At least $10 bln needed to rebuild Gaza health system: WHO

AFP , Thursday 16 Jan 2025

At least $10 billion will likely be needed to rebuild Gaza's devastated health system over the next five to seven years, according an initial World Health Organization assessment Thursday.

Kamal Adwan
The Kamal Adwan hospital stands in Beit Lahya in the northern Gaza Strip, amid the Israeli war on Gaza. AFP

 

"The needs are massive," the UN health agency's representative in the Palestinian territories, Rik Peeperkorn, told reporters.

With a ceasefire finally looming, humanitarians are calling for a dramatic scaling up of humanitarian aid into war-ravaged Gaza, amid efforts to determine the size of the towering needs.

Peeperkorn said his team's initial estimate of the cost to rebuild just the health sector was "even more than $3 billion for the first 1.5 years and then actually $10 billion for the five to seven years".

"In Gaza, we all know the destruction is so massive. I have never seen that anywhere else in my life," he said.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus meanwhile said "less than half of Gaza hospitals are functional".

He hailed Wednesday's announcement from mediators that Israel and Hamas had finally reached a truce in Israel's war on Gaza as "just about the best news".

He voiced hope that "this agreement marks the end of the darkest chapter in the history of the relationship between the Israelis and the Palestinians".

"We welcome this news with great relief, but also with sorrow that it has come too late for those who have died in the conflict," he said. Gaza's health ministry says more than 46,000 have been killed in Israel's war on the territory since October 2023.

He also voiced "caution, given that we have had false dawns before, and the deal has not yet been confirmed".

While the mediators said the deal was due to take effect on Sunday, Tedros urged the sides not to wait.

"If both sides are committed to a ceasefire, it should start immediately," he said. "The best medicine is peace".

"So, let the healing begin, not just for Gaza, but for Israel as well. This is in everyone's best interest."

Peeperkorn said the WHO stood ready to "expand its support rapidly" in the territory where Israel's siege has cut off food, fuel, water, and medical supplies from reaching those in need.

"What is critical though is that the significant security the political obstacles to delivering aid across Gaza are removed," he said. 

"We need a rapid, unhindered and safe access to expedite the flow of aid into and across Gaza."

*This story was edited by Ahram Online.

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