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From inside one of the crowded displacement camps in camps in the central Gaza Strip, dust wrapped the place, tents lined up without a system, and the voices of hungry children overwhelm everything.
There, Al -Jazeera Net met the invading Ahmed Mohamed Kalab, a forty -year -old man who was tired and hungry appeared more than what he said in his words, “We live in a real famine … We have not passed for us days like this, no flour, no food, and the cry that our children ask every minute about food.”
Unbearable
From the Al -Maghraqa area in the central Gaza Strip, Ahmed began a long forced displacement journey, during which it moved between Rafah, Khan Yunis and Deir Al -Balah, to settle today in the Nusseirat camp in the middle of the Strip in a tent that lacks the most basic elements of life, no water, no electricity, and no food.
Ahmed told Al -Jazeera Net, “I run behind the recipes until I save food for my children, and in many days I find nothing that I fed them, and if I find it I offer them and I am hungry …
He continues, and fatigue overcame him from talking about a tragedy that has become the daily reality: we have not passed as a famine with this intensity, sometimes I drop on the ground from the severity of hunger, there is no flour, and if any, we cannot buy it.
In his small tent, Ahmed does not find what he clogged with the breath of his children, and he does not know how to stand up for another day. “What do we do? Holders … no eating, nor the elements of life. We appeal to the world, we appeal to every living conscience to save us. In the poorest countries, what happened with us today, the famine strikes Gaza.”
Humanitarian catastrophe
The Gaza Strip is living one of the worst humanitarian disasters in its history, as United Nations experts warn that famine is approaching, if it has not actually started in large parts of the sector, the interruption of supplies, destruction and a long siege are all factors that led to the collapse of the food system almost completely.
And the displaced in the camps, such as Ahmed, find only the “numbers” – the mobile charitable kitchens – and they race of time and distances for one meal. But even those meals, as Ahmed says, is no longer enough.
While the situation continues to deteriorate, Ahmed launches a human cry from the heart of the tragedy, “Save us … our children die before our eyes, we need everything … life without unbearable food.”
In light of these harsh circumstances, the suffering of Gaza residents is exacerbated day after day, and the screams of the displaced, such as Ahmed Kalb, remain a witness to a human tragedy that requires an urgent move from the international community to save what can be saved.