Gaza ministry: hospitals to cut or stop services ‘within 48 hours’ over fuel shortages

Update Gaza ministry: hospitals to cut or stop services ‘within 48 hours’ over fuel shortages
The Hamas government’s health ministry warned Friday all hospitals in Gaza would have to stop or reduce services “within 48 hours” for lack of fuel, blaming Israel for blocking its entry. (AFP/File)
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Updated 22 November 2024

Gaza ministry: hospitals to cut or stop services ‘within 48 hours’ over fuel shortages

Gaza ministry: hospitals to cut or stop services ‘within 48 hours’ over fuel shortages
  • “We raise an urgent warning as all hospitals in Gaza Strip will stop working or reduce their services within 48 hours,” Marwan Al-Hams, director of Gaza’s field hospitals, said
  • “We call on international institutions to exploit the decision of the International Criminal Court to stop the genocidal war in Gaza Strip“

GAZA: The Hamas government’s health ministry warned on Friday all hospitals in Gaza would have to stop or reduce services “within 48 hours” for lack of fuel, blaming Israel for blocking its entry.
“We raise an urgent warning as all hospitals in Gaza Strip will stop working or reduce their services within 48 hours due to the occupation’s (Israel’s) obstruction of fuel entry,” Marwan Al-Hams, director of Gaza’s field hospitals, said during a press conference.
“We call on international institutions to exploit the decision of the International Criminal Court to stop the genocidal war in Gaza Strip,” he added.
The ICC issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defense minister Yoav Gallant on Thursday “for crimes against humanity and war crimes” committed between October 8, 2023, and May 20 this year.
The court also issued a warrant for the arrest of Hamas military chief Mohammed Deif, whom Israel says it killed in a July air strike, but whose death Hamas has not confirmed.
Gaza is in the grip of a humanitarian crisis since the outbreak of war in the Palestinian territory following Hamas’s attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023.
In late October, the health ministry reported that all hospitals but one in northern Gaza were out of service.
The only medical facility still only partly functioning in the area affected by the Israeli assault had “no medicine or medical supplies,” Kamal Adwan hospital director Hossam Abu Safia said at the time.
The ministry’s latest warning comes three days after the World Health Organization (WHO) expressed grave concern for hospitals still partly operating in northern Gaza.
WHO spokeswoman Margaret Harris said on Tuesday that the organization was “particularly concerned about Kamal Adwan Hospital” in Beit Lahia, where Israeli forces launched an offensive against Hamas and other Palestinian militant groups last month.


US sanctions official says time is right to cut Iran’s Hezbollah funding

Updated 36 sec ago

US sanctions official says time is right to cut Iran’s Hezbollah funding

US sanctions official says time is right to cut Iran’s Hezbollah funding
ISTANBUL: The United States seeks to take advantage of a “moment” in Lebanon in which it can cut Iranian funding to Hezbollah and press the group to disarm, the US Treasury Department’s top sanctions official said.
In a late Friday interview, John Hurley, the undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, said Iran has managed to funnel about $1 billion to Hezbollah this year despite a raft of Western sanctions that have battered its economy.
The US has adopted a “maximum pressure” campaign on Tehran meant to curb its uranium enrichment and regional influence, including in Lebanon where Iran-backed Hezbollah is also weakened after Israel shattered its military power in a 2023-24 war.
Late last week Washington sanctioned two individuals accused using money exchanges to help fund Hezbollah, which is deemed a terrorist group by several Western governments and Gulf states.
“There’s a moment in Lebanon now. If we could get Hezbollah to disarm, the Lebanese people could get their country back,” Hurley said.
“The key to that is to drive out the Iranian influence and control that starts with all the money that they are pumping into Hezbollah,” he told Reuters in Istanbul as part of a tour of Turkiye, Lebanon, the United Arab Emirates and Israel meant to raise pressure on Iran.

IRANIAN ECONOMY HIT BY SNAPBACK UN SANCTIONS
Tehran has leaned on closer ties with China, Russia and regional states including the UAE since September, when talks to curb its disputed nuclear activity and missile program broke down, prompting the reinstatement of United Nations sanctions.
Western powers accuse Iran of secretly developing nuclear weapons capability. Tehran, whose economy now risks hyperinflation and a severe recession, says its nuclear program is wholly for civilian power purposes.
US ally Israel says Hezbollah is trying to rebuild its capabilities and on Thursday carried out heavy airstrikes in southern Lebanon despite a ceasefire deal agreed a year ago.
Lebanon’s government has committed to disarming all non-state groups, including Hezbollah, which was founded in 1982 by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, spearheaded the Iran-backed “Axis of Resistance,” and opened fire on Israel declaring solidarity with Palestinians when war began in Gaza in 2023.
While the group, which is also a political force in Beirut, has not obstructed Lebanese troops confiscating its caches in the country’s south, it has rejected disarming in full.
Hurley, in his first trip to the Middle East since taking office under President Donald Trump’s administration, has pressed the case against Iran in meetings with government officials, bankers and private sector executives.
“Even with everything Iran has been through, even with the economy not in great shape, they’re still pumping a lot of money to their terrorist proxies,” he said.