that have left two Palestinian children dead in Jenin and Tulkarem have been condemned by the UN’s top representative for the Middle East Peace Process, Tor Wennesland.

“I am appalled by the tragic killing of two children over the past two days by Israeli security forces during military operations in Jenin and Tulkarem,” he said in an online post on Thursday.

“I call for an immediate and thorough investigation into these incidents, underscoring the urgent need for accountability and justice to ensure the protection of all civilians. Every child’s life is precious, and the loss of so many young lives serves as a grim reminder that decisive action must be taken now to stop the violence.

Echoing that message, UNWRA reported that violence and destruction “increase by the hour” in the West Bank.

According to the UN agency, last week was the deadliest for Palestinian civilians in the West Bank since November last year, with seven children among the many killed.  

“This is unacceptable. It must stop now,” UNRWA insisted on X.

The UN aid coordination office, OCHA, also reported that medical facilities have been nearly under siege for over a week, with severe restrictions on ambulance and medical staff movement. 

Humanitarian needs are growing amid increasing insecurity and an excessive use of force, it added.

UN Health News


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