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UN aid chief says 'massive job' ahead while on tour of ruined Gaza
The United Nations' aid chief took stock of the monumental task of restoring dignity and hygiene to Palestinians clinging to life in Gaza's ruins on Saturday, as Israel and Hamas exchanged more bodies.
A convoy of white UN jeeps carried relief coordinator Tom Fletcher and his team through the twisted rubble of shattered homes to see a wastewater treatment plant in Sheikh Radwan, north of Gaza City.
"I drove through here seven to eight months ago when most of these buildings were still standing and, to see the devastation -- this is a vast part of the city, just a wasteland -- and it's absolutely devastating to see," he told AFP.
The densely populated cities of the Gaza Strip, home to more than two million Palestinians, have largely been reduced to ruins by two years of Israeli bombardment.
Just over a week since the US-brokered truce, Israel has kept Gaza's Rafah border with Egypt shut, but hundreds of trucks roll in daily via Israeli checkpoints and aid is being distributed.
Hamas has returned the final 20 surviving captives it was holding and has begun to hand over the remains of another 28 who died, likely by Israeli strikes.
On Friday night, it turned over a body identified by Israel as Eliyahu Margalit, 75, who died in the October 7, 2023 attack.
In return, Israel has released some 2,000 Palestinian detainees, many held without charge or trial.
On Saturday, in line with the terms of the ceasefire deal, Israel returned the bodies of 15 more Palestinians to Gaza.
The bodies returned to Gaza have displayed signs of torture, according to medics. Several bodies had their hands and necks bound, with some with signs of having been run over by Israeli military vehicles.
Digging latrines
Surveying the damaged pumping equipment and a grim lake of sewage at the Sheikh Radwan wastewater plant, Fletcher said the task ahead for the UN and aid agencies was a "massive, massive job".
The British diplomat said he had met residents returning to destroyed homes trying to dig latrines in the ruins.
"They're telling me most of all they want dignity," he said. "We've got to get the power back on so we can start to get the sanitation system back in place.
"We have a massive 60-day plan now to surge in food, get a million meals out there a day, start to rebuild the health sector, bring in tents for the winter, get hundreds of thousands of kids back into school."
According to figures supplied to mediators by the Israeli military's civil affairs agency and released by the UN humanitarian office, on Thursday some 950 trucks carrying aid and commercial supplies crossed into Gaza from Israel.
Relief agencies have called for the Rafah border crossing from Egypt to be reopened to speed the flow of food, fuel and medicines, and Turkey has a team of rescue specialists waiting at the border to help find bodies in the rubble.
Despite the ceasefire, Israel has continued attacks on Palestinians.
Gaza's civil defence agency said Saturday that it had recovered the bodies of nine Palestinians -- two men, three women and four children -- from the Shaaban family after Israeli troops fired two tank shells at a bus.
Two more victims were blown apart in the blast and have yet to be recovered, it said.
At Gaza City's Al-Ahli Hospital, the victims were laid out in white shrouds as their relatives mourned.
"My daughter, her children and her husband; my son, his children and his wife were killed. What did they do wrong?" demanded grandmother Umm Mohammed Shaaban. "They were little... What did they do wrong? There is no truce."
The military said it had fired on a vehicle that approached the so-called "yellow line", to which its forces withdrew under the terms of the ceasefire, and gave no estimate of casualties.