
UK's Lammy urged to honour pledge to help evacuate injured children from Gaza
The comments from Dr Tareq Hailat of the Palestinian Children's Relief Fund (PCRF) came after Foreign Secretary David Lammy told MPs on Wednesday that he would be 'happy to do more' if requests for the medical evacuations of Palestinian children were made.
In April, two girls from Gaza arrived in the UK, becoming the first Palestinian children to be evacuated to the country for specialist medical treatment, entirely funded by charitable donations.
The evacuation came through the Project Pure Hope initiative in partnership with PCRF, 17 months after organisations and healthcare workers first started pushing for a legal pathway to bring children from Gaza to the UK for treatment.
An earlier attempt to bring five children for treatment in January 2024 was unsuccessful when they were unable to obtain visas from the Home Office.
New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch
Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters
Meanwhile, the need for medical evacuations for children in Gaza, already overwhelming the short list of countries offering help, has only grown with Medicine Sans Frontiers pleading this week for more countries to open their doors.
Currently, healthcare workers tell MEE that around 5,000 children are believed to be among at least 12,000 patients in Gaza that the World Health Organisation says need to be evacuated outside Gaza to access care.
A UN-sponsored report warned this week that ten children a day are losing one or both limbs in Gaza due to Israel's assault on the Palestinian enclave.
'Power of the state'
Lammy, testifying before the International Development Committee on Wednesday, was asked by Labour MP Sam Rushworth whether there was 'more that we can do for the children of Gaza'.
Rushworth said he and other MPs had recently met with a British plastic surgeon who had just returned from Gaza and showed them video footage and images of children suffering in Gaza.
'Tens of thousands are orphans and many of them are dying because they are not able to receive medical treatment. To date, just two have entered the UK'
- Sam Rushworth MP
'As you know, tens of thousands are orphans and many of them are dying because they are not able to receive medical treatment. To date, just two have entered the UK,' Rushworth said.
'I understand that there are complexities around this, but I know that I would be happy to take a Palestinian child into my home. I'd be happy to help fund their treatment, but we are not able to without the power of the state behind it.'
Lammy responded: 'We have supported the [Project Pure] Hope charity initiative to bring children to the UK. I am happy to do more if those requests come in.'
He then outlined British efforts to treat Palestinians in Gaza, including through field hospitals in Gaza run by UK Med and a polio vaccination campaign.
'I don't want to suggest that with hospitals bombed and lots of aid not able to get in that people aren't experiencing real medical emergencies, second by second and minute by minute in Gaza,' Lammy said.
'But we are doing a lot in the medical space particularly and will continue to do so. And if there are more children that we can work with [Project Pure] Hope and others to bring in, of course, we will do that.'
Gaza's healthcare system has been devestated by Israel's 21-month assault on the enclave. MSF said this week that Israel, whose authorities must sign off on evacuations, has now "reduced medical evacuations to a minimum".
Ten children a day losing a limb in Gaza, warns UN-backed body Read More »
PCRF's Hailat told MEE that, unlike with Ukrainians, who received direct government support when they were brought to the UK for medical treatment, the two girls that came in April were funded privately "after 17 gruesome months of advocacy".
"Now, with Israel severely limiting medical evacuations from Gaza since our first cases, Britain has a clear moral obligation: to treat Palestinian children with the same urgency and state backing as it did Ukrainians, and to press Israel to open and guarantee safe passage for those needing life-saving care," he said.
Labour MP Kim Johnson, who has been pressing the government to bring more Palestinian children for treatment, said it was "disgraceful" the only two had been brought so far.
"We need urgent, coordinated action - not passive promises," Johnson told MEE.
"Every child deserves a chance at a healthy life, yet Palestinian children are being systematically denied this, while hundreds of Ukrainian children in need of healthcare were welcomed with open arms."
Johnson said the government should lead other countries to commit to "a bloc-wide humanitarian effort to bring Gaza's children to safety".
