
Fuel shortages in Gaza at 'critical levels', United Nations warns
GENEVA (AFP): The United Nations warned Saturday that dire fuel shortages in the Gaza Strip had reached "critical levels", threatening to further increase the suffering in the war-ravaged Palestinian territory.
Seven UN agencies said in a joint statement that "fuel is the backbone of survival in Gaza".
Fuel was needed to "power hospitals, water systems, sanitation networks, ambulances, and every aspect of humanitarian operations", they said, highlighting that bakeries also needed fuel to operate.
The besieged Palestinian territory has been facing dire fuel shortages since the beginning of the devastating war that erupted after Hamas's deadly attack inside Israel on October 7, 2023.
But now "fuel shortage in Gaza has reached critical levels", warned the agencies, including the World Health Organization, the World Food Programme and the humanitarian agency OCHA.
"After almost two years of war, people in Gaza are facing extreme hardships, including widespread food insecurity," they pointed out.
"When fuel runs out, it places an unbearable new burden on a population teetering on the edge of starvation."
The UN said that without adequate fuel, the agencies that have been responding to the deep humanitarian crisis in a territory swathes of which have been flattened by Israeli bombing and facing famine warnings, "will likely be forced to stop their operations entirely".
"This means no health services, no clean water, and no capacity to deliver aid," the statement said.
"Without adequate fuel, Gaza faces a collapse of humanitarian efforts," it warned.
"Without fuel, bakeries and community kitchens cannot operate. Water production and sanitation systems will shut down, leaving families without safe drinking water, while solid waste and sewage pile up in the streets," it added.
"These conditions expose families to deadly disease outbreaks and push Gaza's most vulnerable even closer to death."
The warning comes days after the UN managed to bring fuel into Gaza for the first time in 130 days.
While a "welcome development", the UN agencies said the 75,000 litres of fuel they were able to bring in was just "a small fraction of what is needed each day to keep daily life and critical aid operations running".
"The United Nations agencies and humanitarian partners cannot overstate the urgency of this moment," they said.
"Fuel must be allowed into Gaza in sufficient quantities and consistently to sustain life-saving operations." - AFP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Free Malaysia Today
38 minutes ago
- Free Malaysia Today
EU climate VP seeks ‘fair competition' with China on green energy
The European Commission's Teresa Ribera vowed that the EU would defend the interests of its companies, society and businesses. (EPA Images pic) BEIJING : The EU is seeking 'fair competition' with China and not a race to the bottom in wages and environmental standards, the bloc's vice president for the clean transition told AFP on Monday. Deep frictions exist over economic relations between the 27-nation bloc and Beijing. Brussels is worried that a manufacturing glut propelled by massive state subsidies could add to a yawning trade deficit and result in a flood of cheap Chinese goods undercutting European firms. Speaking during a visit to Beijing ahead of a major EU-China summit in the city this month, Teresa Ribera dismissed China's claims that the bloc was engaging in 'protectionism'. 'We Europeans don't want to go down a race towards low incomes, lower labour rights or lower environmental standards,' said Ribera, who also serves as the bloc's competition chief. 'It is obvious that we could not be in a good position if there could be an … over-flooding in our markets that could undermine us with prices that do not reflect the real cost,' she said. The EU imposed extra import taxes of up to 35% on Chinese electric vehicle imports in October and has investigated Chinese-owned solar panel manufacturers. Asked whether EU moves against Chinese green energy firms could harm the global transition to renewables, Ribera said: 'It is fair to say that, yes, we may benefit in the very short term.' However, she also warned 'it could kill the possibility' of long-term investment in the bloc's future. Global disruption Ribera's visit comes as Beijing seeks to improve relations with the EU as a counterweight to superpower rival the US, whose president Donald Trump has disrupted the global order and pulled Washington out of international climate accords. 'I don't think that we have witnessed many occasions in the past where a big economy, a big country, decides to isolate in such a relevant manner,' she told AFP. 'It is a pity.' 'The Chinese may think that the US has given them a great opportunity to be much more relevant in the international arena,' Ribera said. The visit also comes as the bloc and the US wrangle over a trade deal. Trump threw months of negotiations into disarray on Saturday by announcing he would hammer the bloc with sweeping tariffs if no agreement was reached by Aug 1. Ribera vowed on Monday that the EU would 'defend the interests of our companies, our society, our business'. Asked if a deal was in sight, she said: 'Who knows? We'll do our best.' However, she insisted that EU digital competition rules – frequently condemned by Trump as 'non-tariff barriers' to trade – were not on the table. 'It's a question of sovereignty,' Ribera said. 'We are not going to compromise on the way we understand that we need to defend our citizens and our society, our values and our market.'


