‘Where will we get medicine? Where will patients like me go?’ – terrified people flee hospital
Evacuation order by Israelis raises fears of a ground attack on facility
One of Gaza’s last functioning hospitals has been emptying out in recent days as Israel has ordered the evacuation of nearby areas and signalled a possible ground operation in a town that has been largely spared throughout the war.
The Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, in Deir Al-Balah, is the main hospital serving central Gaza.
The military has not ordered its evacuation, but patients and people sheltering there fear that it may be engulfed in fighting or become the target of an Israeli raid.
Israeli forces have invaded several hospitals over the course of the 10-month-old war, accusing Hamas of using them for military purposes, allegations denied by Palestinian health officials.
Israeli evacuation orders now cover around 84pc of Gaza’s territory, according to the United Nations, which estimates that around 90pc of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million have been forced from their homes. Many have been displaced multiple times, fleeing with what they can carry.
Hundreds of thousands of people have packed into swollen tent camps along the coast, where there are few if any public services.
Associated Press reporters saw people fleeing the hospital and surrounding areas yesterday, many of them on foot. Some could be seen pushing patients on stretchers or carrying sick children, while others held bags of clothes, mattresses and blankets. Four schools in the area are also being evacuated.
“Where will we get medicine?” Adliyeh al-Najjar said as she rested outside the hospital gate. “Where will patients like me go?”
Fatimah al-Attar fought back tears as she left the hospital compound heading in the direction of the tent camps. “Our fate is to die,” she said. “There is no place for us to go. There is no safe place.”
The UN Office for Humanitarian Affairs, known as OCHA, said that since Friday the Israeli military has issued three evacuation orders for more than 19 neighbourhoods in northern Gaza and in Deir Al-Balah, affecting more than 8,000 people staying in these areas.
The order affects an area where UN and other humanitarian centres are located, the Al-Aqsa hospital, two clinics, three wells, one water reservoir and one desalination plant, said Jens Laerke, a spokesman for OCHA.
“This effectively upends a whole lifesaving humanitarian hub,” Mr Laerke said.
Doctors Without Borders, an international charity known by its French acronym MSF, said an explosion around 250 metres from the hospital on Sunday caused panic, accelerating the exodus. “As a result, MSF is considering whether to suspend wound care for the time being, while trying to maintain life-saving treatment,” it said on the platform X.
The hospital says it was treating more than 600 patients before the evacuation orders, which apply to residential areas about a kilometre away. Around 100 patients remain, including seven in intensive care and eight in the children’s ward.
The Israeli military said it was operating against Hamas in Deir Al-Balah and working to dismantle its remaining infrastructure there. It said the evacuation orders were issued to protect civilians, and did not include nearby hospitals or medical facilities.
It said it had also informed Palestinian health officials that the facilities did not need to be evacuated.
The army has excluded hospitals from past evacuation orders, but patients and others have still fled, fearing for their safety.
The war began when Hamas-led militants stormed across the border into Israel on October 7, attacking army bases and farming communities. The attack killed some 1,200 people and the militants dragged around 250 people back to Gaza as hostages.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed more than 40,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, and caused heavy destruction across much of the territory.
Israel has continued carrying out strikes across Gaza as the United States, Egypt and Qatar have tried to broker a lasting ceasefire and the release of the remaining hostages.
Major gaps remain despite several months of high-level negotiations.
Hospitals have repeatedly been turned into battlegrounds, both literally and in the rival narratives surrounding the war.
Israel says Hamas and other militants hide inside hospitals, and use them for military purposes. Hospitals can lose their protected status under international law if they are used for military purposes, but any operations against them must be proportional and seek to spare civilians.
“MSF is considering whether to suspend wound care for the time being, while trying to maintain life-saving treatment”