UN Rights Chief ‘horrified’ By Reports Of Mass Graves At Two Gaza Hospitals

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The UN human rights chief, Volker Türk, has said he was “hor­ri­fied” by reports of mass graves con­tain­ing hun­dreds of bod­ies at two of Gaza’s largest hospitals. 
Palestinian civ­il defense teams began exhum­ing bod­ies from a mass grave out­side the Nasser hos­pi­tal com­plex in Khan Younis last week after Israeli troops with­drew. A total of 310 bod­ies have been found in the last week, includ­ing 35 in the past day, Palestinian offi­cials have said.
“We feel the need to raise the alarm because clear­ly there have been mul­ti­ple bod­ies dis­cov­ered,” said Ravina Shamdasani, spokesper­son for the UN high com­mis­sion­er for human rights.
She described bod­ies “buried deep in the ground and cov­ered with waste,” adding that “among the deceased were alleged­ly old­er peo­ple, women and wound­ed,” includ­ing some bound and stripped of their clothes.

Some of them had their hands tied, which, of course, indi­cates seri­ous vio­la­tions of inter­na­tion­al human rights law and inter­na­tion­al human­i­tar­i­an law, and these need to be sub­ject­ed to fur­ther inves­ti­ga­tions,” she said. 
Palestinian res­cue teams and sev­er­al obser­va­tion mis­sions from the UN also report­ed the dis­cov­ery of mul­ti­ple mass grave sites in the Shifa hos­pi­tal com­pound in Gaza City ear­li­er this month after Israeli ground troops with­drew after a pro­longed siege.
Medics work­ing for Doctors Without Borders described how Israeli forces attacked Nasser hos­pi­tal in late January before with­draw­ing a month lat­er, leav­ing the facil­i­ty unable to function.
Rescue work­ers are con­tin­u­ing to dig through the sandy earth to exhume bod­ies out­side the hos­pi­tal. Shamdasani said her office was work­ing on cor­rob­o­rat­ing Palestinian offi­cials’ reports that hun­dreds of bod­ies had been found at the site.
Officials in Gaza said the bod­ies at Nasser were peo­ple who had died dur­ing the siege. Israel’s mil­i­tary on Tuesday reject­ed alle­ga­tions of mass buri­als at the hos­pi­tal, say­ing it had exhumed corpses to try to find hostages tak­en by Hamas in October.
“The claim that the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) buried Palestinian bod­ies is base­less and unfound­ed,” the mil­i­tary said, adding that after exam­in­ing the bod­ies, its forces had returned them to where they had pre­vi­ous­ly been buried.

Israel has repeat­ed­ly accused Hamas of oper­at­ing in hos­pi­tals and using med­ical infra­struc­ture as a shield, which Hamas denies. The UN rights chief also con­demned increas­ing num­bers of Israeli airstrikes that have pum­melled north­ern, cen­tral, and south­ern Gaza in recent days, includ­ing naval artillery fire that has struck build­ings along Gaza’s east­ern shoreline.
Airstrikes hit many areas already reduced to lit­tle more than rub­ble and bro­ken slabs of con­crete after 200 days of the war, includ­ing Beit Lahia in the north and the cen­ter of Gaza City.
“The north remains dire,” said Olga Cherevko of the UN’s Office for Coördination of Humanitarian Affairs, speak­ing dur­ing a vis­it to the area. There’s more food com­ing in, but there’s no mon­ey to buy it. Healthcare facil­i­ties have been destroyed. There’s no fuel to run water wells, and san­i­ta­tion is a mas­sive issue. There’s sewage everywhere.”
As Israeli ground troops report­ed­ly staged a brief incur­sion into east­ern Khan Younis, in the south of Gaza, satel­lite images from the destroyed city showed a grow­ing tent encamp­ment, which could be intend­ed to house peo­ple flee­ing Rafah in the event of an Israeli ground attack there.

Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime min­is­ter, has repeat­ed­ly threat­ened to attack Rafah, Gaza’s south­ern­most city, where more than a mil­lion peo­ple are shel­ter­ing. On Tuesday, Türk again warned against a full-scale incur­sion on Rafah, say­ing it could lead to “fur­ther atroc­i­ty crimes.” Melanie Ward, the head of Medical Aid for Palestinians, who has recent­ly returned from a vis­it to Gaza, said an Israeli inva­sion would be impos­si­ble with­out “human slaugh­ter.” Ward said that roads run­ning north of Rafah approach­ing Deir al-Balah in cen­tral Gaza were already crammed with peo­ple. “Every space … is already full of dis­placed peo­ple liv­ing in tents,” she said. “People from the east of Khan Younis can’t return there because their homes have been destroyed. There isn’t enough space for peo­ple in Rafah to try to move and seek safe­ty some­where else. It’s impos­si­ble for Israel to attack Rafah and for it not to be a dis­as­ter of epic pro­por­tions.” Many of the recent strikes have hit parts of Gaza where peo­ple already dis­placed have fled for the third, fourth, or even fifth time. “There’s no safe place to escape to, so every­thing we do, we try to do it fast,” said Rama Abu Amra, a 21-year-old stu­dent who sleeps with her fam­i­ly in a tent out­side a friend’s house in Deir al-Balah, their fourth loca­tion since flee­ing Gaza City months ago. She said the tent was uncom­fort­able, hot by day and cold at night, and in a crowd­ed area. Asked where the fam­i­ly could flee in the event of an evac­u­a­tion order, she said: “We hon­est­ly don’t know.” This sto­ry orig­i­nat­ed with the guardian.