'If we sleep they bite': Rats and weasels infest camps for displaced Gazans
"When my husband turned on the torch, the weasel ran away.
I looked at my daughter's hand, and it was all blood. Everything was bloody. "
Aid workers are calling for urgent steps to counter a public health crisis.
She is now recovering in her family's tent.
Social media feeds have recently shown footage of rats running amok in camps for displaced families, and of newborn babies, the sick and elderly after rodents have attacked them. One grandmother with nerve damage to her feet caused by diabetes has spoken of having parts of her toes bitten off.
Rodents can harm people through bites and scratches as well as their urine, droppings and fleas. These can cause respiratory and skin diseases, blood infections and food poisoning.
More than six months after the US brokered a Gaza ceasefire deal, it has failed to deliver hoped-for improvements in the humanitarian situation and progress appears to be stuck.
There are still regular deadly airstrikes in which Israel says it is targeting Hamas.
No reconstruction has taken place.
With raw sewage water running through many overcrowded campsites, they have become breeding grounds for rodents.
Many parents say they keep vigil at night to protect their children and belongings from invading animals.
If we sleep, they bite the children and disturb us. There are so many weasels and rats – an abnormal number," says Rizq Abu Laila, who lives right next to a rubbish dump in Gaza City with his four young children, one of whom has cancer.
"They go in the rubbish and fight because there are so many of them.
I swear we can't endure it. The rats have torn our clothes and eaten our flour. There are mosquitoes and foul smells. We call on international institutions to help us. "
UN agencies say they are working on improvements in pest control, drainage and sanitation.
Humanitarian workers want more heavy lifting equipment as well as spare parts for existing machines to clear away rubbish.
In a statement sent to the BBC, Cogat says that it "works in cooperation with the UN and the international community to enable a response in the fields of sanitation and essential infrastructure". "This includes coordinating the removal of waste piles, facilitating the entry of dedicated equipment for infrastructure repairs in accordance with requests and identified needs, and facilitating the entry of trucks and tankers for waste removal on behalf of the international aid organizations.
According to the WHO, there have been reports this year of some 111,500 cases of disease or infestation due to external parasites. These include scabies – caused by mites, lice and bed bugs. More than four-fifths of households in Gaza report skin infections and rashes.
"We need something to deal with it.
I don't see any lasting peace at all in Gaza. Life is much harder that it was before
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