
Some flour reaches Gaza Strip as blockade eases
Flour and other aid has started reaching some of the Gaza Strip's most vulnerable areas after Israel let some trucks through, but nowhere near enough to make up for shortages caused by an 11-week blockade, Palestinian officials say.
Many other trucks were still at the border and people were still waiting to receive food amid fears that desperate crowds would try to loot the vehicles when they arrived, the Palestinian Red Crescent warned.
Israel said it allowed 100 trucks carrying baby food and medical equipment into the enclave on Wednesday, two days after announcing its first relaxation of the restrictions under mounting international pressure.
"Flour arrived from the (United Nations) World Food Programme, and we immediately started working," baker Ahmed Al-Banna said as flatbreads passed by on a conveyor belt behind him at his base in Deir al-Balah on Thursday.
Bakeries across the south of the enclave started ovens that had been shut for two months, he added.
"God willing, bakeries in northern Gaza will soon resume work."
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said late on Thursday that the construction of a "distribution zone" would be completed in the coming days with US companies distributing food in areas controlled by the Israeli military.
"Ultimately, we intend to have large safe zones in the south of Gaza. The Palestinian population will move there for their own safety while we conduct combat in other zones, and receive humanitarian aid there without Hamas interference," he said in a video statement released by his office.
Israel imposed the blockade on all supplies in March, saying Hamas was seizing deliveries for its fighters - a charge the group denies.
The UN has said a quarter of the Gaza Strip's 2.3 million people are at risk of famine.
The Palestinian health minister said 29 children and elderly people had died from starvation-related reasons in the enclave in recent days and many thousands more were at risk.
Israel has repeatedly defended its controls on aid in the Gaza Strip, saying reports from aid groups of famine-like conditions were exaggerated and denying accusations of causing starvation.
Bread distribution would start later on Thursday, Amjad al-Shawa, director of the Palestinian Non-Governmental Organizations Network in Gaza, told Reuters.
He said just 90 trucks had got through.
"During the ceasefire, 600 trucks used to enter every day, which means that the current quantity is a drop in the ocean, nothing," he said.
Bakeries backed by the WFP would produce the bread and the agency's staff would hand it out - a more controlled system than previously when bakers sold it directly to the public at a low cost, he added.
Palestinian Red Crescent President Younis al-Khatib said many trucks were still at the border at Karem Shalom and there was a risk of violence and looting when they arrived.
"No civilian has received anything yet," he said.
"It's very hard to hide the rush or the looting that will happen."
On Wednesday night, boys and young men gathered after one vehicle arrived in the southern Gazan city of Khan Younis but kept back as men, some holding guns, watched over the unloading of sacks.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said it had got one truck of medical supplies through to replenish its field hospital in Rafah but more was needed.
"A trickle of trucks is woefully inadequate. Only the rapid, unimpeded and sustained flow of aid can begin to address the full scope of needs on the ground," the organisation said in a statement.
Israel has stepped up its military operation in the Gaza Strip since early May, saying it is seeking to eliminate Hamas' military and governing capabilities and bring back remaining hostages seized in October 2023.
Israel launched its campaign in the Gaza Strip in response to the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023 which killed 1200 people by Israeli tallies and resulted in 251 hostages being abducted.
The campaign has since killed more than 53,600 Palestinians, according to Gaza health authorities, and devastated the coastal strip, where aid groups say signs of severe malnutrition are widespread.
Hashtags

