Israeli restrictions compound suffering of Palestinian patients

A ward in the Turkish-Palestinian Friendship Hospital in Gaza City, April 22, 2021. (AFP)
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Updated 31 August 2022
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Israeli restrictions compound suffering of Palestinian patients

  • The Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza has accused Israel of preventing about 50 percent of patients in the Gaza Strip from receiving treatment
  • The ministry also accuses Israel of preventing the entry of 21 diagnostic X-ray machines into hospitals in the Gaza Strip

GAZA CITY: For years, patients in the Gaza Strip have complained about the lack of medical services and their inability to receive treatment because of Israeli restrictions and the bureaucracy involved in medical referrals.

Mahmoud and his wife Rahma seem tired as they wait in front of the window of the Palestinian Authority’s referral department to complete the procedure for Rahma’s treatment at Augusta Victoria Hospital in Jerusalem.

Rahma has been suffering from leukemia for three years and has been receiving chemotherapy in Jerusalem, but each time she goes to the hospital, she needs to prepare new papers and submit a travel permit to the Israeli side in order to be admitted to the hospital.

“For three years, I have been ill, and my husband and I have had to navigate bureaucratic procedures in order to receive treatment,” said Rahma Saeed, 43, a mother of three.

“Is it not enough that we suffer from a serious illness? Often there are no medicines in Gaza, and I have to go to the hospital in Jerusalem away from my husband and family,” she told Arab News.

She accompanied her mother to the hospital because her husband was refused an Israeli permit to pass from Gaza to Jerusalem, she said, adding that sometimes she went alone without any attendant.

The Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza has accused Israel of preventing about 50 percent of patients in the Gaza Strip from receiving treatment.

In a press conference held by the Ministry of Health in front of the Erez Crossing that separates Gaza and Israel, officials said that the continuation of the Israeli blockade has “deprived Gaza Strip patients of their treatment rights due to a 40 percent shortage of essential medicines, 32 percent of medical consumables and 60 percent of laboratory and blood bank equipment.”

They said that 1,922 patients could not reach the specialized hospitals in the West Bank, Jerusalem and Israel in time “due to the Israeli occupation’s procrastination and the failure to issue permits.”

The press conference heard that 371 patients left the Gaza Strip for treatment without anyone accompanying them and that this number was the highest since last April, including those who lost their lives alone in inhumane conditions.

Palestinian cancer patients must also endure months-long delays in receiving the necessary Israeli permits, delays that have led to the death of a number of them since the beginning of this year, said officials.

A Palestinian patient in the Gaza Strip must obtain a medical referral from the Palestinian Authority for treatment in hospitals in the West Bank, Israel and sometimes Egypt and Jordan. They also need an Israeli permit in order to pass through the Erez Crossing.

The Ministry of Health organized an ambulance march from the Indonesian Hospital in northern Gaza toward the Erez Crossing before holding the press conference to highlight the “Save Gaza Patients” campaign.

The ministry accuses Israel of preventing the entry of 21 diagnostic X-ray machines into hospitals in the Gaza Strip and the spare parts needed to repair 87 broken medical equipment, including 12 X-ray machines.

The press conference called for “international, humanitarian and human rights institutions today, more than ever, to put pressure on the Israeli occupation to end the siege on Gaza.”

Rahma hopes to obtain her permit to travel to Jerusalem as soon as possible in order to complete her treatment and return to her husband and children in Gaza.


Israeli settlers target wells, disrupt water supply to 19 Palestinian areas near Ramallah

Updated 18 January 2026
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Israeli settlers target wells, disrupt water supply to 19 Palestinian areas near Ramallah

  • Settlers broke windows, doors, control panels and cut the cables rendering the wells completely inoperable
  • Attacks by Israeli settlers on Palestinian homes and businesses have increased since October 2023

LONDON: Israeli settlers attacked water wells in the Ein Samia area, northeast of Ramallah, overnight, causing a disruption in the water supply for several hours, according to the Jerusalem District Water Department's report on Sunday.

The Palestinian Authority’s water authority reported that settlers targeted wells number two, four, and six in Ein Samia, disrupting their operation from Saturday at 10 p.m. until Sunday at 9 a.m. The attackers broke windows, doors, control panels and cut the cables, rendering the wells completely inoperable.

It warned that attacks on the primary water source jeopardized access to water for over 19 areas in the occupied West Bank, worsening the difficulties faced by residents near Ramallah.

Attacks by Israeli settlers on Palestinian homes and businesses have increased since October 2023.

These incidents include vandalism, arson, shootings, and the destruction of agricultural lands and water sources, often intended to pressure residents into leaving their land. Israeli authorities often provide protection for settlers during attacks, including military deployment to accompany them and suppress local resistance, the Wafa news agency reported.

Excluding East Jerusalem, which was occupied and annexed by Israel in 1967, some 500,000 Israeli settlers live in the West Bank, along with about 3 million Palestinian residents.