Israel gives tour of UN aid left ‘rotting' in Gaza
Israel has given a tour of a large storage site within Gaza containing what it claims to be 1,000 lorries-worth of aid that the United Nations (UN) has failed to deliver.
The move on Thursday intensified a row with the international community, which has become increasingly critical of starvation levels in the Strip.
Amid escalating warnings of famine, Israel has in recent days sought to blame the UN and major NGOs for not distributing available supplies, saying it has placed no restrictions on them doing so.
It released well-produced drone footage showing what appeared to be aid packages across a multiple-hectare site within the perimeter wire.
Credit: Reuters
Israeli journalists were subsequently shown around the facility near the Kerem Shalom crossing, with one senior IDF officer criticising the 'famine narrative' he said was propagated by Hamas.
Col Abdullah Halabi, of the defence ministry's Coordinator of Government Activity in the Territories unit, said: 'The State of Israel allows the entry of humanitarian aid beyond the standards of international law, without restriction. As long as the international community makes an effort to bring in the aid, we will allow them to bring it in.'
Mike Huckabee, the US ambassador to Israel, reposted pictures of the footage on social media, saying: 'UN food is either looted by Hamas or rots in the sun.'
But the UN has said that, in practice, Israel is not facilitating the distribution of its aid in Gaza.
Stéphane Dujarric, the UN spokesman, said the country was imposing 'tremendous bureaucratic impediments' and 'tremendous security impediments'.
He said: 'Frankly I think there is a lack of willingness to allow us to do our work.'
This comes against a backdrop of severe denunciations of Israel's conduct in Gaza by the UK, France, Australia, Canada and others.
On Thursday, Sir Keir Starmer condemned the 'unspeakable' and 'indefensible' suffering of Gazans, reiterating Labour's support for a Palestinian state, while France went further by promising to formally recognise such an entity in September.
The full details of why the UN and its NGO partners are unable to deliver aid into Gaza are not clear.
But it is believed that the organisation had to adapt its delivery routes and methods from its traditional patterns because of the deteriorating security and humanitarian situation, and that Israel is not facilitating this on the ground.
On Thursday, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said that the previous day, Israel had facilitated only eight of 16 requested movements of aid.
The UN believes that around one quarter of the Strip's approximately two million residents are now facing famine.
Israel imposed a blockade of aid deliveries at the beginning of March, claiming that Hamas routinely seizes supplies and uses them to finance its terror operations and maintain control over the civilian population.
Since the end of May, a new system was opened using the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a US contractor which requires civilians to walk to a handful of large purpose-built distribution centres to collect aid.
The system has been associated with repeated mass shootings, with the UN accusing Israel of killing more than 1,000 civilians near the sites.
Israel has rejected the claims, admitting only to firing warning shots or shots 'near' Palestinians, and blaming Hamas for the chaos.
Credit: X/@HowidyHamza
Israeli army radio was reported citing a military official that Israel would allow foreign countries to parachute aid into Gaza starting on Friday.
A parallel prong of aid – principally delivered by the UN – is technically in place, but because of the fragmentation of Gazan society, the body is no longer able to safely deliver food, water, medical supplies and fuel into population centres in the way it did before March.
Trucks are routinely looted by desperate civilians or by armed gangs.
The situation has fuelled a bitter war of claim and counter-claim between Israel and the UN, whose relations were already at an all-time low.
Among the un-evidenced accusations levelled by anonymous Israeli government sources is that the UN has requested the Hamas-run 'blue police' to escort its trucks.
On Friday, the row spilled over onto the BBC's Today Programme when David Mencer, a spokesman for Benjamin Netanyahu's office, accused Nick Robinson of telling lies.
In a bad-tempered exchange, Mr Mencer described the UN programme as a 'billion-dollar racket' and said any food shortages were engineered by Hamas.
He said Israel had offered to provide security to deliver the aid at the Kerem Shalom crossing, saying it would provide two weeks' worth of food for every person in Gaza.
'The UN is working in cooperation with Hamas to restrict the amount of aid to its own people,' he claimed.
The spokesman did not give a reason for why the UN would deliberately restrict aid deliveries.
Credit: BBC Today Programme
The OCHA said, regarding Wednesday's aid efforts: 'The facilitation of humanitarian movements inside Gaza, out of 16 attempts to coordinate such movements yesterday, only eight were facilitated – including the collection and transfer of limited fuel.
'Two other movements were initially approved but then faced impediments on the ground, three were outright denied – including the retrieval of medical supplies – and the remaining three had to be cancelled by the organizers.
