A leading human-rights organisation has cautioned that political claims of progress in Gaza are masking a dire reality on the ground. Despite references to pauses or negotiations, extensive evidence continues to show that Palestinians in the enclave are still subjected to conditions widely described by legal experts as amounting to genocide. Observers note that daily life remains dominated by the struggle to survive amid destroyed neighbourhoods, collapsing services and the relentless effects of a militarised blockade.
Researchers working on the territory report that entire residential districts remain uninhabitable, with families forced into overcrowded pockets stripped of basic supplies. Restrictions on food, clean water, medicine and fuel are still in place, leaving people dependent on sporadic and insufficient aid deliveries. Medical teams say they are working in conditions that no longer resemble functioning health-care systems, with clinics lacking electricity, equipment and even space to treat the injured. Emergency responders, stretched far beyond capacity, warn that the scale of devastation is worsening faster than relief can arrive.
Despite official announcements of a halt in operations, rights monitors say the violence has persisted. Hundreds of Palestinians, including large numbers of children, have been killed in the period following the declared pause. Vast areas of Gaza remain under the control of Israeli forces, with civilians restricted to the remaining fragments of the territory, many of which offer little more than makeshift shelter and limited access to humanitarian support. Legal analysts argue that the pattern of destruction, deprivation and forced displacement continues to deepen the humanitarian catastrophe.
The organisation behind the latest findings is urging governments worldwide to move beyond statements of concern and press for immediate protection of civilians. It is calling for unimpeded humanitarian access, the release of Palestinian prisoners, and accountability mechanisms capable of addressing crimes linked to the ongoing genocidal war. Without decisive international action, it warns, the crisis will only intensify.
Source : Safa News