UN calls for mental health support for children impacted by Gaza war

Israel's offensive in Gaza has killed nearly 28,000 people, mostly children and women. PHOTO: REUTERS

GENEVA – A United Nations committee appealed on Feb 8 for “massive psychosocial support” for children traumatised by violence in Gaza, the occupied West Bank and Israel, and said it would review Israel’s treatment of children later in 2024.

Israel’s military launched an offensive in Gaza after a deadly attack by Hamas gunmen in southern Israel on Oct 7, 2023.

The Israeli campaign has displaced most of the Palestinian enclave’s 2.3 million people, left homes and infrastructure in ruins, and caused acute shortages of food, water and medicine.

Children and women make up the bulk of the nearly 28,000 people killed during the offensive, according to the authorities in Gaza.

In their Oct 7 rampage in Israel, Hamas militants killed about 1,200 people and took 253 hostages.

“The rights of children living under the state of Israel’s effective control are being gravely violated at a level that has rarely been seen in recent history,” said Professor Ann Skelton, chair of the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child.

“We call for massive psychosocial support for children and families to relieve the traumatic and long-lasting impact of war, including Israeli children who were victims of, or witnesses to, the (Oct 7) attacks and those whose family members have been taken hostage,” she told a news conference.

The Israeli diplomatic mission in Geneva said it would issue a statement on the UN committee’s comments shortly.

Unicef said last week that nearly all children in Gaza were thought to require mental health support.

Prof Skelton said Israel had postponed its participation in a planned dialogue on child issues and that the dialogue was now due to take place in September.

“The committee deeply regrets that it did not have the opportunity to review Israel when time is of the essence,” she said.

Prof Skelton also voiced concern for children living in the occupied West Bank, where she said people faced “arbitrary arrests, extrajudicial killings and violence committed by occupying forces and settlers”.

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Israel’s military has said it operates against suspected militants in the West Bank.

The West Bank had already been experiencing the highest levels of unrest in decades during the months preceding the Oct 7 assault on Israel.

However, confrontations have increased sharply following the Israeli ground invasion of Gaza. REUTERS

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