No aid scale-up yet in Gaza, aid agencies say
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Around 50 international aid groups, including Care and Oxfam, have still not received clearance for supplies to enter Gaza.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Follow topic:
GENEVA – A major ramp-up of aid needed to ease famine and suffering in Gaza after two years of war has yet to happen, the Red Cross and UN agencies said on Oct 14, as Israeli authorities warned of slower aid flows as the southern Rafah crossing remained shut.
Three Israeli officials said Israel had decided to restrict aid into the shattered Gaza Strip and delay plans to open the border crossing to Egypt at least until Oct 15, because Hamas had been too slow to turn over bodies of dead hostages.
Crossings need to open, aid agencies say
“We need all crossings open. The longer Rafah stays closed the more the suffering prolongs for people in Gaza, especially those displaced in the south,” Unicef spokesman Ricardo Pires said.
US President Donald Trump declared an end to the Israel-Hamas conflict on Oct 13
Cogat, the arm of the Israeli military that oversees aid flows into Gaza, said on Oct 10 that it expected about 600 aid trucks to enter Gaza daily during the ceasefire. It did not respond to a request for further comment on Oct 14.
All of the aid so far has been through the south and central crossing of Kissufim, UN agencies said, with those at the epicentre of the humanitarian crisis in northern Gaza, to where tens of thousands of people are returning, still shut.
No surge in aid seen yet
“The shift has not yet happened. We are still witnessing only few trucks coming in, and large crowds approaching these trucks in a way that does absolutely not conform to humanitarian standards,” International Committee of the Red Cross spokesman Christian Cardon told reporters in Geneva on Oct 14.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said only some 350 humanitarian aid trucks have entered Gaza in the last few days.
The UN World Food Programme (WFP) said on Oct 14 that it has brought in 137 trucks since the weekend, noting it also has not yet seen a ramp-up in aid. None of its aid entered Gaza on Oct 13 because of the hostage-prisoner exchange, it added.
Aid agencies are seeking to rapidly scale up supplies to people in Gaza City, where up to 400,000 people have not received assistance for several weeks, according to the WFP.
Unicef spokeswoman Tess Ingram said it has been able to bring in dozens of trucks with life-saving supplies, such as family tents, plastic tarpaulin sheets, winter clothes and hygiene kits.
“Hopefully scale-up can be seen in earnest later this week,” she added.
Agencies face ongoing restrictions
Around 50 international aid groups, including the Norwegian Refugee Council, Care and Oxfam, have still not received clearance for supplies to enter as they face ongoing registration barriers.
“We’re in this limbo... The needs of a population that has experienced famine over a period of months is not going to be met with a few trucks,” Ms Bushra Khalidi, an Oxfam policy adviser, said.
Cogat previously said that aid trucks operated by the UN and “approved international organisations”, the private sector and donor countries would be allowed to enter Gaza.
Catholic Relief Services has, however, received permission to bring in supplies with shelter as a priority, Mr Jason Knapp, an official with the humanitarian agency, told Reuters from Gaza. REUTERS