"It is utterly unjustifiable that we are refusing access to treatment to children from Gaza when we have the capacity and the expertise – we just need the political will."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Gulf Today
33 minutes ago
- Gulf Today
Over 30 Palestinians killed trying to reach US group's food aid centres
Israeli troops opened fire on Saturday toward crowds of Palestinians seeking food from distribution hubs run by a US-Israeli-backed group in southern Gaza, killing at least 32 people, according to witnesses and hospital officials. The two incidents occurred near hubs operated by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. The organisation launched operations in late May with backing from the US and Israel. The two governments are seeking to replace the traditional UN-led aid distribution system in Gaza, saying that Hamas siphons off supplies. The UN denies the allegation. While the GHF says it has distributed millions of meals to hungry Palestinians, local health officials and witnesses say that hundreds of people have been killed by Israeli army fire as they try to reach the distribution hubs. The army, which is not at the sites but secures them from a distance, says it only fires warning shots if crowds get too close to its forces. The GHF, which employs private armed guards, says there have been no deadly shootings at its sites, though this week, 20 people were killed at one of its locations, most of them in a stampede. The group accused Hamas agitators of causing a panic, but gave no evidence to back the claim. Relatives of Palestinians killed at an aid distribution centre run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation mourn over their bodies during their funeral at Nasser Hospital. Associated Press The army and GHF did not immediately comment on Saturday's violence. Most of Saturday's deaths occurred as Palestinians massed in the Teina area, around three kilometres (2 miles) away from a GHF aid distribution centre east of the city of Khan Younis. 'It was a massacre' Mahmoud Mokeimar, an eyewitness, said he was walking with masses of people – mostly young men – toward the food hub. Troops fired warning shots as the crowds advanced, before opening fire toward the marching people. "It was a massacre ... the occupation opened fire at us indiscriminately," he said. He said he managed to flee but saw at least three motionless bodies lying on the ground, and many other wounded fleeing. Akram Aker, another witness, said troops fired machine guns mounted on tanks and drones. He said the shooting happened between 5am and 6am. "They encircled us and started firing directly at us," he said. He said he saw many casualties lying on the ground. Sanaa al-Jaberi, a 55-year-old woman, said she saw many dead and wounded as she fled the area. "We shouted: 'food, food,' but they didn't talk to us. They just opened fire," she said. Monzer Fesifes, a Palestinian-Jordanian, said his 19-year-old son Hisham was among those killed in the Teina area. "He went to bring food from the failed US, Zionist aid to feed us," the father of six said, pleading for the Jordanian government to help evacuate them from the Palestinian enclave. The Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis said it received 25 bodies, along with dozens wounded. Seven other people, including one woman, were killed in the Shakoush area, hundreds of metres north of another GHF hub in Gaza's southernmost city of Rafah, the hospital said. The toll was also confirmed by the health ministry. Most 'shot in the head, chest' Dr. Mohamed Saker, the head of Nasser's nursing department, said it received 70 wounded people. He told The Associated Press that most of the casualties were shot in their heads and chests, and that some were placed in the already overwhelmed intensive care unit. "The situation is difficult and tragic," he said, adding that the facility lacks badly needed medical supplies to treat the daily flow of casualties. Gaza's more than 2 million Palestinians are living through a catastrophic humanitarian crisis, and the territory is teetering on the edge of famine, according to food security experts. Distribution at the GHF sites has often been chaotic. Boxes of food are left stacked on the ground inside the centres and, once opened, crowds charge in to grab whatever they can, according to witnesses and videos released by GHF itself. In videos obtained recently by the AP from an American contractor working with GHF, contractors are seen using tear gas and stun grenades to keep crowds behind metal fences or to force them to disperse. Gunshots can also be heard. Associated Press


Middle East Eye
2 days ago
- Middle East Eye
