Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Israel to allow flour shipments for Gaza

The flour will be delivered to Ashdod port.

- WITH AFP

Israel will let shipments of flour for Palestinia­ns through the Israeli port of Ashdod, north of Gaza, the White House said Friday after President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke.

The move comes days after the United Nations called on Israel to allow access to the port for the urgent delivery of humanitari­an aid for Gaza, besieged since the 7 October Hamas terrorist attacks on Israel.

“The president welcomed the decision from the Government of Israel to permit the shipment of flour for the Palestinia­n people directly through Ashdod port,” the White House said in a readout of their call.

US teams would “separately work on options for more direct maritime delivery of assistance into Gaza,” it added.

Washington has backed Israel’s offensive against Gaza since the Hamas attacks while also calling on the Israelis to let in more aid to Palestinia­n civilians.

Three UN agencies — the World Food Program, UNICEF and the World Health Organizati­on — pushed for the opening of Ashdod in a joint statement on Monday.

The use of Ashdod, located some 40 kilometers north of the Gaza border, is “critically needed by aid agencies,” they said, while calling for a “fundamenta­l step change in the flow of humanitari­an aid into Gaza.”

The Israel-Hamas war has sparked a humanitari­an catastroph­e for Gaza’s 2.4 million people, who are struggling to get food, water, fuel and medical care.

Opening the Ashdod port would reduce the time it takes to transport food to Gazans from the north, WFP’s regional director for the Middle East, Corinne Fleischer, told Agence France-Presse earlier this month.

In December, Israel approved the temporary delivery of aid into Gaza via its southern Kerem Shalom border crossing, opening a new route for supplies after weeks of pressure.

Meanwhile, the European Union on Friday added six individual­s to an asset freeze and visa ban blacklist for financing Palestinia­n Islamist movement Hamas.

Brussels said those sanctioned included Musa Dudin, a senior member of Hamas’ investment office, along with financiers based in Sudan, Lebanon and Algeria.

“They will get their assets frozen in the European Union and they will get a travel ban to enter our territory,” a high-ranking EU official said.

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