Saed News: Omar Hamad, a writer based in Gaza, wrote in a report about the dire conditions of the residents of this region in coexistence with pests and harmful insects.
According to SAEDNEWS, this is not a claim; it is the documented description of Omar Hamad, a writer residing in Gaza, of a house whose roof has collapsed due to bombardment and has now turned into the domain of giant rats weighing up to 1.5 kilograms.
These days in Gaza, not only Israel but also insects and harmful animals are attacking people and sucking away the last remnants of their lives.
Based on the announcement of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA); the spread of skin inflammations caused by the increase of rodents and insects in the Gaza Strip, coinciding with severe overcrowding in refugee camps and the worsening of health and environmental conditions, has increased significantly. This organization announced that its medical teams are still treating thousands of patients out of 125,085 reported cases.
Omar Hamad, a writer residing in Gaza, wrote on Instagram, referring to the current situation in Gaza: our current situation in Gaza is harder than anything you can imagine. Mosquitoes and insects are eating us to the point that my clothes are full of blood from excessive scratching. But regarding rats, I live in a half-destroyed house. Half of this house has been destroyed due to bombardment and is filled with the sound of hundreds of rats, some of which weigh up to 1.5 kilograms.

He continued: our children cannot sleep at night out of fear. The bombings are still ongoing and the genocide has not stopped even for a single day; massacres happen every day. Every moment I fear that a missile will fall on my head.
Omar Hamad, who has so far managed to draw global attention to the inhumane disaster in Gaza by publishing daily reports, speaks of the continued forced famine for the residents of this region: famine continues; more than 85 percent of the people of Gaza are completely dependent on food kitchens, and Israel still allows only very small amounts of food to enter, which is not even enough for 10 percent of Gaza’s population. We are tired of this situation.
In recent weeks, after the brutal treatment of the Sumud convoy by the Israeli regime, public attention has once again turned toward Gaza and the crimes of the Israeli regime against defenseless Palestinian people. This convoy was launched with the aim of breaking the siege of Gaza and delivering health and food aid to the people of this region.