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23:01 GMT
NEW YORK, March 24 (KUNA) - The UN Secretary-General on Monday took the "difficult decision" to reduce the aid operation inside the Gaza Strip following the resumption of deadly Israeli airstrikes - but pledged that "the UN is not leaving" the enclave.
"In the past week, Israel carried out devastating strikes on Gaza, claiming the lives of hundreds of civilians, including United Nations personnel, with no humanitarian aid being allowed to enter the Strip since early March," said a statement released by Guterres' Spokesperson Stephane Dujarric.
"As a result, the Secretary-General has taken the difficult decision to reduce the Organization's footprint in Gaza, even as humanitarian needs soar and our concern over the protection of civilians intensifies."
The UN stressed that it remained fully committed to providing lifesaving aid. Around a third of the approximately 100 international staff working in Gaza will be temporarily relocated.
After cutting off all humanitarian aid into Gaza for three weeks - the longest suspension since 7 October 2023 - Israeli officials have indicated that they intend to continue their military campaign across Gaza and annex territory to pressure Hamas.
Dujarric said that based on currently available information, "the strikes hitting a UN compound in Deir Al Balah on 19 March were caused by an Israeli tank."
"The strikes claimed the life of a UN colleague from Bulgaria and left six others - from France, Moldova, North Macedonia, Palestine and the United Kingdom - with severe injuries, some of them life-altering," Monday's statement continued.
The location of the compound was well known to all the parties to the conflict.
"I reiterate that all parties to the conflict are bound by international law to protect the absolute inviolability of UN premises," Dujarric continued.
"Without this, our colleagues face intolerable risks as they work to save the lives of civilians."
The Secretary-General is demanding a full, thorough and independent investigation into Wednesday's deadly strike, protection of all civilian life, the resumption of aid deliveries, release of all hostages.
One week since Israeli bombing started again in Gaza, UN humanitarians have described deadly attacks hitting health workers, ambulances and hospitals.
Senior UN humanitarian in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Jonathan Whittall, said that hundreds of children and adults have been killed since the ceasefire broke down.
The UN agency for Palestine refugees, UNRWA, also said on Monday that 124,000 people in the enclave have been forced to flee what it called "relentless bombardment".
"Families carry what little they have with no shelter, no safety, and nowhere left to go; the Israeli authorities have cut off all aid," UNRWA said in an online statement - warning that food is scarce and prices are soaring as the Israeli blockade continues.
Relief chief Tom Fletcher tweeted that he was continuing to receive horrific reports from Gaza of more health workers, ambulances and hospitals attacked as they try to save survivors. Fletcher said "we all must demand that hospitals and medics must not be targeted".
In southern Gaza on Sunday, several casualties were reported after the surgical department of Nasser Medical Complex was hit and caught fire, Dujarric told journalists in New York at the daily briefing.
In Rafah, ambulances were reportedly?hit in Tal Al Sultan, resulting in several casualties. The Palestine Red Crescent Society said four of its ambulances were targeted, as well as 10 team members carrying out humanitarian work.
"Communication with the team has been completely lost for 30 hours, and at this point, their fate remains unknown," the UN Spokesperson continued.
As hostilities continue across Gaza, aid coordination office, OCHA, and partners called for the entry of additional emergency medical teams into Gaza to help health workers already on the ground who are "exhausted and, of course, overwhelmed." (end)
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