CBC Edition

Canada to start airdroppin­g aid into Gaza within days: source

- Evan Dyer, Darren Major

The Canadian government will begin airdroppin­g aid into Gaza within the next week, a government source tells CBC News.

Months of violence have followed the events of Oct. 7, when Hamas militants at‐ tacked Israel, killed approxi‐ mately 1,200 people and took roughly 250 others hostage, according to Israeli accounts. Since then, Israeli strikes have killed approxi‐ mately 29,000 people, ac‐ cording to Gaza's Hamas-led health authority.

Humanitari­an groups are calling for more aid to be al‐ lowed into Gaza to help with an intense and worsening crisis there. The World Food Programme recently sus‐ pended aid shipments into northern Gaza, citing "com‐ plete chaos and violence due to the collapse of civil order" and warning again about the risk of starvation in the re‐ gion.

Some of Canada's allies have already started such air‐ drop operations.

Aid funded by the United Kingdom was recently dropped to a hospital in northern Gaza. The Nether‐ lands and France also have been involved in airdrop op‐ erations.

Jordan has dropped aid to a field hospital it runs in Gaza several times since the begin‐ ning of the conflict. Israel ap‐ proved and co-ordinated with a Jordanian drop in No‐ vember, according to Reuters.

Many of the previous air‐ drops have been carried out by the Jordanian air force. The source said Canada has considered different options for the airdrop. But as of Wednesday night, the option of using Canadian Armed Forces aircraft had been ruled out, the source said.

A UN report said in De‐ cember that Gaza's entire population is experienci­ng a food crisis, with one in four facing starvation.

Internatio­nal Develop‐ ment Minister Ahmed Hussen told CBC Radio's The House last week that Canada was considerin­g airdroppin­g aid.

"We have to do everything we can to avert mass starva‐ tion in northern Gaza and be‐ yond," he told host Catherine Cullen.

Hussen recently travelled to Jordan and the Egyptian border with Gaza. He de‐ scribed what he saw near Gaza as a "really dire situa‐ tion."

"People are in a very des‐ perate situation and they're doing desperate things to survive," he said.

In January, the federal government suspended funding to the United Na‐ tions Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), a key aid agency in

Gaza, in response to Israeli claims that members of the organizati­on were involved in the Oct. 7 attack.

Ottawa announced at the time that it was sending an additional $40 million in aid to other humanitari­an groups in the region.

CBC News reported earli‐ er this month that Canada had not seen evidence from Israel supporting its claims about UNRWA at the time it made its decision. The United Nations says it is investigat‐ ing the allegation­s.

Hussen said Wednesday that the government will wait until the UN investigat­ion is complete before deciding to resume aid to UNRWA. Asked if he's confident the investi‐ gation will be completed be‐ fore April, when Canada's next payment to UNRWA was supposed to be delivered, Hussen said he didn't want to "prejudge" the outcome.

"I have confidence in the UN body that's looking into this, and we'll see what they come back with, but we have always insisted that we should have a transparen­t, comprehens­ive investigat­ion before we act," he said.

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