Palestinians give birth at Israeli checkpoints

Source UN Integrated Regional Information Networks

A report by the Palestinian Ministry of Health says that pregnant Palestinian women are often prevented by Israeli forces from reaching hospitals to receive appropriate medical attention, causing many miscarriages and the deaths of some women. Since the beginning of the second Intifada, a Palestinian uprising against Israeli military occupation, in September 2000, 68 pregnant Palestinian women gave birth at Israeli checkpoints, leading to 34 miscarriages and the deaths of four women, according to the Health Ministry's September report. Thoraya Obaid, executive director of the United Nations Population Fund, said these figures underline the need to put an end to the agony of pregnant Palestinian women held at Israeli checkpoints. "It is urgent to facilitate access by pregnant women to life-saving services, as stipulated by international humanitarian law," Obaid said. Rami Abu Shaaban of the Health Ministry's Information Center said that the amount of time Palestinians spend waiting at border crossings has increased dramatically over the past five years. "Ten percent of women who wished to give birth at medical centers had to spend hours on the road before reaching a hospital, while six percent spent more than four hours. The normal time, before the intifada, was 15-30 minutes," Abu Shaaban said. Munna al-Astal spent 19 days stranded at the Rafah Crossing between Gaza and Egypt before giving birth nearby. She said she was among a number of Palestinians who were being processed through the crossing when it was closed by Israeli authorities for security reasons, leaving her and the others caught inside the terminal. According to the Palestinians, Egyptian authorities do not let them back into Egypt once their passports have been given an exit stamp; and Palestinian authorities do not let them forward into Gaza if the border has been closed. The stranded survive on food and water they are able to buy there and from handouts from the Egyptian Red Crescent. If they need urgent medical attention, they are taken to a hospital in Egypt, but once they are able, they are returned to the crossing. "I was visiting relatives in Egypt and on my way back to Gaza the crossing was sealed off by the Israelis," al-Astal said. "I was about to give birth. I went into labor for several hours with no one to help me. Finally an ambulance came to take me to the Al-Areesh Hospital [in the Sinai] but I gave birth in the ambulance. "I named my daughter Ma'abar [Arabic for crossing] to recollect the sufferings and hardships we both had at the Rafah terminal," she added. According to the Health Ministry's report, there are currently 117,600 pregnant women in the Palestinian territories. This includes 17,640 women who are suffering difficult pregnancies due to a lack of prenatal and postnatal care. "Inadequate medical care during pregnancy is the third leading cause of death among Palestinian women of childbearing age," said Abu Shaaban.