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At least 187,000 Gaza children vaccinated for polio so far, U.N. says

Gaza doctor on polio vaccinations for kids
Gaza doctor describes childhood polio vaccination efforts 07:36

United Nations officials on Wednesday hailed limited pauses in the fighting between Israel and Hamas to allow children's polio vaccinations as rare moments of hope in the nearly yearlong war in Gaza.

The U.N. World Health Organization says 187,000 children in Gaza have been vaccinated for polio, with an eventual goal of 640,000. WHO and its partners launched the campaign this week after Gaza recently reported its first polio case in 25 years — a 10-month-old boy — now paralyzed in a leg.

The boy's mother, Neveen Abu El Jidyan, told CBS News in an interview last week that she has been able to do very little for her son, Abdul Rahman, since he contracted polio.

"We haven't given him any treatments. We live in a tent and there is no medication," El Jidyan, 35, told CBS News on Aug. 27.

"Abdul Rahman was supposed to take his vaccination on the first day of the war, and our home was targeted and his medical booklet was left at home," she said. "As we were moving from one place to another, I couldn't give him the vaccination."

Israel has said the vaccination program will continue through Monday and last eight hours a day.

polio vaccines Gaza
Men unload from a truck crates of polio vaccines provided by the United Nations Children's Fund in Deir el-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on Sept. 4, 2024.  EYAD BABA/AFP via Getty Images

Top U.N. officials on peacebuilding and humanitarian affairs spoke Wednesday at a meeting requested by Israel, which was backed by its allies, veto-holding permanent council members France, Great Britain and the United States. Israel's ambassador on Wednesday focused on the hostages taken during Hamas' Oct. 7 attacks on Israel that launched the war and the recent killing of six captives.

Algeria, which sits on the 15-member council until next year, also requested that the U.N. body meet to discuss the broader situation in the Palestinian territories.

Both Rosemary DiCarlo, U.N. undersecretary-general for political and peacebuilding affairs, and Edem Wosornu, director of the Operations and Advocacy Division at the U.N.'s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, spoke about the polio-inspired pauses in fighting as rare rays of hope, as did the representatives of France, Britain, the U.S. and other nations.

"It does not have to be this way. Indeed, over the past few days, there have been signs that humanitarian objectives can inspire positive steps," Wosornu told the council.

"This vaccination campaign demonstrates that it is possible to allow humanitarian actors to act on the ground," French Ambassador to the U.N. Nicolas de Rivière told the council. "That must become the rule."

Health officials expressed alarm about diseases spreading in the besieged territory as the war has created a humanitarian catastrophe, with people crammed into squalid tent camps and dirty wastewater flowing through the streets.

Ambassador Samuel Zbogar of Slovenia, which is president of the Security Council for September, told reporters on Tuesday that there is "a rising anxiousness in the council" about the lack of a cease-fire and hostage release deal to halt the violence.

The Security Council approved a resolution in June endorsing a cease-fire plan aimed at ending the war, with Russia abstaining.

"It has to move, one way or the other," Zbogar said about fulfilling the deal or finding other options.

The Oct. 7 Hamas attacks killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took about 250 people hostage. The Israeli military's retaliation has killed over 40,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count.

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