Two of Gaza’s largest hospitals have issued desperate pleas for help, warning that fuel shortages caused by Israel’s siege could soon turn the medical centres into “silent graveyards”.

Muhammad Abu Salmiyah, the director of al-Shifa Hospital, Gaza’s largest facility, told reporters that the lives of more than 100 premature babies and some 350 dialysis patients were at risk.

“Oxygen stations will stop working. A hospital without oxygen is no longer a hospital. The lab and blood banks will shut down, and the blood units in the refrigerators will spoil,” Salmiyah said.

“The hospital will cease to be a place of healing and will become a graveyard for those inside,” he said.

Read the full Al Jazeera story here.

 A wounded Palestinian receives treatment in the Intensive Care Unit at Nasser Hospital, which Gaza’s health ministry says is at risk of shutting down due to the Israeli blockade of fuel, as the ongoing shortage has already forced the facility to reduce its capacity, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on July 9, 2025. — Reuters
A wounded Palestinian receives treatment in the Intensive Care Unit at Nasser Hospital, which Gaza’s health ministry says is at risk of shutting down due to the Israeli blockade of fuel, as the ongoing shortage has already forced the facility to reduce its capacity, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on July 9, 2025. — Reuters

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