Aid deliveries to Gaza collapse amid Israeli attacks and increasing chaos
The volume of aid delivered to Gaza has collapsed in recent weeks as Israeli air strikes have targeted police officers who guard the convoys, United Nations officials say, exposing them to looting by criminal gangs and desperate civilians.
On average, only 62 trucks have entered Gaza each day over the past two weeks, according to figures from the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs – well below the 200 trucks per day Israel has committed to facilitating. Just four trucks crossed on two separate days this week.
Aid groups, which have warned of a looming famine, estimate that some 500 trucks are needed each day to meet people’s basic needs.
After a string of Israeli attacks on members of Gaza’s Hamas-run civilian police force, officers withdrew earlier this month from the Palestinian side of the Kerem Shalom crossing with Israel.
Since they left, trucks have been attacked in the crossing’s holding area, according to UN humanitarian coordinator James McGoldrick. Drivers had been shot at, attacked with axes and box cutters, and had their windows smashed, he said.
Humanitarian officials said police had also stopped serving as security guards for aid convoys, paralysing deliveries in the enclave, where some hungry families have resorted to eating weeds and animal feed, and profiteers are selling stolen food at astronomical rates on the black market.
“With the departure of police escorts, it has been virtually impossible for the UN or anyone else ... to safely move assistance in Gaza because of criminal gangs,” said United States Ambassador David Satterfield, appointed by President Joe Biden to coordinate humanitarian aid to Gaza.
“Because of the attacks on the UN convoys and others, the value of things has risen, which only feeds a vicious cycle to empower more criminal activities.”
Satterfield said Israeli forces had killed as many as nine Palestinian police officers involved in protecting aid convoys, including a commander. The police included “Hamas elements”, he said, but also people who were politically unaffiliated, and remnants of Palestinian Authority forces.
Asked if police guarding aid convoys were a target, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said: “The IDF is operating to dismantle Hamas military capabilities. Elements involved in military activity may be targeted.”
Three police officers were killed by an Israeli air strike in Rafah on February 10, according to Rafah governorate police and witnesses, as they were driving to monitor the distribution of food aid in Tal al-Sultan, west of Rafah. Philippe Lazzarini, commissioner of the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), said eight other Palestinian police officers were killed during the previous week. The Washington Post could not independently confirm the figures.
The UN was attempting to obtain assurances from Israel that police would not be attacked, McGoldrick said.
The slowdown in aid deliveries comes amid increasingly dire warnings from humanitarian experts that Gaza’s 2.2 million inhabitants are on the brink of famine. The situation is most precarious in the north of the Strip, where aid groups withdrew months ago, and an estimated 300,000 civilians remain.
One in every six children in the north is suffering from acute malnutrition, according to a World Health Organisation nutritional analysis, with 3% of them exhibiting “severe wasting” – putting them at risk of death unless they receive urgent medical treatment.
Ted Chaiban, deputy director for humanitarian action at Unicef, warned this week that Gaza was “poised to witness an explosion in preventable child deaths”.
All aid that enters Gaza must first undergo screenings by Egyptian and Israeli officials. Approved shipments are taken to the unloading area at Kerem Shalom, then transferred to Gazan trucks before making their way out of the crossing’s blue gates.
“Many of these trucks, before they even get 200m, are stopped by cars and then attacked and looted,” McGoldrick said. “We’re lucky to get some of the material to warehouses.” Getting the food from there to the north is even more difficult.
Convoys ran the risk of being overrun on the journey, he added, describing one driver he met on a trip to Gaza this month who had lost his voice from screaming at looters. “This is for the people of Gaza. This is for Gaza City, it’s not for here,” he recounted telling them. “It made no difference,” McGoldrick said.
The UN’s World Food Programme was forced to stop food deliveries to the north this week, citing the “complete chaos and violence due to the collapse of civil order”. UNRWA has not been able to make any deliveries to northern Gaza since January 23, said Tamara Alrifai, its director of external relations.
The agency and its partners are lobbying
Israel to open other crossings to increase the flow of aid.
At a UN Security Council session yesterday, Tor Wennesland, the Norwegian diplomat who is the UN’s special coordinator for the Middle East peace process, told members there was “no time to lose”. He chronicled “acute shortages of food, water, fuel and medicine” and a “near-total breakdown of law and order”.
“Keeping Gaza on a drip feed not only deprives the desperate population of life-saving support, it drives even further chaos on the ground, and impedes even further humanitarian delivery,” he said, calling for an immediate ceasefire.
“The idea that a ‘humanitarian pause’ is needed for aid to enter Gaza is a complete misnomer,” Eylon Levy, an Israeli government spokesman, posted this week on X. “The aid is already inside. The UN needs to distribute it.”
“We are ready and willing to facilitate the entrance of tens if not hundreds of trucks every day,” Colonel Moshe Tetro, head of the Israeli Coordination and Liaison Administration for Gaza, said this week.
But the drop in the number of trucks was also due in part to the now-routine protests by Israelis at Kerem Shalom, McGoldrick said. The protesters have vowed to block the crossing until Hamas releases its remaining Israeli hostages, and on some days they have succeeded in shutting it down.
“If there’s a disruption on that side, or there’s a disruption on the other side where we are because of insecurity, the result’s the same – we don’t get stuff out of the door,” McGoldrick said.
Yesterday, demonstrators at Kerem Shalom set up a giant bouncy castle at the entrance where aid trucks are supposed to pass through. In a dawn video distributed on WhatsApp, organiser Yosef de Brasser, 22, urged others to join him. “Get ready – there will be inflatables, cotton candy, and popcorn and plushies,” he said. “We are preparing for the people of Israel – come.”
On the other side of the border, Palestinian families described a grinding struggle for survival.
Mahmoud Ibrahim, whose family is in Sheikh Radwan, north of Gaza City, said he had been giving his four children bread made from barley once used for animal feed, but even that was running out. He had also foraged for khoubiza, a leafy green that grows wild in the area. “I have been surviving on it for the past three days.”
Haya Marwan, 23, said her family in the northern Jabalya refugee camp had also been subsisting on khoubiza and other edible plants. Theft was rampant, she said, with empty homes stripped bare.
“The situation has descended into severe chaos,” she said, adding that armed men were threatening anyone carrying food. “I’ve heard of shootings by bandits,” she said. A bag of flour that used to cost US$8 (NZ$13) now went for about US$275 (NZ$445).
“People are left to fend for themselves,” she said. “While we are still breathing, we are far from living.” – Washington Post