
Israel Accused of Enabling Aid Looting to Undermine Gaza's Social Fabric
Instead, eyewitnesses and local analysts say it is being intercepted by armed gangs operating with impunity, turning Gaza's aid distribution into a tool of social collapse.
Residents in the war-ravaged territory say the pattern is clear: aid trucks enter, media cameras roll, and scenes of international assistance are broadcast.
However, beyond the optics, aid is hijacked by local groups allegedly shielded by Israel's selective enforcement, and the result is a desperate population forced to either submit to criminal control or face starvation.
In a refugee camp in western Gaza, Umm Fadi, a mother of four, stirs a pot of water and lentils, her family's only meal for the day.
'We haven't had bread in three days,' she says, nothing. Even grass has become part of our meals. My children ask me, Mama, when will we eat again? And I have no answer.'
She explains that flour enters Gaza but is sold at unaffordable prices.
'They say there's distribution, but one kilo costs 40 shekels. Who can afford that? The strong get the food. We survive on rumors.' She said.
Two days ago, she witnessed looters tear flour sacks apart in daylight, adding, 'They fought over it with sticks and knives. There was blood on the floor. I'll never forget it.'
Not far away, Abu Talal Ayash, a father of five, limps from a stab wound.
'I waited 12 hours under the sun for a chance to get flour. I finally grabbed a sack, but someone stabbed me in the leg and stole it.' He said.
He says, 'This isn't random crime; this is organized theft, where the aid comes in and is resold at ten times the price, and Israel sees it all and says nothing. They're starving us or letting us be killed for food.'
Political analyst Talal Okal believes the looting is part of a deliberate Israeli strategy.
'This isn't just a breakdown caused by war; it's a calculated plan to fracture Gaza's society from within,' he says.
Okal argues that Israel restricts the quantity and timing of aid deliveries, then leaves them vulnerable to chaos.
'The goal is more than hunger; it's to destroy trust and dissolve the social fabric that once held this community together.' Okal said.
He adds that the international fallout works in the Israeli occupation's favor.
'When the world sees Gaza spiraling into chaos, Israel can say, 'Look, these people are ungovernable. It justifies further crackdowns or even future takeovers under the guise of restoring order.' He said.
According to Okal, the broader danger lies in what he calls a 'silent war,' as the Israeli occupation doesn't need bombs for this phase,' he says.
'They use hunger, fear, and internal collapse. It's a war that erodes values and turns survival into savagery.' He added.
For many in Gaza, the desperation is no longer just about feeding their children, it's about defending their dignity in the face of engineered anarchy, and as aid continues to flow in without reaching the people, hunger has become a weapon, and the looters its frontline soldiers.
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