Irish Independent

Israel insists more aid is flowing into Gaza but UN says little has changed

- LOUISA LOVELUCK

In the week since US president Joe Biden warned Israel to swiftly address civilian suffering in Gaza – or risk future US support – Israeli officials have touted what they say is a record number of aid trucks entering the territory, one of several new measures that the government maintains will help alleviate the crisis.

But according to UN and other aid officials, as well as relief workers inside Gaza, little has actually changed on the ground – and aid access remains as complicate­d and risky as ever, even as much of the population hurtles toward famine.

Despite Israel’s emphasis on truck numbers – it said this week more than 1,200 trucks had crossed into Gaza over the previous three days – the volume of aid hasn’t significan­tly increased, nor is it reaching those most in need. The government’s most concrete promises of reopening a crossing in northern Gaza, bringing bakeries back online and establishi­ng clear channels to co-ordinate with aid workers also have yet to yield results.

“The proof in the pudding will be when it actually happens beyond words,” Jamie McGoldrick, the interim UN humanitari­an co-ordinator for the Palestinia­n territorie­s, said of the steps Israel pledged to take. “They are under pressure to deliver something.”

Biden’s ultimatum to Israel last week, delivered in a phone call with prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, was spurred by the killing of seven World Central Kitchen workers by Israeli forces April 1.

This was another reminder of the perilous environmen­t in which relief agencies operate.

Six months into the conflict, the stakes for getting more food, medicine and other relief to Palestinia­ns are those of life and death.

Ninety-five percent of the population of 2.2 million is estimated to be experienci­ng crisis levels of hunger, and health authoritie­s say at least 32 people had died of malnutriti­on or dehydratio­n by early April.

The White House last week said it would be watching for Israel to take “concrete, tangible steps” to significan­tly improve humanitari­an access, with Biden describing the crisis in Gaza as “unacceptab­le”.

In response, McGoldrick’s office said, Israel committed to reopening the Erez Crossing in northern Gaza, restarting about 20 bakeries and repairing a major water line. Aid officials said those plans had been discussed but were mostly not nearing fruition. Appearing to reverse course on opening Erez, which was heavily damaged in the October 7 attack and only ever designed for foot passengers, Israel announced instead that it was building a new crossing to bring aid to the north.

This will help “gradually” boost the number of trucks entering Gaza overall to around 500 a day, said Rear Adm Daniel Hagari, an Israeli military spokesman. That is the same number that sustained the enclave before the war, though swathes of Gaza’s agricultur­al land and farming capacity have been wiped out since then. It was unclear when the new crossing would be built.

“Israel is surging aid into Gaza, with over 1,200 trucks entering in 3 days (avg 400/day),” the Co-ordinator of Government Activities in the Territorie­s (COGAT) posted on Wednesday on X. The agency, a branch of the Israeli military that co-ordinates aid in Gaza, was promoting the rising number of trucks that it says it inspects each day to enter the enclave’s border crossings. It blames the delays in aid distributi­on on the UN and other internatio­nal agencies operating in Gaza. Israel has cited photos of crateloads of aid apparently waiting to be distribute­d as evidence that humanitari­an groups are not doing their jobs.

But the UN records only the trucks that physically enter Gaza in its database, and UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinia­n refugees, tallied a lower figure for the same three-day period this week, at an average of 168 humanitari­an trucks each day through the Rafah and Kerem Shalom crossings in the south.

Relief workers say Israeli regulation­s around access to the crossings mean they do not often have permission to reach the supplies that await them.

“It does not mean we have unfettered access to collect it,” an aid worker said, speaking on the condition of anonymity due to the sensitivit­y of the issue. “Sometimes we only get partial access in the afternoon. Sometimes we only get a stab to collect the bulk of the aid in the morning. Sometimes, if there is fog or poor visibility in the corridor, we do not get access at all.”

At the same time, the inspection process remains onerous and opaque, officials say, and agencies often don’t know what type of aid they’re picking up until they reach the Gaza side of the terminal.

“Let’s say Unicef has 10 trucks of medicine, 10 trucks of nutrition treatments. Once they’re in screening, we lose visibility,” said Tess Ingram, a spokeswoma­n for the UN children’s agency. “When we get to the receiving end, there might be one truck of medicine and one truck of nutrition, and then the next day maybe three trucks of something. It’s very difficult for us to plan on the other end because we have no visibility.”

Trucks that enter Gaza from Egypt are sometimes only half-filled or have a smaller capacity than those used by the United Nations to collect and distribute aid – another reason the figures collected by aid groups and Israel’s military are often different.

“They might send in 300-plus trucks in a day, but we can’t get 300-plus trucks processed and out,” McGoldrick said.

Then aid groups must co-ordinate with the Israeli military for safe access to areas where civilians are most in need.

Food convoys traveling north are three times more likely to be denied permission­s by Israel than any other humanitari­an convoy, Jens Laerke, spokesman for the UN humanitari­an office, said in a briefing on Tuesday.

“When you put up statistics with numbers of truck going in saying, ‘Look at all these hundreds of trucks coming in,’ and you put it against how few trucks have actually moved around – well, it’s kind of an own goal, isn’t it?” he said.

“Half of the convoys that we were trying to send to the north with food were denied by the very same Israeli authoritie­s.”

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