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The morgue at Gaza’s biggest hospital is overflowing as Israeli attacks intensify

A Palestinian man carries a wounded girl into Shifa Hospital in Gaza City
A Palestinian man carries a wounded girl into Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on Tuesday.
(Fatima Shbair / Associated Press)
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The morgue at the Gaza Strip’s biggest hospital overflowed Thursday as bodies came in faster than relatives could claim them on the sixth day of Israel’s heavy aerial bombardment on the territory of 2.3 million people.

With scores of Palestinians killed each day in the Israeli onslaught after an unprecedented Hamas attack, medics in the besieged enclave said they ran out of places to put remains pulled from the latest strikes or recovered from under the ruins of demolished buildings.

The morgue at Gaza City’s Shifa Hospital can handle only about 30 bodies at a time, and workers had to stack corpses three high outside the walk-in cooler and put dozens more, side by side, in the parking lot.

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“The body bags started and just kept coming and coming, and now it’s a graveyard,” Abu Elias Shobaki, a nurse at Shifa, said of the parking lot. “I am emotionally, physically exhausted. I just have to stop myself from thinking about how much worse it will get.”

Israel battled Hamas infiltrators for a third day and massed tens of thousands of troops near the Gaza Strip after the biggest attack in decades on Israeli soil.

Nearly a week after Hamas militants breached Israel’s highly fortified separation fence and killed more than 1,300 Israelis in a brutal rampage, Israel is preparing for a possible ground invasion of Gaza for the first time in nearly a decade.

A ground offensive would probably drive up the Palestinian death toll, which already has outpaced the last four wars between Israel and Hamas.

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Already, the sheer volume of human remains has pushed the system to its limit in the long-blockaded territory.

Gaza’s hospitals are poorly supplied in quiet times, but now Israel has stopped the water flow from its national water company and blocked electricity, food and fuel from entering the coastal enclave.

“We are in a critical situation,” said Ashraf Qidra, the spokesman for the Health Ministry in Gaza. “Ambulances can’t get to the wounded, the wounded can’t get to intensive care, the dead can’t get to the morgue.”

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Lines of white body bags — soles of bare feet sticking out from one, a bloodied arm from another — brought the scale and intensity of Israel’s retaliation on Gaza into sharp relief.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and a leading opposition figure have created a wartime Cabinet to oversee Israel’s latest war against Hamas.

Israel’s campaign on Gaza has leveled entire neighborhoods, killing more than 1,500 people — more than 60% of them women and minors, according to the Gazan Health Ministry. More than 423,000 have been displaced, or 18% of Gaza’s population.

The Israeli military says it is striking Hamas militant infrastructure and aims to avoid civilian casualties — a claim that Palestinians reject.

Those deaths, and more than 6,000 injuries, have overwhelmed Gaza’s healthcare facilities as supplies dwindle.

“It is not possible, under any circumstances, to continue this work,” said Muhammad Abu Salima, the general director of Shifa. “The patients are now on the streets. The wounded are on the streets. We cannot find a bed for them.”

After the heavy bombing of the Shati refugee camp just north of Gaza City along the Mediterranean coast Thursday, a new wave of people streamed into the hospital complex — toddlers with bruises and bandages, men with makeshift tourniquets, young girls with blood caked on their faces.

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Because Shifa’s intensive care unit was full, some of the wounded lay in the hospital corridors, pressing up against the walls to clear aisles for staff and stretchers.

Biden issued an apparent warning to Hezbollah: “To any country, any organization, anyone thinking of taking advantage of the situation, I have one word: Don’t.”

Making matters worse, Gaza’s sole power plant ran out of fuel Wednesday.

Shifa and other hospitals are desperately trying to save whatever diesel remains in their backup generators, turning off the lights in all hospital departments but the most essential — intensive care, operating rooms, oxygen stations.

Abu Salima, director of Shifa, said the last of the hospital’s fuel would run out in three or four days.

When that happens, “a disaster will occur within five minutes,” said Naser Bolbol, head of the hospital’s nursery department, citing all the oxygen equipment keeping infants alive.

Hospital authorities said there wouldn’t be electricity left to refrigerate the dead, either.

DeBre reported from Jerusalem and Kullab from Baghdad.

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