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CH1945590_Feras and his grandchildren in the tent where the family shelters in Al Mawasi, Khan Youni

12,000 CHILDREN A DAY FORCIBLY DISPLACED IN GAZA, AS NEW ‘EVACUATION ORDERS’ ISSUED TO CIVILIANS

About 893,000 children are likely to now be internally displaced in Gaza, meaning an average of nearly 12,000 children a day have been forced to flee

22 December 2023, RAMALLAH – About 893,000 children are likely to now be internally displaced in Gaza, meaning an average of nearly 12,000 children a day have been forced to flee – many multiple times – since Israeli authorities launched their military operations following the attack on Israel on 7 October, said Save the Children [1]. 

About 1.9 million people are estimated to be internally displaced in southern Gaza, according to the UN, representing nearly 85% of the enclave’s entire population, with children making up almost 50% of this figure [1]. The proportion of the population displaced within Gaza in just ten weeks is now also one of the highest recorded globally, according to an analysis by Save the Children [2]. 

WE STAND SIDE BY SIDE WITH CHILDREN IN THE WORLD'S TOUGHEST PLACES.

With the Government of Israel now issuing new evacuation orders in the southern city of Khan Younis, children and families are being pushed into even smaller areas further south, creating extreme, cramped conditions with nowhere safe from violence. Save the Children staff have witnessed people being injured from being crushed in crowds while waiting for desperately limited supplies of food and water. 

Israeli authorities have been pushing hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in Gaza, including children, further and further south into increasingly smaller areas since 7 October, with the  in the Rafah governorate now exceeding 12,000 people per square kilometre – more than one and a half times the population density of Singapore [3].  

READ MORE: Nowhere is safe for children in Gaza

Many people in Gaza have been displaced multiple times and are now fleeing areas they were told would be safe.  People have been seeking refuge anywhere they can – in overcrowded shelters, hospitals, schools, or relatives’ houses. People and civilian infrastructures such as hospitals and schools that are granted special protection and safety under international law have come under fire and bombardment. 

Feras*, a farmer living in a crowded shelter with his family in Khan Younis said:  

“We were like a tree being uprooted from the land…We were asked to go to southern Gaza, and we had to follow the instructions to keep our children safe. And here we are…it doesn’t feel safe either…Bombing and rockets are still fired around us…Children need space to play, but we are cramped here…It’s not a proper life anymore.” 

Shelters are more than four times their capacity, leaving many with no choice but to sleep amongst rubbish in the street, posing a momentous risk to the health of almost an entire population. Children are without proper clothes, and people cannot find shoes, mattresses, or tents, despite winter now bringing cold and wet weather.  

Jason Lee, Save the Children Country Director in the occupied Palestinian territory, said: 

“In Gaza, these figures reveal a horrifying reality. 85% of people displaced, 890,000 children – these aren’t just statistics, it's a stark reminder that an entire population is in real danger. Children are having their entire lives and any sense of safety ripped away again and again. Losing everything, desperately fleeing their homes under fire to save their lives, with nowhere to go – now imagine it happening again and again. This must stop.” 

Save the Children is calling on the international community to secure an immediate and definitive ceasefire and for the Government of Israel to reverse the conditions that have made a meaningful humanitarian response almost impossible, including unfettered humanitarian access to all of Gaza, and the restoration of the entry of commercial goods into Gaza. The Government of Israel must ensure the basic needs of the population are met and must stop the forcible displacement of civilians, in line with their obligations under international law.  

Save the Children has been providing essential services and support to Palestinian children since 1953. Save the Children’s team in the occupied Palestinian territory has been working around the clock, prepositioning vital supplies to support people in need, and working to find ways to get assistance into Gaza.   

Notes to editors:  

[1] This is an average figure based on dividing the estimated total number of people internally displaced in Gaza – 1.9 million according to UNRWA - by the number of days since October 7, based on PCBS data that estimates that 47% of Gaza’s population are children. This means 893,000 children displaced over 75 days, or on average 11,900 children per day between October 7 and December 21.  

[2] Save the Children compared the current proportion of population displaced within Gaza to the most recent data available on displacement in other global crisis. Figures showing the number of people internally displaced from other countries are from the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC), while population data is taken from the UN World Population Prospects.  For 2023, since IDMC has not yet released new data, Save the Children looked at mid-year estimates from UNHCR as well as the IOM’s latest estimate for Sudan. Sudan currently has the highest absolute number of people internally displaced at 7.1 million people, which represents 14% of the population of 49.7 million. Comparisons between countries are based on year for each country when the population of people internally displaced was at its highest since 2009, when IDMC began recording such data. 

[3] According to the World Bank, the population density of Singapore in 2011 was 7595 people per square km.  

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