logo
Eyewitnesses say first aid supplies have reached people in Gaza

Eyewitnesses say first aid supplies have reached people in Gaza

Yahoo22-05-2025

The first aid deliveries have reached the population of the Gaza Strip after an almost three-month blockade by Israel, during which humanitarian organizations warned of acute levels of hunger.
A total of 87 lorries carrying flour, food and medical supplies drove overnight into the coastal area's interior, said Jihad Islim, the vice president of the Association of Private Freight Forwarders in Gaza.
They headed towards the locations of Deir al-Balah and Khan Younis in the south of the Gaza Strip, he added. A UN spokesman spoke of about 90 lorries and confirmed the contents of the deliveries.
Some bakeries in these locations began baking bread with the received flour at dawn and distributing it to the residents, bakery owners and other eyewitnesses reported.
However, local and international aid workers emphasized that the quantities that have arrived so far are just a drop in the ocean.
According to previous UN information, around 500 lorry deliveries would be needed daily to ensure the supply for the approximately 2 million Palestinians in Gaza.
Amjad Shawa, the director of the Palestinian NGO Network in Gaza, said that no aid has yet reached the north of Gaza, where the need is particularly dire. The lorries that have arrived so far represent only a fraction of the essential needs, he added.
Israel lifted the nearly three-month blockade of humanitarian aid on Sunday, but some of the lorries allowed into the sealed-off coastal area afterwards stood for days within the Gaza Strip near the border crossing because the route proposed for them was too dangerous, according to the UN.
Israel justified the blockade with the claim that the Palestinian militant organization Hamas would steal the aid supplies and sell them on the black market to finance its fighters and weapons.
The UN counters that Israel has not provided any evidence for this.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rep. Mike Lawler urges removal of troubled Haiti from President Trump's travel ban
Rep. Mike Lawler urges removal of troubled Haiti from President Trump's travel ban

CBS News

timean hour ago

  • CBS News

Rep. Mike Lawler urges removal of troubled Haiti from President Trump's travel ban

Congressman Mike Lawler on Thursday came out against Haiti's inclusion on President Trump's travel ban. The move prevents the entry of foreigners from 12 countries who are seeking to come to the U.S. permanently as legal immigrants, as well as those with temporary visas, including tourists. Lawler is strongly urging the Trump administration to reconsider the full suspension of entry for Haitian nationals. "We have a moral duty to help" Lawler, a Republican who represents all of Rockland and portions of Westchester, Putnam and Dutchess counties in New York, said Haiti's humanitarian crisis, including gang-related atrocities that have resulted in 1,600 killed in the first three months of 2025, is reason enough to embrace the troubled Caribbean nation, not reject its people outright. "Haiti's disaster has been growing, and given our proximity to the nation and our historical interventions. We have a moral duty to help. Haitians cannot do it alone," Lawler said in a statement. "This travel ban will only deepen the suffering of Haitians, many of whom have strong ties to the U.S., including the vibrant Haitian diaspora in the Hudson Valley that I represent in Congress, and risks isolating Haiti further at a time when they need our support most." Back in February, Lawler urged Mr. Trump to maintain Temporary Protected Status for Haitian citizens in the U.S., noting the country's "unstable and dangerous" conditions following the 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moïse, which gave way to a rise in gang violence. "I strongly urge the Trump administration to immediately remove Haiti from this list, or at the very least, reduce it to a partial ban as was done for countries like Cuba and Venezuela," Lawler said. "Last month, Secretary [of State Marco] Rubio testified that the Trump administration is 'prepared to play a leading role' in the Organization of American States and asserted that the UN-authorized Multinational Security Support Mission 'alone will not solve this problem.' I urge the administration to move forward with such a leading role, including a potential security mission led by OAS to end the crisis and lead Haiti on a path to stability." Here are the countries on the travel ban list Citing national security in the wake of last week's terror attack in Boulder, Colorado, Mr. Trump signed a proclamation on Wednesday night that bars travelers from the following countries to enter the U.S. permanently as legal immigrants, as well as those with temporary visas: Afghanistan Myanmar Chad The Republic of the Congo Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Haiti Iran Libya Somalia Sudan Yemen The proclamation also partially suspends the entry of travelers and immigrants from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan, and Venezuela. The ban takes effect on Monday.