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


The Advertiser
27 minutes ago
- The Advertiser
Wars displace more 120m people as aid funding falls: UN
The number of people displaced by war and persecution around the world has climbed above 122 million due to a failure to resolve multi-year conflicts such as those in Sudan and Ukraine, the UN refugee agency says, noting that funding to help the refugees has fallen to 2015 levels. There were over two million more people displaced globally by the end of April 2025 than there were the previous year despite the return of nearly the same number of Syrians after the collapse of Bashar al-Assad's rule, according to the report by United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi. The report attributed the rise to major conflicts in Sudan, Myanmar and Ukraine and a "continued failure to stop the fighting". "We are living in a time of intense volatility in international relations, with modern warfare creating a fragile, harrowing landscape marked by acute human suffering," Grandi said on Thursday in a statement alongside the report. The surge in displacement numbers comes as funding to help them has fallen to 2015 levels when the total number of refugees around the world stood at about half current levels, UNHCR said. It described the cuts in aid as "brutal and ongoing" and said the situation was untenable, leaving refugees and others vulnerable. Humanitarians complain a lack of political leadership in brokering peace deals is prolonging conflicts and stretching aid groups tasked with addressing their impacts. The agency, whose largest donor has historically been the US, has previously said the cuts put millions of lives at risk and left women refugees at a greater risk of rape and children at risk of trafficking. UNHCR has not given details on which donors have reduced their funding. US President Donald Trump has cut most foreign aid while Britain and European neighbours are spending less on aid and more on defence. The number of people displaced by war and persecution around the world has climbed above 122 million due to a failure to resolve multi-year conflicts such as those in Sudan and Ukraine, the UN refugee agency says, noting that funding to help the refugees has fallen to 2015 levels. There were over two million more people displaced globally by the end of April 2025 than there were the previous year despite the return of nearly the same number of Syrians after the collapse of Bashar al-Assad's rule, according to the report by United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi. The report attributed the rise to major conflicts in Sudan, Myanmar and Ukraine and a "continued failure to stop the fighting". "We are living in a time of intense volatility in international relations, with modern warfare creating a fragile, harrowing landscape marked by acute human suffering," Grandi said on Thursday in a statement alongside the report. The surge in displacement numbers comes as funding to help them has fallen to 2015 levels when the total number of refugees around the world stood at about half current levels, UNHCR said. It described the cuts in aid as "brutal and ongoing" and said the situation was untenable, leaving refugees and others vulnerable. Humanitarians complain a lack of political leadership in brokering peace deals is prolonging conflicts and stretching aid groups tasked with addressing their impacts. The agency, whose largest donor has historically been the US, has previously said the cuts put millions of lives at risk and left women refugees at a greater risk of rape and children at risk of trafficking. UNHCR has not given details on which donors have reduced their funding. US President Donald Trump has cut most foreign aid while Britain and European neighbours are spending less on aid and more on defence. The number of people displaced by war and persecution around the world has climbed above 122 million due to a failure to resolve multi-year conflicts such as those in Sudan and Ukraine, the UN refugee agency says, noting that funding to help the refugees has fallen to 2015 levels. There were over two million more people displaced globally by the end of April 2025 than there were the previous year despite the return of nearly the same number of Syrians after the collapse of Bashar al-Assad's rule, according to the report by United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi. The report attributed the rise to major conflicts in Sudan, Myanmar and Ukraine and a "continued failure to stop the fighting". "We are living in a time of intense volatility in international relations, with modern warfare creating a fragile, harrowing landscape marked by acute human suffering," Grandi said on Thursday in a statement alongside the report. The surge in displacement numbers comes as funding to help them has fallen to 2015 levels when the total number of refugees around the world stood at about half current levels, UNHCR said. It described the cuts in aid as "brutal and ongoing" and said the situation was untenable, leaving refugees and others vulnerable. Humanitarians complain a lack of political leadership in brokering peace deals is prolonging conflicts and stretching aid groups tasked with addressing their impacts. The agency, whose largest donor has historically been the US, has previously said the cuts put millions of lives at risk and left women refugees at a greater risk of rape and children at risk of trafficking. UNHCR has not given details on which donors have reduced their funding. US President Donald Trump has cut most foreign aid while Britain and European neighbours are spending less on aid and more on defence. The number of people displaced by war and persecution around the world has climbed above 122 million due to a failure to resolve multi-year conflicts such as those in Sudan and Ukraine, the UN refugee agency says, noting that funding to help the refugees has fallen to 2015 levels. There were over two million more people displaced globally by the end of April 2025 than there were the previous year despite the return of nearly the same number of Syrians after the collapse of Bashar al-Assad's rule, according to the report by United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi. The report attributed the rise to major conflicts in Sudan, Myanmar and Ukraine and a "continued failure to stop the fighting". "We are living in a time of intense volatility in international relations, with modern warfare creating a fragile, harrowing landscape marked by acute human suffering," Grandi said on Thursday in a statement alongside the report. The surge in displacement numbers comes as funding to help them has fallen to 2015 levels when the total number of refugees around the world stood at about half current levels, UNHCR said. It described the cuts in aid as "brutal and ongoing" and said the situation was untenable, leaving refugees and others vulnerable. Humanitarians complain a lack of political leadership in brokering peace deals is prolonging conflicts and stretching aid groups tasked with addressing their impacts. The agency, whose largest donor has historically been the US, has previously said the cuts put millions of lives at risk and left women refugees at a greater risk of rape and children at risk of trafficking. UNHCR has not given details on which donors have reduced their funding. US President Donald Trump has cut most foreign aid while Britain and European neighbours are spending less on aid and more on defence.


Canberra Times
an hour ago
- Canberra Times
Israeli minister sanctions dubbed too little, too late
"Israel has shown it does not take international opinion seriously, and this move is unlikely to deter the Israeli government in the way they're prosecuting the war in Gaza," he said.

Sky News AU
an hour ago
- Sky News AU
Penny Wong's ‘unilateral' sanctions on Israeli ministers are ‘counterproductive' for peace
Opposition Leader Sussan Ley speaks out on the Foreign Minister Penny Wong's decision to put sanctions on two Israeli ministers, saying she acted 'unilaterally' on this. 'It's unprecedented to as a government to take actions, sanctions, on members of a democratically elected government,' Ms Ley told Sky News Australia. 'The US has explained that these actions are actually counterproductive to securing that ceasefire and that peace, and the government should be paying attention to that.'