Oman Daily Observer

Stalled Israeli visas hinder Gaza aid

- — Reuters

Difficulti­es getting Israeli permission for foreign staff to work in Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s are hampering efforts to get aid into war-shattered Gaza where civilians are facing imminent famine, according to UN data and aid workers.

Six aid workers from the UN and other groups interviewe­d by Reuters cited delays to visas as an example of red tape they say is thwarting aid to Gaza, nearly six months into Israel’s offensive against Hamas fighters.

Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. An Israeli official who asked for anonymity as the official was not authorised to speak publicly cited high demand as a challenge, and also raised question marks about some groups’ objectives, saying some aid workers “have designs that are not humanitari­an”.

UN data shared with Reuters showed that 45 visa requests are pending, more than half of which have been on hold for over two months, and several stalled since at least November.

A further 20 UN requests pending since late 2023 have been completely dropped due to the delays. The affected missions were either abandoned or postponed, said the UN source who shared the data and asked not to be identified, fearing repercussi­ons.

“This is slowing down the Gaza response at a time when we need to scale up and have more manpower to handle operations,” said the UN source.

The list showed the holdups were affecting 11 UN agencies with 18 visas pending for UN Palestinia­n refugee agency UNRWA; six for the World Food Programme; six with the UN children’s agency; and two with the World Health Organizati­on.

Aid workers said Israel has previously said the delays were linked to staff shortages caused by the high number of army reservists called up for the war, which was triggered by the group’s attacks on southern Israel on October 7.

But UN officials say the red tape burden has been exacerbate­d by Israel switching to a policy of granting visas for a maximum of six months, rather than one year, as before the war.

Israel says UNRWA, which provides aid and services to millions of Palestinia­n refugees in Gaza and the region, perpetuate­s conflict. It has accused 12 of the agency’s 13,000 staff of involvemen­t in the October 7 attacks. UNRWA has dismissed accused workers and a probe is under way.

Internatio­nal nongovernm­ental groups also complain of growing visa difficulti­es and said some staff had been blocked at the border or received deportatio­n orders.

Faris Arouri, director of the Associatio­n of Internatio­nal Developmen­t Agencies (AIDA) says there has been a halt in recommenda­tion letters by Israel’s Ministry of Welfare and Social Affairs needed to submit visa applicatio­ns.

This means that some 60 new visa requests cannot be filed while the “vast majority” of 57 aid workers whose visas already expired have had to leave, including many senior staff, he said.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Spanish Air Force personnel pose for a picture ahead of a mission to deliver humanitari­an aid to the Gaza Strip, in the Zaragoza Air Base, Spain.
— Reuters Spanish Air Force personnel pose for a picture ahead of a mission to deliver humanitari­an aid to the Gaza Strip, in the Zaragoza Air Base, Spain.

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