The polio vaccine last month following the start of the second round, More than 442,000 children in Gaza's.

The final phase of a two-stage polio
vaccination campaign has started in north Gaza on Saturday, the World Health
Organization (WHO) said.
The second phase was postponed in October by
UN agencies due to intense Israeli bombardments, mass displacement and lack of
access in the region.
Gaza recorded its first case of polio in 25
years in August, which left a baby boy paralysed and prompted
the rollout of the programme.
The
immunizations are resuming as 15 UN and humanitarian organisations have
described the situation in north Gaza as "apocalyptic" nearly a month
after an Israeli ground offensive began.
A humanitarian pause in the fighting has
been agreed upon to allow vaccinations to restart in Gaza City, the WHO said.
The campaign will run for three days.
About 15,000 children under 10 years old
in towns across north Gaza, such as Jabalia, Beit Lahia and Beit Hanoun,
"still remain inaccessible" and will be missed by the vaccination
campaign, compromising its effectiveness, the agency said.
The WHO had aimed to give 119,000 children
in the area a second dose of the oral polio vaccine.
The agency added that achieving this
target "is now unlikely due to access constraints".
The first round of the vaccine campaign
successfully reached 559,000 children under 10 years old over three phases in
south, central and north Gaza between 1 and 12 September, during which there were
local “humanitarian pauses” agreed by Israel and Palestinian groups.
However, the area agreed in the latest
humanitarian pause "has been substantially reduced" compared to the
first round of vaccinations and is now limited to just Gaza City, according to
the WHO.
From the start of the polio vaccination
campaign in Gaza, medical experts stressed that delays in administering the
second dose could jeopardise overall efforts to halt transmission of the
contagious, potentially deadly disease.
To interrupt transmission, at least 90% of
all children need to be given a minimum of two doses.
The
UN human rights chief said last week that the Gaza war's “darkest moment” is
unfolding in the north of the territory.
Hundreds
of people have reportedly been killed since the Israeli military launched a
ground offensive in Beit Lahia as well as neighbouring Jabalia and Beit Hanoun
on 6 October, saying it was acting against regrouping Hamas fighters.
At
least 100,000 people have been forced to evacuate from north Gaza towards Gaza
City for safety, the WHO said.
The
joint statement from UN agencies, including the WHO, released on Friday, said
the situation was "apocalyptic", with the entire Palestinian
population in the area "at imminent risk of dying from disease, famine and
violence".
The
UN estimates that about 100,000 residents remain in dire conditions, with
severe shortages of food, water and medical supplies.
The
US warned
Israel this week to immediately increase humanitarian aid into
Gaza as a deadline
approaches to boost aid or face cuts to American military
assistance. The US envoy to the UN said on Tuesday that Israel's words
"must be matched by action", which was "not happening".
Israel
launched a campaign to destroy Hamas in response to the group's attack on
southern Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and
251 others were taken hostage.
More than 43,160 people
have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run
health ministry.
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