The humanitarian crisis in Sudan deserves the world's attention and outrage
The humanitarian crisis in Sudan deserves the world's attention and outrage

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

The humanitarian crisis in Sudan deserves the world's attention and outrage

Five food aid workers were killed this week, a state sanctioned military force claimed control of a major city, and in just the past two years, nearly 4 million people have fled their homes and becomes refugees. You might think I'm describing events in Gaza, but you'd be wrong. I'm talking about what's been happening in Sudan. It's the humanitarian crisis it seems that almost no one wants to talk about despite several global powers exacerbating the civil war and trying to use Sudan for their own advantages. We need to talk about why that is, why 4 million people fleeing their homes — a number roughly equivalent to the population of Oklahoma — hasn't garnered more attention. The humanitarian crisis in Gaza is a background beat in the cadence of American news; while people disagree on whether starvation is being used as a weapon of war, the details and images of the conflict are readily available in our devices, and we experience a type of unfiltered access to what's happening there. People pore over every aid convoy movement and military strike launched since Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, using those details to analyze what should, can or will happen to the more than 2 million residents of Gaza. We should care about what's happening to humans in Gaza, whether they be Palestinian or Israeli. We should also care what's happening in Sudan. We are objectively not seeing the same level of online discourse or public empathy for the people living in unspeakable conditions there. It's not that Sudan lacks national security or global trade importance; world and regional powers like Russia, China, the UAE and Saudi Arabia are deeply involved in the current conflict. It is fair to look at this dynamic — and our individual consumption of global news — and ask if the relative lack of concern about this crisis unfolding in Africa is because the people at the center of it are Black. Though the narrative about Sudan's civil war isn't framed in biblical terms, its people have experienced apocalyptic conditions. Two brothers in arms worked to overthrow a harsh, autocratic leader, leading civilians to victory in 2019. But the two brothers, paramilitary leader Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo and the army chief, Gen. Abdel Fattah Burhan, could not resist the lure of earthly power. Falling victim to the sin of pride, they turned against each other and set their armies to burning villages, taking conscripts and razing the land. Men, women and children were not spared the brutal fighting; many had already experienced similar horrors before they escaped Syria. Famine, one of the four horsemen of the apocalypse, was declared a reality in North Darfur last year. According to the United Nations, on Monday night, 15 trucks carrying food had traveled more than 1,110 miles from the Red Sea toward the famine area. The World Food Programme and UNICEF insist standard protocol had been followed and all parties in the area had been made aware of the convoy. Still, it was attacked approximately 50 miles from the destination, leaving five people dead. This would have been the first convoy of food aid to reach the area in more than a year, the U.N. reports. In addition to statements of outrage from the WFP and UNICEF, U.N. spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said the United Nations condemns the 'horrendous attack in the strongest possible terms.' Still, the attack on humanitarian workers and the overall crisis itself have drawn minimal concern from inside the U.S. Sudan is attractive for trade and security reasons because of its location connecting the Red Sea and the Horn of Africa. When the fighting escalated in 2023, U.S. special operations forces dramatically airlifted 70 Americans to safety, then quietly stopped engaging in negotiations or diplomatic outreach. By 2024, the embattled Biden administration likely didn't find political sense in investing more resources into a region that Donald Trump had lumped together as 's---hole countries,' especially given the focus on a post-Oct. 7 Middle East. Meanwhile, Russia remains keen on establishing a Port Sudan naval base, its first on the continent, so it stands firm behind the current military dictator in Khartoum. The United Arab Emirates is accused of doing China's dirty work by supplying gold, bombs and howitzers to the opposition paramilitary group. Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, picks around the edges of both groups to recruit for its never-ending war in Yemen. Major world powers are openly using military power and massive economic investments to twist Sudan's crisis to their advantage, while the United States withdraws from the region. Even in a power dynamic calculus, humanitarian aid is widely seen as having a soft power that extends beyond the most immediate need. But under the Trump administration and the auspices of the Department of Government Efficiency, the United States has callously zeroed out aid and refugee programs that otherwise could save millions of lives while also advancing American interests. That's all the proof we need that the United States, as a government and a public, is no longer even pretending to care about what happens to people in the Sahel and the least among us. This article was originally published on

Netanyahu says Israel has 'activated' some Palestinian clans in the fight against Hamas
Netanyahu says Israel has 'activated' some Palestinian clans in the fight against Hamas

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Netanyahu says Israel has 'activated' some Palestinian clans in the fight against Hamas

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that Israel has 'activated' some local clans of Palestinians in Gaza in the fight against Hamas. In a video posted to his X account, Netanyahu said the government made the move on the advice of 'security officials,' in order to save lives of Israeli soldiers. The announcement came hours after a political opponent criticized him for arming unofficial groups of Palestinians in Gaza. Some local Palestinian families in Gaza are known to have arms and often wield some control in parts of the territory. In the past, before and during the war, some have had clashes or tensions with Hamas. An Israeli official said that one of the groups that Netanyahu was referring to was the so-called Abu Shabab group. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media. In recent weeks, the Abu Shabab group announced online that its fighters were helping protect aid shipments to the new distribution mechanism backed by Israel in southern Gaza.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store