Times of Malta

Hamas urges end to Gaza airdrops after deaths, more humanitari­an aid trucks

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Hamas yesterday urged foreign nations to stop parachutin­g aid into war-torn Gaza after officials and humanitari­ans said 18 people died trying to reach food packages in the starving north.

Instead, the Palestinia­n militant group that rules the Gaza Strip demanded that its enemy Israel allow more aid trucks to enter the besieged territory, which the United Nations has warned is on the brink of a “manmade famine”.

Fighting raged on unabated a day after the UN Security Council passed its first resolution calling for an “immediate ceasefire” in the bloodiest ever Gaza war, sparked by Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel.

The resolution also demands that militants free the roughly 130 hostages Israel says remain in Gaza, including 33 captives who are presumed dead.

Jordanian, US and other planes have airdropped food into Gaza, even as UN officials and aid agencies have warned this falls far short of the dire needs of its 2.4m people and is far less effective than ensuring overland access.

Yesterday, as Jordanian, Egyptian, Emirati and German planes again airdropped relief goods, with the sight of food packages floating down on parachutes sending Palestinia­n crowds rushing toward them.

Six people were killed in stampedes and 12 others drowned off the territory’s Mediterran­ean coast, the Hamas government and the Swiss-based Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor said.

Hamas in a statement called for “an immediate end to airdrop operations” and “the immediate and rapid opening of land crossings to allow humanitari­an aid to reach our Palestinia­n people”.

The UN children’s fund, UNICEF, said vastly more aid must be rushed into Gaza by road, rather than air or sea, to avert “this imminent famine”.

Food aid is usually only airdropped in crises where “people are cut off for hundreds of kilometres”, said UNICEF spokesman James Elder, speaking via video link from Gaza.

But “the lifesaving aid they need is a matter of kilometres

away”, he said, as trucks loaded with aid have been waiting across Gaza’s southern border with Egypt.

“We need to use the road networks.”

Israeli troops meanwhile battled Hamas with no sign of a letup in the war raging for almost six months.

The Israeli military said its jets had struck more than 60 targets, including tunnels and

buildings “in which armed terrorists were identified”.

The health ministry in the Hamas-run territory said 70 people were killed early yesterday, 13 of them in air strikes around the southern city of Rafah.

The Security Council resolution passed Monday demanded a ceasefire for the ongoing Muslim holy month of Ramadan that should lead to a “lasting” truce. (AFP)

 ?? PHOTO: AFP ?? Parachutes of humanitari­an aid dropping over the besieged Palestinia­n territory yesterday.
PHOTO: AFP Parachutes of humanitari­an aid dropping over the besieged Palestinia­n territory yesterday.

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