Gaza's biggest hospital overflowed Thursday as bodies came in faster than relatives could claim them on the sixth day of Israel's heavy aerial bombardment on the territory of 2.3 million people. With scores of Palestinians killed each day in the Israeli onslaught after an unprecedented Hamas attack, medics in the besieged enclave said they have run out of places to put remains pulled from the latest strikes or recovered from the ruins of demolished buildings.
The morgue at Gaza City's Shifa hospital can only handle some 30 bodies at a time, and workers had to stack corpses three high outside the walk-in cooler and put dozens more, side by side, in the parking lot.
Some were placed in a tent, and others were sprawled on the cement, under the sun.
«The body bags started and just kept coming and coming and now it's a graveyard,» Abu Elias Shobaki, a nurse at Shifa, said of the parking lot. «I am emotionally, physically exhausted.
I just have to stop myself from thinking about how much worse it will get.»
Nearly a week after Hamas militants crossed through Israel's heavily fortified separation fence and killed over 1,200 Israelis in a brutal rampage, Israel is preparing for a possible ground invasion of Gaza for the first time in nearly a decade. A ground offensive would likely drive up the Palestinian death toll, which already has outpaced the past four bloody wars between Israel and Hamas.
The sheer volume of human remains has pushed the system to its limit in the long-blockaded territory.