The Hindu - International

Starving Gazans scramble for aid drops to scrounge a can of food

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A military plane banked over the warravaged ruins of Gaza City dropping dozens of black parachutes carrying food aid.

On the ground, where almost no building within sight was still standing, hungry men and boys raced towards the beach where most of the aid seemed to have landed.

Dozens of them jostled intensely to get to the food, with scrums forming up and down the rubblestre­wn dunes.

“People are dying just to get a can of tuna,” said Mohamad alSabaawi, carrying an almost empty bag on his shoulder, a young boy beside him.

“The situation is tragic, as if we are in a famine. What can we do? They mock us by giving us a small can of tuna.”

Returning home in Gaza City with little to keep his family going, another Palestinia­n man said their situation was miserable.

“We are the people of Gaza, waiting for aid drops, willing to die to get a can of beans — which we then share among 18 people,” he said.

Palestinia­ns rush to collect food aid airdropped in the northern Gaza Strip on Monday.

Aid groups say only a fraction of the supplies required to meet basic humanitari­an needs have arrived in Gaza since

October, while the UN has warned of famine in the north of the territory by May without urgent interventi­on.

The aid entering the Gaza Strip by land is far below prewar levels, at around 150 vehicles a day compared to at least 500 before the war, according to UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinia­n refugees.

‘Increasing­ly desperate’

With Gazans increasing­ly desperate, foreign government­s have turned to airdrops, in particular in the hardtoreac­h northern parts of the territory including Gaza City.

The United States, France and Jordan are among several countries conducting airdrops to people living within the ruins of what was the besieged territory’s biggest city.

But the aircrews themselves said that the drops were insufficie­nt.

U.S. Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Jeremy Anderson noted earlier this month that what they were able to deliver was only a “drop in the bucket” of what was needed.

The air operation has also been marred by deaths. Five people on the ground were killed by one drop and 10 others injured after parachutes malfunctio­ned, according to a medic in Gaza.

Calls have mounted for Israel to allow in more aid overland, while Israel has blamed the UN and UNRWA for not distributi­ng aid in Gaza.

“Palestinia­ns in Gaza desperatel­y need what has been promised — a flood of aid. Not trickles. Not drops,” UN chief Antonio Guterres said on Sunday after visiting Gaza’s southern border crossing with Egypt at Rafah.

“Looking at Gaza, it almost appears that the four horsemen of war, famine, conquest and death are galloping across it,” he added.

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REUTERS Turning to the sky:

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