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“It’s difficult for the kids, and their spirits are low,” she said. “They don’t have basic hygiene and you can’t get them what they want or ask for. I hope we can return to our homes safely. We just want a normal healthy life.”

Her sister-in-law, Imm Mohammed al-Mullah, is staying in an adjacent tent with her in-laws and five children.

“The martyrs are now resting in peace, but here we are dying a slow death,” she said. “The situation is very bad. No food, no water, no electricity, no sanitation.”

There are five families gathered in their area of the courtyard. The glaring sun forces them awake at 6am and beats down on them until the late afternoon, and there is no respite from the flies.

“The salty water has made us itchy,” Imm Mohammed said. “I bathe my three-year-old son, and he goes back to playing in the sand and dirt. Now he’s got scabs all over his body. Nothing is clean. We don’t even have bedding.”

Another one of her sons has a fever, and the 34-year-old mother is sure that there will be an outbreak of smallpox.

Every day, there’s a very long line just to get water and bread,” she said. “You can’t even get a full bag of bread, only half. We’re living off of canned cheese and fava beans.”

Imm Mohammed wants to go back to her life before the war and not live “this slow death”.

But she says her home has been destroyed in an Israeli air raid, and her entire neighbourhood in Sheikh Radwan is gone.

“Just as the US, the big devil, is supporting Israel, I want to see the Arab countries fully behind us,” she said. “Where is their conscience?”