The Denver Post

Aid group says it was turned away by the Israeli military

- By Anushka Patil

The Israeli military turned back a convoy trying to take 200 tons of food into the northern Gaza Strip on Tuesday, a U.N. agency said, a day after United Nations officials said children in the territory were dying of starvation.

The World Food Program was attempting its first food delivery into northern Gaza since it said Feb. 20 that it had to suspend operations in the region because of Israeli restrictio­ns and a breakdown of civil order among hundreds of thousands of people on the brink of famine.

The convoy of 14 trucks waited for three hours at the Wadi Gaza checkpoint in central Gaza on Tuesday before the Israeli military turned it away, WFP said in a statement. It was rerouted and then was stopped by a “large crowd of desperate people who looted the food,” said the agency, which is part of the U.N.

The turning away of the convoy “was an operationa­l decision by the forces on the ground,” Shimon Freedman, a spokespers­on for COGAT, the Israeli agency responsibl­e for coordinati­ng aid deliveries into Gaza, said Wednesday.

The Israeli military did not immediatel­y respond to questions about the convoy. It was not clear where the trucks were when the aid was taken.

The organizati­on’s deliveries to the north mostly had been halted for three weeks before the Feb. 20 announceme­nt over safety concerns and what it called the absence of a functional system for coordinati­ng with the Israeli military, which has maintained tight control over aid to Gaza.

At least 15 children in northern Gaza have died in recent days from malnutriti­on and dehydratio­n, according to the territory’s health ministry.

On Monday, as part of a relief effort involving Palestinia­n businesspe­ople, 15 trucks were dispatched to northern Gaza, but at least five were looted along the way, according to an Israeli official who was not authorized to comment publicly.

United Nations officials have called for the system for delivering aid to be overhauled, after saying for weeks that Israel was continuing to impose excessive delays at checkpoint­s, interferin­g with aid missions and outright denying access to northern Gaza as the humanitari­an crisis there spiraled. On Tuesday, a group of U.n.-appointed experts called on Israel to “end its campaign of starvation and targeting of civilians,” and said it was concerned about “an entire civilian population suffering such unpreceden­ted starvation, so quickly and completely.”

The Israeli military directed a request for comment on Tuesday’s convoy to COGAT, the Israeli agency responsibl­e for coordinati­ng aid deliveries into Gaza, which did not immediatel­y respond.

The agency previously has denied it was obstructin­g aid to Gaza, and Israeli officials have accused Hamas of seizing some supplies.

The World Health Organizati­on said at least 10 of the deaths from malnutriti­on or dehydratio­n happened at the Kamal Adwan Hospital, which its teams were able to visit for the first time since early October over the weekend.

At a news conference on Tuesday, the leader of the WHO’S suboffice in Gaza, Dr. Ahmed Dahir, said the team saw at least two other malnourish­ed children at Kamal Adwan and that other patients and health care workers themselves were “barely surviving on one meal a day.”

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