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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

UN cuts international staff due to safety concerns

A man and paramedic assist an injured man to exit an ambulance upon arrival at the Indonesian Hospital in Beit Lahia. — AFP
A man and paramedic assist an injured man to exit an ambulance upon arrival at the Indonesian Hospital in Beit Lahia. — AFP
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GENEVA: The United Nations is cutting its international staff in Gaza by around a third, a UN spokesperson said on Tuesday, citing safety concerns. "We are trying to reduce the number of international staff by about one third and this is really because the Secretary-General (Antonio Guterres) doesn't have the power of guaranteeing the safety of UN staff," UN spokesperson Alessandra Vellucci told a Geneva press briefing, saying that this meant around 30 of 100 international staff. The agencies affected included the World Food Programme, the World Health Organization and the UN children's agency, she added.


The United Nations said on Monday it is reducing its international staff numbers in Gaza after Israeli strikes in the enclave that have killed hundreds of civilians, including United Nations personnel. UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric told a regular news briefing the move was taken for security and operational reasons and would involve the withdrawal of about 30 of the 100 or so international staff currently in Gaza.


"What we're doing is reducing the number of international staff members by about one third this week, maybe a bit more likely to come. It's a temporary measure. We hope to have people return to Gaza as soon as practicable," he said. He stressed that the UN was not leaving Gaza. "The Secretary-General has taken the difficult decision... even as humanitarian needs soar and our concern over the protection of civilians intensifies," he said. "The organisation remains committed to continuing to provide aid that civilians depend on for their survival and protection."


Dujarric said that based on information currently available, strikes that hit a UN compound in Deir Al Balah on March 19, killing a Bulgarian UN worker and leaving six others - from France, Moldova, North Macedonia, the Palestine territories and the United Kingdom - with severe injuries, came from an Israeli tank. "The location of this UN compound was well known to the parties to the conflict," he said, noting that UN Secretary-General Antonio Gutteres had demanded "a full, thorough and independent investigation."


Gaza's health ministry attributed the strike to Israel, but Israel denied this, saying it hit a Hamas site where it detected preparations for firing into Israeli territory. Asked if the UN believed the compound had been deliberated targeted, Dujarric said: "I think that's one of the reasons we need to have a pretty clear and transparent investigation. The point is that the Israelis knew exactly where this UN facility was, and it was hit by a shell from one of their tanks." The Israeli military said its forces had fired on Monday at a building belonging to the Red Cross. — Reuters


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