But she was told there was no equipment available in Gaza to clear the rubble."I should be able to bury my family so that instead of visiting a house [where I] mourn in pain, I can visit their grave and at least I know they are in a good place," she said."Each time I look at the house I have regret, a pain Many families have been left without reliable access to clean water, electricity, food or health care.Rescue teams say they have also been inundated with calls from families who know exactly where their dead loved ones are buried and require help to pull them from the rubble.But recovery efforts in Gaza have stalled, despite a US-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Hamas coming into effect six months ago.In some of the hardest-hit areas in Gaza City, recovery operations have stopped altogether."With a lack of heavy machinery, we are unable to retrieve bodies because the equipment is prevented from entering [the strip] by Israel," Director of Civil Defense in Gaza Brigadier General Raed Al-Dahshan told the ABC.The ABC has contacted Israel's government for comment.Hamdi Malaka is another Gazan who knows exactly where people are buried under rubble, but cannot get to them.He said 70 people were killed in his block in the neighbourhood of Zeitun in an air strike in November, including his family."I have a son who had five children