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Jordanian, Emirati planes drop aid on Gaza as UN slams Israeli-induced starvation - War on Gaza

Jordanian, Emirati planes drop aid on Gaza as UN slams Israeli-induced starvation - War on Gaza

Al-Ahram Weekly27-07-2025
Two Jordanian and one Emirati plane dropped 25 tonnes of humanitarian aid over the Gaza Strip on Sunday, the Jordanian army said in a statement.
"The Jordanian Armed Forces on Sunday carried out three air drops on the Gaza Strip carrying humanitarian and food aid, one of which was with the United Arab Emirates," the statement said, adding that they were carrying 25 tonnes of aid.
Meanwhile, the UN's World Food Programme (WFP) said it had enough food in, or on its way to, the region to feed the 2.4 million people in the Gaza Strip for almost three months.
UN emergency relief coordinator Tom Fletcher said on X he welcomed the announcement of "humanitarian pauses".
"In contact with our teams on the ground who will do all we can to reach as many starving people as we can in this window," he said.
WFP said the pauses and corridors should allow emergency food to be safely delivered.
"Food aid is the only real way for most people inside Gaza to eat," it said in a statement.
It said a third of the population had not been eating for days, and 470,000 people in Gaza "are enduring famine-like conditions" that were leading to deaths.
WFP said more than 62,000 tonnes of food assistance were needed monthly to cover the entire Gaza population of more than two million.
The agency noted that, on top of Sunday's "pause" announcement, Israel had pledged to allow more trucks to enter Gaza with quicker clearances, along with "assurances of no armed forces or shootings near convoys", after months of total blockage.
"Together, we hope these measures will allow for a surge in urgently needed food assistance to reach hungry people without further delays," it said.
'Dystopian landscape'
UN rights chief Volker Turk said Israel, as the occupying power in Gaza, was obliged to ensure sufficient food was provided to the population.
"Children are starving and dying in front of our eyes. Gaza is a dystopian landscape of deadly attacks and destruction," he said in a statement.
He criticised a US and Israeli outfit, called the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), that in late May began distributing foodstuffs when UN-organised efforts were blocked.
Turk said the GHF's "chaotic, militarised distribution sites were "failing utterly to deliver humanitarian aid at the scope and scale needed".
His office says Israeli forces have killed more than 1,000 Palestinians trying to get food aid in Gaza since the GHF started operations -- nearly three-quarters of them in the vicinity of GHF sites.
'Starvation crisis'
"The starvation of people in Gaza must end now," UN refugees chief Filippo Grandi said on X.
"Standing with UN and NGO colleagues ready to deliver desperately-needed, lifesaving aid to hundreds of thousands at risk of death."
Fletcher's UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) warned Friday that conditions on the ground in Gaza were "already catastrophic" and deteriorating.
"The starvation crisis is deepening," it said.
OCHA said UN teams were in place to ramp up deliveries into the Palestinian territory as soon as they were permitted to do so.
"If Israel opens the crossings, lets fuel and equipment in, and allows humanitarian staff to operate safely, the UN will accelerate the delivery of food aid, health services, clean water and waste management, nutrition supplies, and shelter materials," it said.
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