Women and girls in Gaza are being forced to use scraps of tents during their periods as they have no sanitary products, aid workers say.
With more than 1.9 million Gazans displaced since 7 October, a tent “city” of almost two square miles has been set up in Rafah, south of the strip.
No food or medical supplies are allowed to enter the territory, including sanitary towels, tampons and contraceptive pills that could stop or delay periods.
Riham Jafari, an ActionAid worker based in Bethlehem, said: “Imagine having to manage your period with no period products, toilet paper or soap, and no chance of being able to wash yourself.
“This is the reality for hundreds of thousands of women and girls in Gaza right now.
“Some women cut part of towels to use on their periods – this is not healthy.
‘Why do we have to fight?’: Life on the Israel-Lebanon border as missiles are sent back and forth
Pro-Palestinian protesters dragged out after David Lammy speech interrupted
Benjamin Netanyahu accused by cabinet member of not telling the truth over Hamas defeat in Gaza
“They are using parts of the tents or fibres. They cut off part of it to use as pads and some of them are using their extra clothes as pads.”
Using unclean materials as sanitary products can cause a risk of infection and potentially deadly toxic shock syndrome.
Women and girls have made up roughly 70% of the 25,000 people killed in Gaza since 7 October, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.
Read more:
Netanyahu rejects calls for Palestinian state
Who are the key leaders of Hamas?
One ActionAid Palestine worker, who asked to remain anonymous, added: “There was no water available for me to get clean during my period. I had no sanitary pads for my own needs.”
A woman called Adara, who was forced to flee her home with her four children, said they “suffer a lot whenever we want to go to the bathroom” and have to “stand in line for a long time”.
Be the first to get Breaking News
Install the Sky News app for free
With clean running water incredibly sparse in Gaza, people there are falling well short of the 15 litres needed per person per day.
According to estimates from the UN’s agency for Palestine, only one of the three water pipelines between Israel and Gaza is functional, and there is only one toilet per 486 people.
ActionAid is calling for a ceasefire to allow more aid into the territory.