BBC Information Arabic Gaza reporter
BBC World Service
BBCIn a makeshift tent in al-Shati refugee camp, within the north of the Gaza Strip, 33-year-old Enas Abu Daqqa holds her tiny child daughter Niveen in her arms. A fan hums consistently behind her to interrupt the morning warmth.
Enas worries that Niveen’s well being may deteriorate at any level. She is just seven months outdated, and was born through the warfare with a gap in her coronary heart.
As her mom explains how she struggled to maintain her alive amid a collapsing well being system in Gaza, Niveen, together with her huge brown eyes and tiny body, cries and fidgets.
“The warfare has been very robust for her,” Enas tells the BBC. “She wasn’t gaining any weight, and he or she would get sick so simply.”
Niveen’s solely probability to outlive was to obtain pressing care outdoors Gaza. And in early March, Jordan made that doable.
As a ceasefire between Hamas and Israel held, 29 sick Gazan kids, together with Niveen, had been evacuated to Jordan to obtain therapy within the nation’s hospitals. Her mom and older sister had been introduced out together with her.
They had been the primary kids evacuated to Jordan after King Abdullah introduced plans to deal with 2,000 sick Gazan kids in hospitals there throughout a go to to the US the earlier month. These evacuations had been co-ordinated with the Israeli authorities who do background checks on the mother and father travelling with their kids.
Medical doctors in Jordan carried out profitable open-heart surgical procedure on Niveen, and he or she was slowly starting to recuperate.
However about two weeks into the youngsters’s therapy, the ceasefire in Gaza collapsed when Israel resumed its offensive in opposition to Hamas, and the warfare was again on, in full pressure.
For weeks, Enas adopted the information from her daughter’s hospital room in Jordan, worrying in regards to the security of her husband and different kids who had been nonetheless in Gaza.
After which late at evening on 12 Could, the Jordanian authorities instructed Enas they had been sending her and her household again to Gaza the next day, as they stated Niveen had accomplished her therapy.
Enas was shocked.
“We left whereas there was a ceasefire. How may they ship us again after the warfare had restarted?” she says, annoyed.

Enas is now reunited together with her husband and youngsters in Gaza. They are saying Niveen didn’t full her therapy earlier than she was despatched again, and so they fear that her situation may worsen.
“My daughter is in a really unhealthy situation that would result in her loss of life,” says Enas. “She has coronary heart illness. Typically she suffocates and turns blue. She will be able to’t proceed dwelling in a tent.”
On 13 Could, Jordan introduced that it had despatched 17 kids again to Gaza “after finishing their therapy”. And the following day, a brand new group of 4 sick kids had been evacuated from Gaza to Jordan.
The Jordanian authorities have instructed the BBC that every one kids despatched again had been in good medical situation, rejecting claims that they didn’t full their therapy.
The authorities famous that the dominion was clear from the start about its intention to ship the youngsters again as soon as they had been higher, including that this was vital “for logistical and political causes”.
“Jordan’s coverage is to maintain Palestinians on their land, and to not contribute to their displacement outdoors their territory,” a international ministry assertion despatched to the BBC stated. The return of the 17 kids would additionally enable for extra sick kids to be evacuated from Gaza, it added.
However an official within the Hamas-run well being ministry in Gaza instructed the BBC the youngsters nonetheless wanted care, and that their return to the warfare endangered their lives.
‘Compelled again’
That is precisely what worries 30-year-old Nihaya Bassel.
Her son, Mohammed, who’s simply over a 12 months outdated, suffers from bronchial asthma and critical meals allergy symptoms. She believes her son didn’t obtain the total therapy he deserved.
“We’re again to dwelling in concern and starvation, surrounded by loss of life,” Nihaya says as her eyes refill with tears. “How can I get this little one the milk that he must drink? He does not eat although he is simply over a 12 months outdated, as a result of if he eats, he’ll instantly get sick.”
Israel imposed a strict siege on the Gaza Strip 11 weeks in the past, chopping off all provides together with meals, drugs, shelter and gasoline. It stated this and the resumed offensive had been meant to place stress on Hamas to launch the hostages nonetheless held in Gaza.
Worldwide organisations warn that Palestinians dwelling there are at “essential threat of famine”. On Monday, Israel introduced it could enable a “minimal” quantity of meals into Gaza following US stress. The UN welcomed the crossing of 5 lorries carrying support together with child meals, however referred to as it “a drop within the ocean”.

Nihaya is now dwelling in a small, tented space in al-Shati camp together with her brother-in-law’s household. Her husband and three different kids had fled there from elsewhere in northern Gaza, escaping heavy Israeli strikes because the warfare restarted whereas she was in Jordan.
“I left my kids right here. I left my husband right here. They went by hell whereas I used to be away,” Nihaya says as she bursts into tears.
“My thoughts and coronary heart had been consistently with them in Gaza whereas I used to be in Jordan. All of this in order that my little one may get handled. Why pressure me again earlier than ending his therapy?”
As she speaks, the sounds of Israeli surveillance drones drown out her voice. Her toddler runs round subsequent to her, at instances nearly stumbling right into a smoky open fireplace within the tent that the household makes use of for cooking meals.
She struggles to include her anger as she recounts her journey again to Gaza.
“We did not go away [till] 04:00, and did not arrive in Gaza until 22:45,” she says. As they reached the border crossing, Nihaya says they had been harassed by Israeli safety forces.
“They began cursing at us. They threatened to beat us. They took all our cash. They took our cellphones, our baggage and every thing,” she says, noting that they confiscated all the luggage of anybody who had money on them.
Enas stated the identical factor occurred to her, noting that her medical provides had been confiscated too.
The Israeli military instructed the BBC that they confiscated “undeclared money exceeding regular limits” from Gazans coming back from Jordan because of suspicions that they might be “used for terrorism inside Gaza”. It notes that the cash is being held whereas circumstances are investigated.
It has not given a purpose for why different private belongings had been confiscated.
Nihaya says she has come again from Jordan “empty-handed”; even her son’s medical information had been within the baggage that the Israeli safety forces took away, she says.
Jordan says it has given kids like Niveen and Mohammed the very best healthcare it may possibly supply, and each households acknowledge this.
However they fear {that a} life in one of many world’s deadliest warfare zones for youngsters will simply undo all of the progress their kids have remodeled the previous two months.
“I obtained my son to a degree the place I used to be very glad to see him like that,” Nihaya says by her tears. “Now they wish to carry him again to sq. one? I do not need my son to die.”
Edited by Alexandra Fouché
















































