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UN Palestinian refugee staff and doctors fainting from hunger in Gaza, says UNRWA

Update UN Palestinian refugee staff and doctors fainting from hunger in Gaza, says UNRWA
The head of the UN Palestinian Refugee Agency said on Tuesday that its staff members as well as doctors and humanitarian workers are fainting on duty due to hunger and exhaustion. (File/AFP)
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Updated 22 July 2025

UN Palestinian refugee staff and doctors fainting from hunger in Gaza, says UNRWA

UN Palestinian refugee staff and doctors fainting from hunger in Gaza, says UNRWA
  • UNRWA said it had received dozens of emergency messages from its staff describing grave conditions and exhaustion
  • Lazzarini also criticized a US-backed aid distribution scheme run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation

GENEVA: The head of the UN Palestinian refugee agency said on Tuesday that its staff, as well as doctors and humanitarian workers, were fainting on duty in Gaza due to hunger and exhaustion.

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East said it had received dozens of emergency messages from its staff describing grave conditions and exhaustion in the enclave, where Israel has been fighting a war against Hamas since October 2023.

“No one is spared: caretakers in Gaza are also in need of care. Doctors, nurses, journalists and humanitarians are hungry,” UNRWA Commissioner General Philippe Lazzarini said in a statement, shared by his spokesperson at a press briefing in Geneva.

“Many are now fainting due to hunger and exhaustion while performing their duties: reporting atrocities or alleviating some of the suffering.”

Lazzarini also criticized a US-backed aid distribution scheme run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation that has been supplying aid since late May, when Israel, which controls supplies into Gaza, lifted an 11-week blockade.

“The so-called ‘GHF’ distribution scheme is a sadistic death trap. Snipers open fire randomly on crowds as if they are given a license to kill,” Lazzarini said.

The GHF uses private US security and logistics companies and largely bypasses a UN-led system, that Israel alleges has let Hamas-led militants loot aid shipments intended for civilians. Hamas denies the allegation.

More than 1,000 people have been reported killed while trying to receive food aid since the end of May, according to UNRWA estimates, Lazzarini said.

“UN has enough aid sitting in Gaza that they refuse to deliver and that could help end the desperation and help reduce or eliminate the violence around all aid distribution efforts if they would collaborate with us,” the GHF told Reuters in a statement.

Jens Laerke, spokesperson for the UN humanitarian office OCHA, told reporters on Tuesday that claims that the UN has stopped working are “manifestly incorrect.”

The GHF also claimed that the “deadliest attacks” on aid distribution in Gaza have been linked to
UN convoys.

At least 67 Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire as they waited for UN aid trucks in northern Gaza on Sunday, the Gaza health ministry said, as Israel issued new evacuation orders for areas packed with displaced people.

The UN said on July 15 it had recorded at least 875 killings within the past six weeks at aid points in Gaza run by the GHF and convoys run by other relief groups. The majority of those killed were in the vicinity of GHF sites, while the remaining 201 were killed on the routes of other aid convoys.

The Israeli Foreign Ministry and COGAT, the Israeli military aid coordination agency, were not immediately available for comment.


Dam reservoir levels drop below 3 percent in Iran’s Mashhad city

Dam reservoir levels drop below 3 percent in Iran’s Mashhad city
Updated 8 sec ago

Dam reservoir levels drop below 3 percent in Iran’s Mashhad city

Dam reservoir levels drop below 3 percent in Iran’s Mashhad city
  • Nationwide, 19 major dams — about 10 percent of the country’s reservoirs — have effectively run dry, Abbasali Keykhaei of the Iranian Water Resources Management Company said in late October, according to Mehr news agency

TEHRAN: Water levels at the dam reservoirs supplying Iran’s northeastern city of Mashhad plunged below three percent, media reported on Sunday, as the country suffers from severe water shortages.
“The water storage in Mashhad’s dams has now fallen to less than 3 percent,” said Hossein Esmaeilian, the chief executive of the water company in Iran’s second largest city by population.
He added that “the current situation shows that managing water use is no longer merely a recommendation — it has become a necessity.”
Mashhad, home to around 4 million people, relies on four dams for its water supply.
Esmaeilian said consumption in the city had reached around “8,000 liters per second, of which about 1,000 to 1,500 liters per second is supplied from the dams.”
It comes as authorities in Tehran warned over the weekend of possible rolling water supply cuts in the capital amid what officials call the worst drought in decades.
In the capital, five major dams supplying drinking water are at “critical” levels, with one empty and another at less than eight percent of capacity, officials say.
“If people can reduce consumption by 20 percent, it seems possible to manage the situation without rationing or cutting off water,” Esmaeilian said, warning that those with the highest consumption could face supply cuts first.
Nationwide, 19 major dams — about 10 percent of the country’s reservoirs — have effectively run dry, Abbasali Keykhaei of the Iranian Water Resources Management Company said in late October, according to Mehr news agency.
President Masoud Pezeshkian has cautioned that without rainfall before winter, even Tehran could face evacuation, though he did not elaborate.
The water crisis in Iran follows a month of drought across the country.
Authorities over the summer announced public holidays in Tehran to reduce water and energy consumption, as the capital faced almost daily power outages during a heatwave.
Local papers on Sunday slammed what they described as the politicization of environmental decision-making for the water crisis.
The reformist Etemad newspaper cited the appointment of “unqualified managers ... in key institutions” as being the main cause of the crisis.
Shargh, another reformist daily, said that “climate is sacrificed for the sake of politics.”