UK must bring sick, injured children from Gaza ‘without delay,’ MPs say

Children in the Palestinian enclave are at risk of imminent death, and any barriers preventing their evacuation to Britain must be removed, MPs said. (Reuters/File Photo)
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Updated 16 August 2025
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UK must bring sick, injured children from Gaza ‘without delay,’ MPs say

  • Remove barriers preventing evacuations immediately, urges group of 96 parliamentarians
  • Letter to senior ministers says medical, humanitarian catastrophe reaching ‘horrific proportions’

LONDON: The British government must bring sick and injured Palestinian children from Gaza to the UK “without delay,” a group of MPs has said.

The cross-party group of 96 parliamentarians made the appeal in a letter to senior government ministers, the BBC reported.

Children in the Palestinian enclave are at risk of imminent death, and any barriers preventing their evacuation to Britain must be removed, they said.

Responding to Gaza’s “decimated” healthcare system requires adequate funding and a detailed timeline for child evacuations, the MPs added.

UN children’s charity UNICEF has said that more than 50,000 Palestinian children have been killed or injured since the beginning of the Gaza war in late 2023.

The medical and humanitarian catastrophe in the enclave has reached “horrific proportions,” said the MPs’ letter, which was coordinated by Dr. Simon Opher, a Labour MP and GP.

Signatories to the letter, addressing the health, home, and foreign secretaries, said they were working with Medecins sans Frontieres to expedite the evacuation of injured and ill Palestinian children to Britain.

The children and their families must be allowed to claim asylum after their treatment is completed, the letter said.

The UK Home Office previously said that biometric checks would be carried out before Palestinian children and their carers travel to the UK, a decision that was questioned by the letter’s signatories.

Plans to evacuate seriously ill or injured children from Gaza were being carried out “at pace,” the government said earlier in August.

A spokesperson said: “We are accelerating plans to evacuate children from Gaza who require urgent medical care, including bringing them to the UK for specialist treatment where that is the best option.”

Several hundred Palestinian children are expected to be evacuated as part of the scheme.

Since late 2023, the UK has channeled funding toward the treatment of injured and seriously ill Palestinians in hospitals across the Middle East.

Liz Harding, of MSF’s UK branch, welcomed the MPs’ letter and called on the government to waive its biometric visa requirement.

Britain must “urgently act on its commitment by creating a dedicated, publicly funded pathway based on clinical need, not bureaucracy,” she added.


WHO prequalifies another novel oral polio vaccine

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WHO prequalifies another novel oral polio vaccine

  • The nOPV2 shot is designed to be more genetically stable than ‌older ‌oral polio vaccines

GENEVA: The World Health Organization said it had prequalified another novel oral polio vaccine type 2 (nOPV2), a step it said would speed efforts to eradicate the disease.

Prequalification certifies that the vaccine meets international standards for quality and safety, enabling UN agencies such as UNICEF to procure and distribute it for immunization campaigns.

The nOPV2 shot is designed to be more genetically stable than ‌older ‌oral polio vaccines, lowering the ‌risk of triggering new ‌outbreaks while helping to stop transmission, the WHO said.

The move follows a pledge ‌by global leaders in December to provide $1.9 billion to support eradication efforts, aiming to protect 370 million children each year despite recent budget cuts.

Polio, a disabling and potentially life-threatening disease, has been wiped out in many regions but continues to circulate.

A new vaccination campaign that began in southern Malawi this month is another reminder that the world has not yet eradicated the ancient disease.

Dr. Joe Collins Opio, UNICEF’s Malawi chief of health, said the vaccination campaign would first focus on children in eight districts and would ultimately expand into a national effort across the country, and called on everyone to “be part of the response.”

Malawi’s deputy health minister, Charles Chilambula, was among the officials promoting the vaccination drive. 

Health officials believe they came close several times, including five years ago, when just five cases of the natural polio virus were reported globally.

But a WHO report said that there were 38 cases of the natural polio virus between January and October 2025 — all in Pakistan and Afghanistan, the last two countries where it remains endemic — and another 151 cases of a vaccine-derived polio virus strain in 13 countries.

Those vaccine-derived cases have overtaken natural polio virus cases in recent years, and complicated the eradication effort as one of a number of missteps in the global fight. 

They occur when the weakened live virus in oral polio vaccines mutates into a form capable of causing new outbreaks.

That’s the problem in Malawi, which reported last month that it had detected a vaccine-derived Type 2 polio virus strain in sewage in the southern city of Blantyre, prompting health authorities to launch a new immunization campaign using a modified vaccine.

Under WHO regulations, Malawi was required to declare an outbreak upon confirming traces of the polio virus.

It involves 1.7 million doses being administered to children in schools and delivered door-to-door in some of the city’s neighborhoods by health workers.

In an attempt to reassure people, Chilambula said the doses will protect against the vaccine-derived strain that has been detected in environmental samples in Blantyre. 

Malawi’s Health Ministry said it’s using the novel oral polio vaccine, designed to prevent circulating vaccine-derived Type 2 outbreaks.

“It’s very important that we do the vaccine now, because it also deals with this virus which we have detected,” Chilambula said.

Despite statistics now showing more children contracting polio viruses originating in vaccines than in the wild, global health authorities claim a bigger victory against polio. 

Wild polio virus cases have decreased by more than 99 percent since 1988, according to the WHO, and the number of endemic countries has fallen from 125 to two, largely due to vaccines.

But the end goal — the eradication of polio like smallpox — has been elusive.

Malawi became a country of concern for polio again in 2022 when a child contracted the wild polio virus, the first case in the southern African nation for 30 years. 

Last month’s announcement of traces of a vaccine-derived strain is another setback.