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
US envoy Kellogg arrives in Ukraine for defence talks
KYIV: US envoy Keith Kellogg arrived in Kyiv on Monday for defence talks with senior leadership after US President Donald Trump announced new Patriot air defence systems supplies to Ukraine. The visit -- more than three years into the Kremlin's invasion -- comes as Russian forces killed three civilians in east Ukraine and launched dozens of long-range drones at targets across the country. 'We welcome US Special Representative Keith Kellogg to Ukraine,' Andriy Yermak, a top aide to the Ukrainian president wrote on social media. 'Russia does not want to cease fire. Peace through strength is the principle of US President Donald Trump, and we support this approach,' Yermak added, alongside images of him welcoming Kellogg at Kyiv's central train station. Washington had said this month it would pause some arms deliveries to Kyiv but Trump has changed tack, criticising Russian President Vladimir Putin for intensifying attacks as US-led peace talks stalled. Trump said this weekend Washington would also supply Kyiv with more Patriot air defence batteries, but added that the United States would not pay for them. Kellogg's visit comes as the US president is set to meet with NATO's Secretary General Mark Rutte in Washington later on Monday. Trump has said he would issue a 'major statement' on the war on Monday. Russian forces meanwhile said on Monday they had claimed new territory in eastern Ukraine with the capture of two villages, one in the Donetsk region and another in the Zaporizhzhia region. Moscow claimed to have annexed both almost three years ago despite not having full military control over them. Its forces also killed at least three civilians in the eastern Kharkiv and Sumy regions on Monday, regional Ukrainian officials announced. Moscow has stepped up aerial strikes on Ukraine over recent months, launching hundreds of drones almost on a daily basis. The Ukrainian air force said Monday Russia had launched 136 drones and four missiles at Ukraine. – AFP


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Iran says ‘no specific date' for US nuclear talks
TEHRAN: Iran said Monday it had 'no specific date' for a meeting with the United States on Tehran's nuclear programme, following a war with Israel that had derailed negotiations. 'For now, no specific date, time or location has been determined regarding this matter,' said foreign ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baqaei of plans for a meeting between Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and US envoy Steve Witkoff. Iran had been negotiating with the United States before Israel began strikes on its nuclear facilities last month, which Washington later joined. Araghchi and Witkoff met five times, starting in April, without concluding a deal, before Israel launched surprise strikes on June 13, starting a 12-day war. 'We have been serious in diplomacy and the negotiation process, we entered with good faith, but as everyone witnessed, before the sixth round the Zionist regime, in coordination with the United States, committed military aggression against Iran', said Baqaei. The United States launched its own set of strikes against Iran's nuclear programme on June 22, hitting the uranium enrichment facility at Fordo, in Qom province south of Tehran, as well as nuclear sites in Isfahan and Natanz. The extent of the damage from the strikes remains unknown. With its own strikes, numbering in the hundreds, Israel killed nuclear scientists and top-ranking military officers as well as hitting military, nuclear and other sites. Iran responded with missile and drone attacks on Israel, while it attacked a US base in Qatar in retaliation for Washington's strikes. Israel and Western nations accuse Iran of pursuing nuclear weapons, a charge Tehran has consistently denied. While it is the only non-nuclear power to enrich uranium to 60-percent purity, close to the level needed for a warhead, the UN's atomic energy watchdog has said it had no indication that Iran was working to weaponise its stockpiles. – AFP