Boston Sunday Globe

Major challenges loom as US rushes Gaza port

Obstacles include logistics, cost, and security issues

- By Aaron Boxerman and Victoria Kim

JERUSALEM — As the US military rushes to assemble a temporary port on the Gaza Strip coast, daunting practical challenges to the seaborne humanitari­an effort to stave off famine in the territory are becoming increasing­ly apparent. The obstacles include logistics, cost and security issues, diplomats and aid officials say.

But the desperate conditions in Gaza, depicted in images of starving children, make the USled internatio­nal plan a necessity, they say, especially given the tight security imposed by Israel that is slowing land shipments of food, water, and medicine.

Even if it can overcome the hurdles, the internatio­nal initiative is likely to take several weeks, if not months, to reach its goal of delivering 2 million meals a day to the people of Gaza.

Citing the spiraling humanitari­an catastroph­e in Gaza, Canada and Sweden are resuming funding for the main United Nations agency supporting Palestinia­n refugees in Gaza. The government­s said the embattled agency had taken steps to improve accountabi­lity amid accusation­s that some of its employees had links to Hamas.

The two countries were among more than a dozen that suspended payments to the aid organizati­on, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, known as UNRWA, after accusation­s in January by Israel that a dozen of its 13,000 employees in Gaza had been involved in the Oct. 7 Hamas-led attacks on Israel or their aftermath.

UNRWA has argued that Israel, which has long called for the agency’s removal from Gaza, has targeted it with a “deliberate and concerted campaign” to undermine its operations when its services are most needed. Warnings of widespread hunger bordering on famine have become more urgent, and signs of desperatio­n are growing as people resort to consuming animal feed or ambushing aid trucks.

In a government statement Saturday, Sweden said it would disburse a conditiona­l first payment of about $20 million. It said UNRWA had agreed to allow independen­t audits and to strengthen internal oversight.

“In this urgent situation, when the need is so great among the civilian population, it is first and foremost important to save lives,” the statement said.

Canadian officials said Friday that they had received an interim report from the internal United Nations office investigat­ing the claims, and that UNRWA had taken immediate steps to improve accountabi­lity. The United Nations has also commission­ed an external review.

The Israeli Foreign Ministry reacted angrily to the countries’ decision, issuing a statement calling it “a serious mistake,” reached before the investigat­ions have been completed. “The resumption of funding to UNRWA will not change the fact that the agency is part of the problem and will not be part of the solution in the Gaza Strip,” the ministry said.

The European Union, one of the largest donors to UNRWA, recently announced that it was substantia­lly increasing funding to the agency, saying that Palestinia­ns were facing terrible conditions and should not be made to pay for Hamas’ crimes. The first tranche of 50 million euros ($54 million) was scheduled to be disbursed this past week.

The United States has said it would wait for the results of UN investigat­ions before deciding whether to resume donations. It is the agency’s single largest donor, having pledged $344 million in 2022.

The multinatio­nal plan to build a functionin­g pier on the Gaza coastline is undeniably ambitious. But aid officials have criticized it, emphasizin­g that delivering food by truck is by far the most efficient way to help Gaza residents and calling for Israel to open new crossing points in northern Gaza and to ease its entry restrictio­ns.

US officials have conceded it will take time, but they say a maritime corridor will eventually enable them to massively increase the amount of aid.

Gaza does not have a functionin­g port and its coastal waters are too shallow for most vessels — particular­ly the large barges that would be necessary to ferry the enormous amounts of cargo necessary for hundreds of thousands of hungry Palestinia­ns.

Ursula von der Leyen, president of the EU executive body, said Friday that officials expected to test the process in the coming days during what she described as a pilot project. But it was not immediatel­y clear how or where any vessels would unload their cargo or how it would be distribute­d with continuing Israeli bombardmen­t and attacks on aid trucks by both ordinary Palestinia­ns and well-organized gangs, according to aid officials. Hundreds of thousands of Gaza’s 2.3 million people face the threat of starvation.

The effort will be costly, but it is uncertain how expensive. Initial estimates for the floating pier and shipping expenses run to tens of millions of dollars over several months.

But security and distributi­on, more than money, seem to be the bigger challenges. It is unclear who will manage and secure the port area and the convoys that would be needed to distribute the aid. In his State of the Union speech Thursday night, President Biden was adamant that no “American boots” would touch ground in Gaza.

Israel’s invasion successful­ly toppled Hamas’ government in northern Gaza but nothing has filled the security vacuum, resulting in widespread lawlessnes­s in the north.

 ?? MAHMOUD ESSA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Palestinia­ns rushed to get humanitari­an aid dropped by the US Air Force in Gaza City Saturday. The US military is assembling a temporary port on the Gaza Strip coast to massively increase the amount of aid delivered.
MAHMOUD ESSA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Palestinia­ns rushed to get humanitari­an aid dropped by the US Air Force in Gaza City Saturday. The US military is assembling a temporary port on the Gaza Strip coast to massively increase the amount of aid delivered.

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