'OCHA and its partners emphasize that the aid that they have been able to bring into Gaza over the past two months is nowhere near sufficient to meet people's survival needs.'
It comes as Medecins Sans Frontieres said the rate of malnutrition among young children and pregnant or breastfeeding women at its clinics in Gaza had tripled in the last two weeks, and now stood at 25 per cent.
Reuters reported that an analysis by the US agency for international development, completed in June, found no evidence of systematic theft of aid by Hamas.
The analysis examined 156 incidents of theft or loss of US-funded supplies reported by US aid partner organisations between October 2023 and May this year.
USAID has now been largely shut down, thanks to Donald Trump's government spending cuts, and the leaked documents were heavily criticised by a state department spokesman.
It came as footage emerged appearing to show ultra-nationalist Israelis blocking the road to prevent aid trucks from getting into Gaza.
A spokesman for UNICEF, the UN humanitarian body for children, said Gaza was on the brink of running out of specialised therapeutic food needed to save the lives of severely malnourished children.
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Solve the daily Crossword

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

28 minutes ago
Over 4 years since the Taliban took Kabul, millions of Afghans have been sent back to a country in crisis
Over the course of the past four years since the Taliban took control of Kabul, plunging Afghanistan into a humanitarian crisis and stripping away women's rights, millions of Afghans who initially fled have now been expelled from Iran and Pakistan, according to the United Nations. Over 1.5 million Afghans have returned to Afghanistan so far this year, according to the United Nations International Organization for Migration (IOM). 700,000 Afghan migrants have returned to Afghanistan from Iran this year as of June 2025, according to the UN. Some have never set foot in Afghanistan, while others haven't been in the country since fleeing it decades ago, said Arafat Jamal, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) representative in Afghanistan. Russia became the first country to recognize the Taliban as Afghanistan's official government, but other countries have not done so. Many of the returnees arrived at the Afghan border in buses 'bewildered, disoriented, and tired and hungry,' according to Jamal. Earlier this year, Iran ordered all of the estimated 2 million undocumented Afghans -- out of the estimated 6 million total Afghans in Iran -- to leave the country. Since the 12-day war between Israel and Iran in June, UN agencies have seen a large increase in the number of Afghans crossing the border from Iran back into Afghanistan, Jamal said. This increase of Afghans leaving Iran came as the government of Iran intensified their campaign against Afghans, accusing many of them of espionage, according to the Center for Human Rights in Iran. Pakistan has also accelerated the expulsion of Afghan refugees within its borders since April. More Afghans are expected to leave Pakistan after the government of Pakistan confirmed it won't renew Proof of Registration cards for Afghans, according to the IOM. Some experts warn that these actions constitute a violation of the principle of non-refoulement – meaning not forcing refugees or asylum seekers to return to a country where they may be subject to persecution – in possible violation of international law. In previous years, UNHCR could provide $2,000 in cash assistance to returnee Afghan families, enabling them to build autonomy and get back on their feet once they returned to their home country. In the past few months, cuts in foreign aid funding have decreased that budget to just $156 per family, 'simply enabling a person to survive for a week or two on the basic necessities,' Jamal said. Once inside Afghanistan, returnees' face difficult conditions back at home. In addition to the Taliban restricting women's rights by banning their movements outside of the home without a male guardian and by restricting their access to education past age 12, Afghanistan is also facing climate change and environmental challenges -- around a third of Afghans don't have access to basic drinking water, according to Unicef. The World Food Program reported that 3.1 million Afghans are on the brink of starvation. Zahra, a journalist living in Afghanistan who asked ABC News to use only her first name due to fear of persecution by the Taliban, said that Afghans have done their best to support returnees, despite having very few resources themselves. "Even if I have one extra pillow, I should give it to others," she told ABC News. 'It's enough if we eat lunch and skip dinner to give this meal to another.' In the last several months, international humanitarian aid funding has been slashed by previously committed allies. In April 2025, the U.S. Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction announced that it was cutting nearly all assistance programs to Afghanistan. Since the Taliban takeover in 2021, the U.S. had been Afghanistan's largest donor, according to SIGAR. Soon after the U.S.'s April announcement, the U.K. -- another major donor to humanitarian initiatives in the country -- reduced its aid to Afghanistan by 19%. More than 400 health facilities, 400 acute malnutrition centers, and 300 clinics for survivors of gender based violence have shut down as a result, according to the UN. Zahra said she has witnessed the devastating consequences of these facilities' closures. She said there was a pregnant woman who needed medical help but couldn't go to her local clinic, which had shuttered due to aid cuts. The expecting mother could not immediately secure a male chaperone to travel to the nearest open clinic, as mandated by the Taliban, Zahra said. As a result, according to Zahra, both the woman and her baby lost their lives. 'You just cut the aid to kill people slowly,' she told ABC News. 'It is like you're firing and shooting at humans.' Now, as millions of additional Afghans return to a country already facing multiple humanitarian crises, many international NGOs are operating with inadequate funding to address the many issues in the country. UNHCR, for example, said it has less than a quarter of the funding it needs to address the emergency situation in Afghanistan and neighboring countries. Additionally, the International Rescue Committee has had to suspend some of their education services in Afghanistan. These international bodies are calling for an increase in funding and support. "More humanitarian aid is urgently needed to protect and assist Afghans forced to flee," the UNHCR wrote on its website. 'What's happening in Afghanistan are crimes against humanity – crimes against the whole of humanity – which should shock our conscience and provoke action by all,' said Richard Bennett, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Afghanistan. "It is not time to give up."
