Families bid a tearful goodbye to over a dozen critically ill children who left Gaza for treatment abroad on Thursday. It's the first medical evacuation since the territory's sole travel crossing shut down in early May after Israeli forces captured it, Palestinian officials say.
Kamela Abukweik burst into tears after her son got on the bus heading to the crossing with her mother. Neither she nor her husband were cleared to leave.
''He has tumors spread all over his body and we don't know what the reason is. And he constantly has a fever,'' she said. ''I still don't know where he is going.''
Israeli authorities say 68 people — 19 sick and injured children plus their companions — have been allowed out of the Gaza Strip and into Egypt. It was not clear where they would receive treatment.
The nearly nine-month Israel-Hamas war has devastated Gaza's health sector and forced most of its hospitals to shut down. Dr. Mohammed Zaqout, the head of Gaza's hospitals, said over 25,000 patients require treatment abroad, including some 980 children with cancer, a quarter of whom need ''urgent and immediate evacuation.''
International criticism is growing over Israel's campaign against Hamas as Palestinians face severe and widespread hunger. The eight-month war has largely cut off the flow of food, medicine and basic goods to Gaza, and people there are now totally dependent on aid. The top United Nations court has concluded there is a ''plausible risk of genocide'' in Gaza — a charge Israel strongly denies.
Israel launched the war in Gaza after Hamas' Oct. 7 attack, in which militants stormed into southern Israel, killed some 1,200 people — mostly civilians — and abducted about 250.
Since then, Israeli ground offensives and bombardments have killed more than 37,600 people in Gaza, according to the territory's Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between combatants and civilians in its count.