Families, medics anxiously await opening of medical corridor from Gaza

9:11 pm on 16 October 2025

By Ebrahim Hajjaj, Ramadan Abed and Emma Farge, for Reuters

AFP reports Taha Abu Libdeh, 18, lost his eyesight in Gaza, after being shot by an Israeli sniper while attempting to rescue a wounded person, while doctors were hindered by shortages of medicine and equipment.

AFP reports Taha Abu Libdeh, 18, lost his eyesight in Gaza, after being shot by an Israeli sniper while attempting to rescue a wounded person, while doctors were hindered by shortages of medicine and equipment. Photo: AFP/ Doaa Albaz

  • More than 15,000 people are waiting for medical evacuation from Gaza
  • Young malnourished Gazan, Hassan, with a brain injury is among them
  • The Rafah border crossing used for patients could reopen
  • Hundreds on the waiting list have died, medical groups say

The father of 18-year-old Hassan, who says his son was shot in the head over two months ago in Gaza while out seeking food, hopes that the reopening of the Rafah border point will save him.

"The Rafah crossing is our lifeline, for patients and for the Gaza Strip," Ibrahim Qlob told Reuters in Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, where Hassan lies motionless in bed, his eyes covered with bandages.

"I'm waiting. One day passing for me feels like a year."

The injury caused a brain haemorrhage, necessitating the removal of part of his skull. A later infection caused him to lose sight in his right eye, his father said.

Now that a fragile ceasefire is taking hold between Israel and Hamas after two years of war, Hassan is just one of 15,600 Gazan patients waiting evacuation, including 3800 children, according to the World Health Organisation.

Many like him suffer from injuries sustained during the conflict. Others have chronic conditions like cancer and heart disease which the decimated health system cannot cope with.

Israeli officials have said the Rafah crossing previously used for patients to exit via Egypt would reopen for transfers.

Two sources told Reuters people could start crossing on Thursday. COGAT, the arm of the Israeli military that oversees aid flows into Gaza, said on Wednesday the date for reopening for people will be announced later.

Nowhere to go

During the conflict more than 7000 patients have been evacuated from Gaza, with Egypt taking more than half of them.

The rate of transfers slowed, however, when Rafah shut in May 2024 and Israel seized control. Since a previous ceasefire collapsed in March, fewer than four patients have exited daily, meaning it would take more than 10 years to finish the list, WHO data shows.

A Palestinian mother holds her child who suffers from malnutrition, at the Patient Friends Association Hospital in Gaza City, on 22 July, 2025.

A Palestinian mother holds her child who suffers from malnutrition, at the Patient Friends Association Hospital in Gaza City, on 22 July. Photo: AFP/ NurPhoto - Majdi Fathi

"What we need is more countries to accept patients from Gaza, and we need the restoration of all the medical evacuation routes," the WHO's Tarik Jasarevic told reporters this week.

Mohammed Abu Nasser, 32, who survived a strike on his home in Zeitoun, Gaza City with severe injuries to both legs, said he has been on the waiting list for more than a year.

"My condition is getting worse every day," he said from Al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City.

Dying children

Hundreds have already died waiting, medical groups and Palestinian health authorities say. The WHO, which took over management of the process last year, said 740 people on the list, including 137 children, have died since July 2024.

One of them was a girl called Jana Ayad who died from severe acute malnutrition in September, the WHO told Reuters, saying no country accepted her.

Medecins Sans Frontieres project coordinator Hani Isleem said that 19 of its patients on the transfer list had died during the war, including 12 children.

"Seeing those patients' files, being in direct touch with these children, and then you know that you lost them because of all these challenges and difficulties, that is really painful," he said.

Israeli rejections have sometimes prevented transfers, Isleem added. COGAT did not respond to a request for comment. It has previously said that approvals are subject to security checks.

"The mortality rate is tragically rising, as would be expected given the decimation of health systems and infrastructure on the ground," said Kate Takes, a solicitor with Children Not Numbers, a UK-based charity working in Gaza and overseeing cases of children needing evacuation.

For Hassan, there are worrying signs. His malnutrition is worsening and he now weighs just 40 kilograms, or nearly half his former body weight, his father said.

"If things stay like this, it will be too late for him."

- Reuters

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