Gaza doctor Abu Safiya given 'two spoonfuls of rice a day' in Israeli jail
A lawyer representing Palestinian Dr Hussam Abu Safiya has raised concerns over his deteriorating health and routine torture in Israeli detention, where inmates are given only two spoonfuls of rice a day. In an interview with Arab48, publiched Thursday, lawyer Gheed Kassem said that the director of Kamal Adwan Hospital, located north of the Gaza Strip, had faced severe physical assault that resulted in bruising to his head, neck, rib cage, and back. When Dr Abu Safiya requested medical assistance for complications stemming from the beatings, including an irregular heartbeat, his request was denied. Medical neglect and abuse in Israeli-run prisons have been well-documented, with such practices reportedly intensifying since the events of 7 October 2023. In early May, the Palestinian Prisoners' Affairs Commission said that sick Palestinian detainees faced "deliberate and systematic medical neglect," alongside hunger and torture negatively affecting their health conditions. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters The statement came after the death of 60-year-old prisoner Mohyee al-Din Fahmi Najem, who suffered from chronic illnesses and was denied proper medical treatment during his detention. Abu Safya, who remains in solitary confinement at the Ofer military prison - which houses 450 detainees from the Gaza Strip - weighs no more than 60 kilograms, according to his lawyer. She said that since his detention in late December, the senior paediatrician and neonatologist had lost 40 kilograms, describing his body as "emaciated." Additionally, Dr Abu Safiya is held in an underground cell that is completely isolated and receives no natural light. "He knows nothing about the outside world, and he is still wearing winter clothes," Kassem explained. "Prisoners inside Ofer prison endure incredibly harsh and catastrophic conditions," she added. The lawyer described how Palestinians imprisoned there are allowed only two spoonfuls of rice a day, while both sugar and salt are completely banned "to prevent any rise in the happiness hormone, even a small one, from eating sugar". "This is in addition to the frequent cell raids, the torture, and the constant searches that prisoners are subjected to." The most recent case of torture and medical neglect in Israeli detention involves the death of 53-year-old Samir al-Rifai from Jenin. According to the Palestinian Prisoners' Affairs Commission, Rifai died seven days after his arrest, raising the death toll of Palestinian prisoners who have died under Israeli detention since the beginning of the war on Gaza to 74. The father of five had reportedly suffered from heart issues and needed intensive medical care. Sources suggest that his death resulted from ill-treatment and the severe conditions in prison, though no official reports have been released. Lack of rights Abu Safiya has been categorised as an "unlawful combatant" by Israeli authorities, despite him being a civilian doctor. This classification means there is no formal indictment against him. Iron bars, electric shocks, dogs and cigarette burns: How Palestinians are tortured in Israeli detention Read More » "The designation of an unlawful combatant renders a prisoner without rights," Kassem said. "Israeli law strips those with this designation of their natural human rights inside prisons." The Kassem added that prison authorities also create "successive obstacles for lawyers," with each visit needing to be scheduled four months in advance. Even then, it could be cancelled. Additionally, legal representatives are often left waiting for long stretches of time, and when their clients are finally brought in for the visit, they are often assaulted on the way as they are crawling on the ground in handcuffs. "The interview is conducted under a microscope, under the eyes and ears of the jailers. If the jailers feel that the visit has boosted the prisoner's morale, they assault him in revenge," she said. Detainees are also subjected to constant psychological torture, Kassem added, including being exposed to graphic images and depressing news as well as being told false information about the death of loved ones. "The first question every prisoner asks me is about their families and whether they are still alive," she said.


The National
3 days ago
- The National
Two dead in Israeli strike on Catholic church in Gaza as Pope 'deeply saddened'
Two Israeli soldiers seriously wounded in Gaza Several injured as Israeli strike hits Catholic church in Gaza city More than 10,000 Palestinians still need medical evacuation At least 58,479 Palestinians killed and 139,355 wounded since Gaza war began