Swapna Kumbar , Bengaluru - Displaced Palestinians in Gaza's sprawling tent cities face a horrifying new enemy: massive infestations of rats, weasels, fleas, and lice that swarm through shelters at night, biting sleeping children on faces and toes while destroying food, clothing, and medicine. Over 80% of UNRWA shelters now report rodent problems, with 1.45-1.7 million people exposed to surging skin infections, tetanus, scabies, hepatitis A, and bacterial diseases as collapsed sanitation systems flood camps with sewage amid Israeli aid restrictions.
Harrowing testimonies reveal the scale of suffering: father Mohammed al-Raqab guards his children nightly from nose biting rats tunneling under tents, while Ghalia Abou Selmi weeps over pests gnawing her wedding jewelry their only valuables. UNRWA data shows skin infections tripling since March 2026, respiratory illnesses dominating 58% of 1.2 million monthly cases, and emergency hepatitis alerts as fleas spread fevers and contaminated food triggers gastroenteritis outbreaks. Doctors at Al-Aqsa and Nasser hospitals treat relentless scabies and bacterial infections without antibiotics, sterilizers, or pest control supplies blocked at crossings. Overcrowding (30+ people per tent), overflowing latrines, and summer heat create perfect breeding conditions, while weasels hunt trapped rats in broad daylight. Gaza Municipality teams plead for fumigation chemicals and traps, but Cogat claims coordination delays while blaming Hamas for aid diversion. Parents burn tires for toxic smoke and sleep sitting upright, but rodents climb walls and chew through plastic sheeting. Aid workers report children too terrified to sleep, malnutrition worsening disease susceptibility in a population where 60% face acute food insecurity.
Gaza's rodent apocalypse atop war devastation signals public health Armageddon, demanding immediate unrestricted access for pest control, sanitation equipment, and medical supplies before epidemics overwhelm the 1.7 million surviving in tent hell. Without urgent intervention, infestations threaten to eclipse military conflict as the deadliest scourge, turning displacement camps into disease factories where rats dictate survival.
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