The National - News

Sea deaths underline food crisis brewing in the north

- NAGHAM MOHANNA

The UN expects famine to hit by the end of May if a ceasefire agreement is not reached and urgent aid delivered

Mohammed Masoud fought for his life and survived in the sea off Gaza, as he tried to retrieve aid packages dropped from aircraft.

Twelve others were not fortunate enough to return to the shore this week.

Amid food shortages and growing fears of famine, nearly six months into Israel’s relentless war, many in the ravaged Palestinia­n enclave often risk their lives to swim long distances to secure the much-needed supplies.

“I saw death with my own eyes in the sea when I went after the aid,” Mr Masoud, 35, told The National.

“In front of me in the sea, I saw young people drowning. I couldn’t do anything to help them. The sea was pulling them in and most of us didn’t know how to swim.”

The father of four is from Jabalia refugee camp, in northern Gaza, where the UN expects famine to hit by the end of May if a ceasefire agreement is not reached and urgent aid delivered.

Since October, Gazans in the north have endured miserable conditions under a relentless Israeli bombardmen­t supporting the military’s ground offensive.

Most civilians from northern areas, including Gaza city, have fled south. The 300,000 or so who remain have been cut off from aid since the war broke out in October.

The critical situation has forced internatio­nal entities and humanitari­an organisati­ons to seek other ways to deliver aid to Gaza.

One method is to drop aid packages, which occasional­ly land in the sea. Gaza’s health authoritie­s said 12 people drowned this week while trying to reach aid in the water.

Mahmoud Ibrahim, 20, was among them. The Palestinia­n, who lived in the northern area of Beit Lahia, was his family’s sole breadwinne­r.

He would venture out to bring food and water home to his parents and sisters.

Despite suffering from speech and hearing problems, he was always “distributi­ng kindness … and running to help others”, his father, Fathi Ibrahim, told The National.

“Mahmoud used to go to chase the air drops. The day he became a martyr, I told him not to go into the sea because he didn’t know how to swim.

“As the young men told us, Mahmoud failed to get the aid that had landed on land. In despair, he decided to go into the sea.”

His family was unaware of his fate until men told them of his disappeara­nce. The next day, the waves carried his body and several others ashore.

“My message to the world is that the injustice to us, the Palestinia­n people, must stop,” said Mahmoud’s father.

Gaza was already highly dependent on aid before the war broke out.

The latest conflict began after a Hamas attack killed about 1,200 people in Israel.

More than 32,400 people have since been killed by Israeli

fire, and aid deliveries by land, controlled by Israel, have been reduced to a trickle.

Palestinia­ns have resorted to grinding animal feed to make flour, while hundreds have been shot dead by Israeli troops while waiting for food aid. At least 27 people, most of them children, have starved to death in Gaza’s hospitals, the enclave’s authoritie­s say.

At the shore, Omar Al Daour was watching an aid drop operation, but when the packages dropped into the sea, he decided not to chase the boxes because he was afraid of drowning.

“The weather was very cold and the waves were very high,” said Mr Al Daour, a father of three from northern Gaza. “Eventually, everyone who came out was dead.”

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