Heavy Israeli bombing pushing Gaza to the edge of catastrophe

“The level of violence and injury sustained over the last few days is unbearable and unacceptable. We are deeply concerned for the safety of the civilian population”

In the wake of violence in Jerusalem that left hundreds of Palestinians, including children, with injuries, the international medical organisation Doctors Without Borders (MSF) finds the use of force by Israeli police unacceptable and raises the alarm on the devastating impact of any escalation in the Gaza Strip.

“The Israeli bombing is incredibly heavy and stronger than previous bombing campaigns” says Hellen Ottens-Patterson, MSF Head of Mission in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT). “Relentless bombing has destroyed many homes and buildings all around us. It’s not safe to go outside, and no one is safe inside, people are trapped.  Emergency health workers are taking incredible but necessary risks to move around.”

From the evening of 10 May to the morning of 13 May, the Gaza Ministry of Health reported that Israeli airstrikes had already killed 67 people, including 17 children, with nearly 400 injured. The Israeli authorities reported the death of seven people as a result of rockets and missiles launched by Palestinian militant groups in Gaza during the same period.

The recent airstrikes on Gaza follow days of violence in Jerusalem. During the night of Monday 10th May, MSF teams supported the Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) in the assessment and stabilisation of hundreds of patients injured by the Israeli police, most of whom had sustained rubber bullet, stun grenade, and blunt trauma injuries.

“Our teams were confronted with serious injuries caused by the Israeli police to men, women and children,” said Ottens-Patterson. “They treated children as young as 12 who had been injured by rubber bullets. The violence was the worst that MSF teams had witnessed in Jerusalem in years.”

This is not the first time that MSF witnesses the devastating consequences of violence in Gaza. Previous military confrontations between Israel and Gaza, have resulted in the injury and death of many thousands of Palestinian civilians, many of them children.

 “After each war, each ‘escalation’, each wave of protests, we treat people who have been injured by the Israeli armed forces in our clinics and hospitals,” says MSF’s Medical Coordinator, Dr Natalie Thurtle. “We see on a daily basis the long-term disabilities and pain that this violence causes, and we know that the longer this current round of violence goes on, the more people will be injured, and the more that they will suffer even long after the bombs have stopped.”

“The 14-year Israeli blockade on Gaza means that the health system here lacks many of the things it needs to treat people even during normal times. Yet every few years it is called on to deal with a huge influx of wounded: the 11,000 injured during the 2014 war; the more than 7,000 shot during protests in 2018 and 2019; and now the already hundreds injured in bombings and dozens dead since Monday.”

MSF, present in the Gaza Strip for over 20 years, stands ready to support the local health authorities to provide vital medical care to those who need it. “The level of violence and injury sustained over the last few days is unbearable and unacceptable. We are deeply concerned for the safety of the civilian population” says Ottens-Patterson.

FINAL 20210512 Op-ed.docx

DOCX 16 KB

Seipati Moloi

Media Liaison Co-ordinator (Human Interest & Special Projects), Doctors Without Borders (MSF)

Share

Latest stories

Website preview
Why is this Ebola outbreak so different?
On May 15, 2026, the Democratic Republic of Congo's Ministry of Health officially declared an Ebola disease outbreak in the northeast of the country, where Doctors Without Borders (MSF) teams are operating. Since then, authorities have reported nearly 500 suspected cases and more than 130 deaths across multiple health zones. On the same day, Uganda announced the virus had crossed its borders. The outbreak is caused by the Bundibugyo virus - rarer and one for which no vaccine or treatment has been approved yet. Here is what we know about the unfolding crisis in the DRC and Uganda.
msf-sa-press.prezly.com
Website preview
South Sudan: New MSF report exposes escalating attacks on civilians
Indiscriminate attacks on civilians and civilian structures – including bombing hospitals – forced recruitment, sexual violence, access constraints and shrinking humanitarian space are realities for people in South Sudan, as described by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in their report on escalating violence in the country, “They Killed Them While We Were Running”. The report details that a total of 12 attacks on MSF staff and facilities left an estimated 762,000 people without access to healthcare between January 2025 and April 2026.
msf-sa-press.prezly.com
Website preview
DRC: MSF preparing large-scale response to Ebola outbreak in Ituri province
Following the official declaration of an Ebola Virus Disease outbreak by the Ministry of Health in the Democratic Republic of Congo on 15 May, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) is preparing to rapidly scale up its medical response in Ituri province, in the country’s northeast.
msf-sa-press.prezly.com

About Doctors Without Borders (MSF) Southern Africa

Contact

70 Fox Street, 7th Floor Marshalltown, Johannesburg South Africa

011 403 4440

DL-JNB-Joburg-Press@joburg.msf.org

www.msf.org.za