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
In Gaza, tribal fighters and diplomats eye the same prize
Gazan resident Mahmoud Hamdan says that Palestinians, caught between Israel and Hamas, have 'no clear political alternative' As Israel moves to seize Gaza City, dismantle Hamas, and keep a long-term military presence, local medical staff reported at least 48 dead Tuesday in strikes across Gaza City and Khan Yunis. Five more people, including two children, have died of starvation and malnutrition in Gaza in the past 24 hours, the territory's health ministry said. Critics warn that Netanyahu's Oct. 7, 2025, deadline for seizing Gaza City could uproot thousands more residents and further deepen the political vacuum left by Hamas' retreat and the Palestinian Authority's 18-year absence. That gap is already being contested on the ground: clan-based militias are stepping into governance roles, mediating disputes and escorting aid convoys in parts of the Strip. Rooted in Bedouin and clan traditions, these kinship systems have long mediated disputes, distributed aid and maintained social order when formal government structures faltered. The war has brought them back to the forefront, operating as de facto municipal authorities in many neighborhoods. A Hamas-free pocket in eastern Rafah — controlled by the clan-based 'Popular Forces' of Yasser Abu Shabab — has emerged as an example of an alternative local order. Its future is uncertain, but the enclave is drawing attention as both an anomaly and a possible preview of postwar governance. The Yasser Abu Shabab – Popular Forces Facebook page — followed by more than 30,000 people — describes the group as 'The voice of truth against terrorism for a safe homeland for all' and labels its feed as the group's 'media office.' Operating in the eastern sector of Rafah, near the Gaza–Egypt border, the group showcases its activities through frequent online updates. In a July 30 video, Abu Shabab said his forces carried out a 'special operation' evacuating dozens of civilians from Deir al-Balah, Nuseirat and Khan Yunis to 'safe areas' under their control in eastern Rafah. The group said it spent months building the refuge to shelter Gazans 'still suffering from Hamas' looting and repression.' On July 31, it said its fighters 'secured and imported dozens of trucks' carrying flour and other supplies, and on Aug. 6, it reported escorting 'a large number of trucks' loaded with food, flour and cooking oil out of its territory. Hamas's replacement Omar Salim, 22, a student from Rafah, told The Media Line that Yasser Abu Shabab and his fighters were one of the few realistic options for ending Hamas' rule. 'What Yasser Abu Shabab's popular forces are doing is probably the best option we've got right now. We just want peace — we don't want to be ruled by armed groups like Hamas that drag us into war. We're sick of it,' Salim said. 'Sure, they still need to get better organized, but they're working on it. These days, a lot of families are moving into areas controlled by the popular forces because they feel safer there than in the neighborhoods where Hamas militias are still around.' In Deir al-Balah, Ibrahim Ahmed, 36, who worked at a local mobile phone shop until the 2023 war began, described the chaos and deprivation now gripping Gaza as 'mired in uncertainty,' with many 'grappling with anxiety about what lies ahead.' People rush to stockpile food and medicine, he said, 'but soaring prices and persistent shortages complicate these efforts.' Ahmed told The Media Line he sees no alliances among the warring factions. 'Israeli forces have largely subdued Hamas, which now clings to a mere handful of weapons, primarily to instill fear among civilians and quash dissent,' he said. 'Hamas' claims about readiness to resist an Israeli takeover of Gaza City are hollow media posturing — a facade for maintaining their waning influence.' He added that the Palestinian Authority 'appears increasingly irrelevant,' while armed groups like Abu Shabab 'navigate freely within Israeli-controlled territories' and avoid conflict with Israeli forces. 'This dynamic suggests Israel may turn to these clans during a potential period of military governance, positioning them as a counterbalance to both Hamas and the Palestinian Authority,' Ahmed warned. 'Mr. Netanyahu and the Israeli military are cultivating a new power structure. But Gaza risks descending into civil war and chaos.' Meanwhile, Hamas' feared counterintelligence Sahm unit continues to kill, torture, maim and intimidate Palestinians in Gaza, with the group posting graphic images and videos of its actions on a Telegram channel believed to be operated from Belgium. The footage shows detainees beaten, bound and in some cases executed, as the unit seeks to stamp out suspected dissent or collaboration. Other Facebook videos last week showed a convoy of masked, rifle-waving fighters patrolling a Gaza neighborhood. On the platform — one of the few spaces where Gazans can safely vent about the suffering caused by Israel's war and Hamas' grip on their streets — users mocked the fighters' covered faces and apparent comfort amid civilian hunger and deprivation. Mahmoud Hamdan, 41, a father of three from Gaza City, said a military operation to reclaim the city is 'unlikely to unite factions; instead, it may deepen divisions, fragment communities and increase violence.' 