The Citizen (KZN)

Aid ship sails to Gaza

HUMANITARI­AN CRISIS: NEW MARITIME CORRIDOR TO TERRITORY OPENS

- Palestinia­n territorie­s

27 people have died of malnutriti­on and dehydratio­n, most of them children.

ASpanish aid boat was en route to Gaza yesterday, opening a new maritime corridor intended to allow deliveries of desperatel­y needed food to the Palestinia­n territory ravaged by months of war between Israel and Hamas.

In a sign of worsening humanitari­an conditions, the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry says 27 people have died of malnutriti­on and dehydratio­n, most of them children.

A weeks-long diplomatic push had sought to bring about a ceasefire and increase aid deliveries before the start of the holy month of Ramadan, but key mediator Qatar said on Tuesday the warring sides were not close to striking a deal.

Fresh bombardmen­ts could be heard in southern Gaza, an AFP journalist said early yesterday, and the health ministry reported another 70 people killed in overnight strikes.

With land shipments into the territory severely curtailed, the internatio­nal community has sought to diversify routes for delivering aid, including via air drops and the new Cyprus maritime corridor.

The Open Arms ship that left the port of Larnaca on Tuesday is towing 200 tons of relief goods roughly 400km across the Mediterran­ean to Gaza, with US charity World Central Kitchen saying work was “underway” on a jetty to unload the shipment.

Cyprus said a second vessel was also being prepared.

Gaza has experience­d dire shortages of food and other essentials since Israel imposed a siege at the outset of the war, and prices have shot up for what food there is.

“Today, there are many things in the market that are not available; even if they are available, they are at astronomic­al prices,” said dentist and Gaza City resident Baher Hassouna, one of the 1.5 million Gazans displaced to the southern border city of Rafah.

Four US Army vessels also departed a base in Virginia on Tuesday carrying about 100 soldiers and equipment needed to build a temporary port on Gaza’s coast to facilitate aid shipments.

The new facility – which will consist of an offshore platform and a pier to bring aid ashore – is expected to be up and running “at the 60-day mark”, said US Army Brigadier-General Brad Hinson.

Aid groups have been warning of the risk of famine in besieged Gaza for weeks and the United Nations has reported particular difficulty in accessing the territory’s north for deliveries of food and other humanitari­an supplies.

The UN aid coordinato­r for Gaza, Sigrid Kaag, and head of the United Nations Office for Project Services, Jorge Moreira da Silva, said in a joint statement they “welcome the opening of a maritime corridor” while cautioning it may not be enough.

“For aid delivery at scale there is no meaningful substitute to the many land routes and entry points from Israel into Gaza,” they said.

The Israeli army on Tuesday night announced a pilot project for delivering aid directly into the north, saying six World Food Programme (WFP) aid trucks had entered through a new crossing.

Israel has maintained strict control over supplies entering the Gaza Strip and aid workers have blamed cumbersome screenings for the severity of the current shortages.

Israel blames problems on the Palestinia­n side for inadequaci­es in aid delivery.

Without specifical­ly mentioning the new overland route, the WFP wrote on X that it had “delivered enough food for 25 000 people to Gaza City early Tuesday in [the] first successful convoy to the north since 20 February”.

“With people in northern #Gaza on the brink of famine, we need deliveries every day,” it added.

Morocco, meanwhile, sent a plane loaded with 40 tons of relief supplies directly to Ben Gurion airport near Tel Aviv, a diplomatic source said, a bid to bypass bottleneck­s on the Egypt-Gaza border.

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