This article is part of a developing story.

See latest updates

What it’s like in northern Gaza right now

MSF staff share accounts of the desperate situation in northern Gaza as Israeli forces’ intense siege continues, with winter approaching.

Body bags in northern Gaza.

Victims are placed in body bags in northern Gaza on October 20. | Palestine 2024 © MSF

Fighting has been raging for over 45 days in northern Gaza, where an offensive Israeli forces launched in October has resulted in some of the most horrific and violent attacks. 

Staff from Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) are on the ground in this part of the Strip, sheltering and providing vital health care as the offensive continues. They include Haydar, an MSF driver sheltering with his family in Beit Lahia, and Caroline Seguin, an MSF emergency coordinator who recently left. They recount below the apocalyptic situation they are facing. 

Since October 6, 2024, the governorate of North Gaza has been under continuous attack by Israeli forces. You managed to reach Gaza City, just south of the the governorate. What’s the situation on the ground?

SEGUIN: It’s very difficult and dangerous to get to northern Gaza. You have to cross the Netzarim corridor, a line that separates northern and southern Gaza. This corridor, which was a simple road at the start of the war, is now 8 kilometers [5 miles] long and controlled by Israeli forces. Despite the fact that NGOs coordinate their movements with Israeli forces to ensure their safety, incidents are frequent and, recently, NGO vehicles have been hit within the corridor.

Once out of the corridor, you arrive in Gaza City. It’s like arriving in a ghost town: destruction everywhere, everything flattened out, not a single building left standing. There are vast areas with no one left apart from a few wandering inhabitants trying to salvage what’s left of the destroyed houses.

Gaza today means cold, hunger, and bombs.

Caroline Seguin, an MSF emergency coordinator

On the night of November 28, at around 1 a.m., there was a bombardment 70 meters [230 feet] from our clinic. Shrapnel hit the building, fortunately without injuring anyone. There are about 25,000 displaced people around the MSF clinic, and medical activity has doubled since their arrival in October following the Israeli forces’ destructive offensive on North Gaza. The fighting is raging, and the situation is apocalyptic, with attacks by drones, quadcopters, and bombardments. Two of our colleagues are still trapped in Beit Lahia and in Jabalia, and we have been unable to evacuate them. On November 21, Kamal Adwan Hospital was bombed again, with medical staff injured. 

“I ask myself what type of death me and my children will get”

Haydar, MSF driver in northern Gaza:

“I am now sheltering in Beit Lahia in the blocks surrounding Kamal Adwan Hospital. I am here sheltering with 10 members of my family, including my sons and grandchildren.

I have been here since November 5. Before that, I was sheltering in Al-Yemen Al-Saeed Hospital, but [Israeli forces] told us to evacuate. So we came here.

My wife is sick with rheumatoid arthritis and cannot move. She needs surgery to replace the joints in her legs and hands. Before the war, we had a referral to go to Egypt or the West Bank for her treatment. She’s suffering and we do not have any solutions. I don’t even have a wheelchair to push her around in...

... We tried to evacuate from Beit Lahia once, but she struggled to walk. It was very difficult. On the way, we met some people who were coming back toward Beit Lahia. They told us that the [Israeli] soldiers at the checkpoint were not allowing anyone to go further, so we decided to turn back.

The bombing does not stop. You can hear the shelling and strikes all day and night. Sometimes it is less, sometimes it is more. It is not safe at all.

I try my best to be strong in front of the family and the children, but the truth is I am terrified. It is real fear. I expect death at any moment. I ask myself what type of death me and my children will get. I do not know.” 

A young Palestinian girl is held at an MSF facility in Gaza.

What are the consequences of Israel’s obstruction of humanitarian aid entering Gaza?

We thought the worst was behind us, but I think the worst is yet to come. Today, we’re facing several major problems, the first of which is the delivery of humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip. We still have recurring problems of validation by COGAT [Coordinator of the Government Activities in the Territories] to bring in humanitarian aid [for example, all medical equipment, medicines, food, etc.] transported by truck and systematically checked by the Israeli authorities. This deliberately complex system of physical and bureaucratic obstacles is designed by Israel to hinder the flow of aid into Gaza.

Looting is increasingly frequent and organized, and the few trucks that do manage to get in are almost systematically looted by gangs at the Kerem Shalom and Kissoufim crossings. On November 16, of the 109 WFP [World Food Programme] trucks that entered Gaza, 98 were looted. On November 30, UNRWA also tried to bring in food trucks through Kerem Shalom and they were all taken.

It’s like arriving in a ghost town: destruction everywhere, everything flattened out, not a single building left standing. There are vast areas with no one left apart from a few wandering inhabitants trying to salvage what’s left of the destroyed houses.

Caroline Seguin, an MSF emergency coordinator

Beyond food, there are also fuel problems. Recently, the United Nations managed to bring in a few trucks, but the flow remains very tense. Ten days ago, we were forced to halve our distribution of drinking water because there wasn’t enough fuel for the trucks. MSF is currently among the largest humanitarian suppliers of water in Gaza, but the needs are enormous, and we can’t meet them all.

The banning of UNRWA and its activities by a law passed by the Israeli parliament on October 28 is a devastating blow and a major source of concern. [UNRWA] is a vital [source of] support for the Palestinians and the biggest provider of health care in Gaza. UNRWA is also responsible for almost all United Nations aid distribution. So we don’t know how we’ll manage without them. The implications will be catastrophic for the already-dire humanitarian situation in Gaza. 

A mother lights a fire to cook in Gaza.
With no access to cooking gas, Yasmin is forced to light a fire using plastic to prepare a meal for her children. | Palestine 2024 © MSF

MSF also works in southern Gaza, where over 1.7 million people are concentrated. What are the living conditions with the onset of winter?

[In southern Gaza], 1.7 million people are piled on top of each other in the rain, in the mud, with hunger in their stomachs and bombs falling on them. It’s catastrophic.

Winter came quickly and the shelters aren’t ready after a year of being exposed to sun, wind, and rain. They are not at all adapted to the cold or the torrential rains we’ve seen in Gaza over the last few weeks. Some areas have been completely flooded, and the tents by the sea have also been partially submerged.

The Israeli authorities’ obstruction of the delivery of humanitarian aid and commercial trucks is causing shortages, particularly of food. Markets are beginning to empty; bakeries are closing, and prices are rising. A small loaf of bread that cost a few cents a few weeks ago now costs 5 shekels, just over 1 euro [$1.38]. In this context, malnutrition is truly a growing concern.

What’s happening in northern Gaza?

Learn more

The whole situation is creating very strong tensions within communities and families, which have sometimes ended in violence. The population is on edge.

Teams are trying to meet medical needs, particularly at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, which is permanently full. We also have the field hospital that MSF has set up in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza, where teams offer pediatric care, sexual and reproductive health care for pregnant women, physiotherapy, and general medical consultations. Preparations are underway to increase the number of beds in view of the likely increase in the number of sick children due to the cold weather and living conditions.

Gaza today means cold, hunger, and bombs. We need a ceasefire at all costs, [and] a massive and unrestricted influx of aid to put an end to the suffering of thousands of people, the majority of whom are women and children—who also account for the majority of deaths in this war. 

How we're responding to the war in Gaza