Prominent figures, doctors urge restoration of medical care in Gaza

Dozens of prominent figures, including Cynthia Nixon (L), Mark Ruffalo (C) and Ilana Glazer (R), have joined doctors, human rights leaders and humanitarian organizations in calling for the immediate restoration of medical care in Gaza. (AFP/File Photos)
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Updated 13 January 2026
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Prominent figures, doctors urge restoration of medical care in Gaza

  • Letter will be presented to UK, EU leaders

LONDON: Dozens of prominent figures, including Cynthia Nixon, Mark Ruffalo and Ilana Glazer, have joined doctors, human rights leaders and humanitarian organizations in calling for the immediate restoration of medical care in Gaza, in a letter addressed to Israel and world leaders.

“Israel’s systematic attacks on hospitals and unlawful blockade have collapsed Gaza’s healthcare system,” the letter says.

“Through its policies and military activities the government of Israel has deliberately inflicted conditions of life calculated to bring about the destruction of Palestinians in Gaza, and then denied the very help that could save them.”

The letter, shared with The Guardian, will be presented to UK and EU leaders this week and calls for the “immediate, unconditional, unhindered and sustained humanitarian access into Palestine,” including the entry of medical and humanitarian personnel.

The first signatory was Wesam Hamada, the mother of 5-year-old Hind Rajab, who was killed by Israeli fire in January 2024 while waiting for Palestinian paramedics whose ambulance was shelled as it tried to reach her.

Her story is told in Tunisian director Kaouther Ben Hania’s Oscar-shortlisted film “The Voice of Hind Rajab.”

Ben Hania said: “Hind Rajab did not die because help was impossible, but because it was denied.”

Human rights groups, including B’Tselem and Physicians for Human Rights, have also signed the letter, along with figures such as Brian Eno and Rosie O’Donnell.

The UN Human Rights Office estimates that 94 percent of Gaza’s hospitals have been damaged or destroyed since the conflict began in 2023, and at least 1,722 healthcare workers have been killed.

Many medical items, including wheelchairs and walkers, have been barred from entering the territory. UN experts have described the attacks on the healthcare sector as “medicide”.

Israel recently banned dozens of aid agencies, including Medecins Sans Frontieres, from working in Gaza and the West Bank.

The Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories, also known as COGAT, the Israeli military agency that controls access to Gaza, said “the registration process is intended to prevent the exploitation of aid by Hamas,” although a US analysis found no evidence of Hamas systematically looting aid convoys.

More than 18,500 Palestinians are awaiting medical evacuation from Gaza, MSF estimated in December, with at least 1,000 people having died while waiting for care.

Dr. Thaer Gazawneh, a Chicago-based emergency physician who has signed the letter, said: “(They) are making the living conditions in Gaza so unbearable that people will be forced to be displaced again.”

Ilana Glazer said: “This call for medical access is urgent because medicine and care is the bare minimum of humanity, and when even that’s blocked, it puts every person on the planet at risk of being treated the same way: subhuman.”

Rajab’s mother said the issue was deeply personal because her daughter had dreamed of becoming a doctor.

Hamada said: “Hind never bought any ordinary toys or dolls like other children. She always chose doctor’s toys: a stethoscope, a plastic syringe, a small first-aid kit. She would treat her dolls, pat them, and promise them that everything would be all right.

“Hind’s dream is no longer to become a doctor, but for the children of Gaza to find a doctor, a hospital, medicine, and safety.”


Russia has taken ‘over 1,000’ Kenyans to Ukraine: intelligence report

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Russia has taken ‘over 1,000’ Kenyans to Ukraine: intelligence report

  • Russia has enticed men from African countries with promises of lucrative jobs, only to force them into fighting
NAIROBI: More than 1,000 Kenyans have gone to fight for the Russian army in Ukraine, most of them tricked into signing military contracts, according to an intelligence report presented to Kenya’s parliament.
Multiple media investigations, including one published earlier this month by AFP, have exposed how Russia has enticed men from African countries with promises of lucrative jobs, only to force them into fighting on the front line in Ukraine.
A joint investigation by Kenya’s National Intelligence Service and Directorate of Criminal Investigations, presented in parliament on Tuesday, put the number of recruits from the country at “over 1,000” — far higher than the figure of “around 200” given by authorities in December.
“The Kenyans leave the country on tourist visas to join the Russian army through Istanbul, Turkiye, as well as Abu Dhabi, UAE,” Kimani Ichung’wah, parliament majority leader, told lawmakers.
But he said increased border enforcement at Nairobi’s airport meant recruits were also now traveling to other African countries to avoid detection.
Ichung’wah said unlicensed recruitment agencies in Kenya were “colluding with rogue airport staff.”
He said at least 39 Kenyans were currently hospitalized, 28 missing-in-action and 89 on the front line.
Kenya’s Foreign Minister Musalia Mudavadi is due to visit Moscow next month to discuss the issue, with the government condemning the use of its people “as cannon fodder.”
Uganda and South Africa are among the other African countries that have been targeted for recruitment as Russia faces heavy casualties in Ukraine.