The Boston Globe

Israel moves to block protesters from preventing flow of aid

Crowds demand captives be freed prior to assistance

- By Isabel Kershner

Israel on Sunday stepped up efforts to prevent Israeli protesters from blocking the flow of aid into the Gaza Strip, two days after the United Nations’ highest court said it must allow more supplies to get into the enclave.

The Israeli military has declared the area around a border crossing into Gaza a closed military zone in a bid to stop the protests that have for several days impeded the movement of aid through the only open crossing between Israel and Gaza. The decision was made Saturday night but announced publicly Sunday afternoon.

Dozens of protesters had been blocking the Kerem Shalom crossing in southern Israel since Wednesday, arguing that no humanitari­an assistance should pass through into Gaza until Hamas releases all captives it is holding there.

The Internatio­nal Court of Justice in The Hague, making an interim ruling in a case in which Israel is being accused of genocide in Gaza, on Friday ordered the delivery of more humanitari­an aid to Palestinia­ns and called for the release of hostages being held by armed groups in the enclave.

Before the military announced the closed zone, many protesters had walked through open fields to bypass police roadblocks, thwarting efforts by Israeli authoritie­s to stop them, according to footage posted online by a group behind the demonstrat­ions. A few trucks managed to enter Gaza before the protesters arrived at the crossing, according to Israeli news media reports.

The military order is meant to bar access to all unauthoriz­ed people and will remain in force through next Saturday.

Protests at the Kerem Shalom crossing have forced scores of aid trucks to reroute through Egypt, with only a few making it through the crossing, according to the United Nations.

The United Nations said Friday that protesters had blocked trucks containing flour, food, hygiene items, tents, and other goods from accessing Gaza for two days, adding that the inability to deliver aid would “exacerbate the already dire humanitari­an situation of those in need of assistance.”

Israel opened the crossing at Kerem Shalom in December after pressure from the United States to speed up the flow of humanitari­an aid into Gaza, where most of the territory’s 2.2 million civilians are enduring dire shortages of food, water and supplies. At the time, Israel said it was committing to 200 trucks a day, but the rate of entry has fallen short of that goal.

Kerem Shalom is one of two border crossings through which aid has been allowed to enter Gaza; most of it transits through the Rafah crossing with Egypt. The United Nations said that since its reopening, about onefifth of the aid had been going through Kerem Shalom.

Video footage showed Israeli security forces standing by as protesters at the crossing Sunday waved Israeli flags and chanted through megaphones that no aid would pass through until all the hostages were returned.

The protest came as US-led negotiator­s developed a written draft agreement that calls for the phased release of captives held by Hamas in exchange for a cessation in Israel’s military offensive for about two months.

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Displaced Palestinia­ns received food aid at a United Nations center in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Sunday.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES Displaced Palestinia­ns received food aid at a United Nations center in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Sunday.

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