'Palestinian civilians suffer the most,' Hamdan told The Media Line, 'trapped between Israel and Hamas, with no control or refuge in their homes amid the chaos.' He sees 'no clear political alternative' — neither from clan factions nor possible Arab troop involvement. In his view, the main aim is 'strengthening Netanyahu's power,' with the prime minister 'manipulating the situation with Hamas to justify his controversial political moves.' Hamdan's fears of Gaza sliding toward civil war come as even some of Hamas' staunchest foreign patrons signal a shift. Pivoting from years of alignment with Hamas, Qatar and Turkey — two of the movement's most reliable political and financial backers joined other Arab and Muslim-majority states on July 29, 2025, in a joint declaration urging the group to return control of Gaza to the Palestinian Authority and disarm. At the same time, a new technocratic governance plan is being advanced by former Israeli intelligence operative Ari Ben-Menashe, now a Montréal-based lobbyist, who is positioning West Bank businessman Samir Hulileh to lead a transitional administration under an Arab League framework acceptable to the Trump administration — if not all elements of the Netanyahu cabinet. That includes far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who has openly called for the expulsion of Palestinians from Gaza and the resettlement of the Strip with Jewish Israelis, a vision sharply at odds with any internationally backed governance arrangement. The Hulileh concept envisions securing $53 billion in Gulf and European reconstruction funding, expanded border crossings, and up to 1,000 aid trucks a day — a top-down blueprint dependent on Arab and US endorsement. Hulileh, 68, is a Ramallah-based economist and former senior Palestinian Authority official with no political or professional ties to Gaza. Born in Kuwait in 1957, he earned a master's in economics from the American University of Beirut. He later served as CEO of the Palestine Development and Investment Company, one of the largest investment holding firms in the territories. A close confidant of US-Palestinian billionaire Bashar Masri, founder of Rawabi and head of Massar International, Hulileh has been involved in major West Bank development projects. Masri's investment network and political connections, including with the Trump administration, could help secure foreign capital and diplomatic support for the plan. Speaking to the Palestinian Ajyal radio on Tuesday, Hulileh said, 'In July 2024, I received a call from a Canadian contractor who was working closely with the US administration and the Pentagon on their search for moderate Palestinian figures.' Hulileh added, 'I then reached out to President Mahmoud Abbas informally, hoping to gain his essential support and endorsement for the initiative,' saying 'Israel firmly rejected the proposal, as did several Arab states that were expected to provide financial backing.' The Palestinian presidency has rejected the idea, saying it would aid Israeli efforts to separate Gaza from the West Bank. While Hulileh's candidacy reflects a top-down, internationally backed vision for Gaza's governance, Yasser Abu Shabab's 'Popular Forces' is a homegrown operation run through Gaza's tribal networks. Azzam Shaath, a political analyst from Deir al-Balah, told The Media Line the rise of Abu Shabab stems from 'the exceptional circumstances created by the Israeli war on the Strip.' He argued that Israel has tried to cultivate tribal and local leadership as alternatives to Hamas and the Palestinian Authority but 'has failed to produce any credible Palestinian civil body capable of managing aid or leading Gaza after the war.' Shaath said Israel works with Abu Shabab 'to sow further instability, dismantle Hamas' rule and create the illusion of viable Palestinian alternatives.' In reality, he views the group as 'a temporary, reactive phenomenon that will likely fade once the war ends and Palestinian factions agree on a unified governing committee.' 'As long as the conflict drags on, Abu Shabab will keep a limited foothold by exploiting the security vacuum and the absence of formal governance.' Solve the daily Crossword


Boston Globe
3 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Facing up to the stark realities of Gaza
Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up Netanyahu recently announced that Israel will take over the Gaza strip to 'further the elimination of Hamas.' It's another step in his attempt to annex Gaza. The United States has always considered Israel to be an ally. We have sent billions of dollars worth of weaponry and other aid to Israel. But Netanyahu is not our friend. The United States needs to stop supporting this power-hungry despot. Advertisement Sandra Breen Warwick, RI All eyes are on the innocents of Gaza Re ' Advertisement As plans to escalate the war against Hamas come to light, the horror of starvation in Gaza increases daily. The people of the world are watching the heartless killing of innocents in Gaza — women, children, and the disabled. Israel, Hamas, and Iran are directly culpable. But we American taxpayers are financing this horror. We are paying for the fighter planes and ammunition used by armed Israelis to rain death and destruction on Gaza's people. We are complicit in the horrifying starvation of innocents, as the eyes of the world watch children struggle for life and die from lack of food. Unless this horror is stopped immediately and the besieged innocents of Gaza have access to food, water, and safety, then the aggressors — both Israel and Hamas — should be shunned by the world. A coalition led by the United Nations must be given direct access to Gaza, with armed security and a variety of peacekeepers paving the way. America, my country, must lead the way to peace in Gaza. We have been the world's peacekeepers since the end of World War II. Why are we now abandoning the innocent, the vulnerable, the starving children? John J. Drew Boston The writer is the former president/CEO of Action for Boston Community Development. History is repeating itself, and it needs to stop It is not anti-Jewish to be against the Israeli government's actions in Gaza, which many experts conclude amount to genocide. Such mass starvation is an affront to humanity. Competent humanitarian agencies need to be given access to those starving; the annihilation of the Palestinian people needs to stop. President Bill Clinton wavered and did not call the Rwanda tragedy a genocide until it was too late. History is now repeating itself. Advertisement John Hammock Belmont The writer is president of Episcopalians for Global Reconciliation and former president of Oxfam America. There probably won't be a 'Diary of a Young Girl' from Gaza Why we will likely never get to know the 'Anne Frank' of Gaza: 1. There is no attic in Gaza. 2. There is no food in Gaza. 3. There is no neighbor who can protect her. 4. Her family is likely injured or dead. 5. International journalists are not allowed in Gaza. 6. Soon, she will be dead. Kathleen Curtis Marblehead Some needed momentum for a two-state solution Re ' Ron Israel Milton Hisham Jabi Nablus, West Bank The writers are members of the board of the Global Citizens' Initiative, a nonprofit focused on bringing people and organizations together to solve global problems. Where is the outrage over Hamas's actions? Where's the outrage? Hamas recently released video showing two barely alive, emaciated Israeli hostages abducted from the Nova music festival during the Hamas invasion on Oct. 7, 2023. Outrage against the tragedies of the continuing war in the aftermath of that vicious attack appears to be selective. It is reserved for Israel as the perceived sole perpetrator of all the misery now engulfing Gaza. Hamas, which for 20 years brutally oppressed the population under its control, in part through holding the reins of food and aid distribution, gets a pass from the international community. The new video evidence of Hamas's starvation of these hostages can't move the needle. Instead, France, Britain, and Canada have announced their intention to recognize a Palestinian state, under various conditions. With no plan for effective governance in place, how will that help? Absent a coordinated agreement for responsible administration of Gaza by a coalition of Arab and Western power players, it won't. Advertisement David Greenfield Waltham Israelis and Americans need to take a stand I agree with John Benjamin's piece 'Israel is losing America' (Ideas, Aug. 10). The Gaza atrocities are terrible. The United States would have lost worldwide support if we conducted our Afghanistan war with such callous regard for civilians. Israel must be held responsible for its conduct. At the same time, the Trump administration is using American Jews and Israel as a divisive lever in the United States. His extortion of universities and companies is based in part on claims of antisemitism, while completely ignoring anti-Palestinian views. The good people of Israel, like the good people of the United States, need to reject the policies of their extremist governments and enable freedom and equality for all. John Greichen Jr. Newport, R.I.