
Gazans starve as aid shipments are turned back at border
Seven aid officials and three truckers interviewed by Reuters listed a host of obstacles, ranging from rejections of shipments for minor packing and paperwork issues to heavy scrutiny over possible dual military use for a range of goods, as well as short working hours at the Israeli border crossing.
The supplies on the stalled truck and trailer outside Egypt's Rafah border crossing carried blue logos of the World Health Organisation (WHO) and labels describing contents like topical medications and suction devices to clean wounds.
A WHO employee working at the border said the cargo was blocked for carrying "ille gal medicine s".
Reuters visited Egypt's border with Gaza on Monday on a trip organised by the Elders, a group of former world leaders set up by late South African president Nelson Mandela that backs a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Some Elders members have been highly critical of Israel's conduct in Gaza, including former Irish president Mary Robinson and former New Zealand prime minister Helen Clark, who joined the border trip.
Israel on July 27 announced measures to let more aid into Gaza. But aid agencies say only a fraction of what they send is getting in.
Clark expressed shock at the amount of aid turned back at the b order.
"To see this crossing, which should be a place where people interact with each other, where people can come and go, where people aren't under blockade, where people who are ill can leave to come out — to see it just silent for the people, it's absolutely shocking for us."
Approvals and clearance procedures that got a shipment through the Rafah border crossing "within a few days" of arrival in Egypt during a ceasefire earlier in the war now took "minimum one month", according to the WHO employee.
On Monday, the Gaza government media office said at least 1,334 trucks had entered Gaza through all land crossings, including from Egypt, since the Israeli measures announced on July 27, but this was far short of the 9,000 that would have gone in if 600 trucks had entered per day.
The United States has said a minimum of 600 trucks per day are needed to feed Gaza's population.
In mid-July, Israel introduced a requirement that shipments of humanitarian aid arriving from Egypt undergo Customs clearance leading to "additional bureaucratic hurdles, delays, and costs for humanitarian organisations".
More than 200 Gazans have died of malnutrition or starvation in the war, according to Palestinian health authorities, adding to the over 61,000 dead they say have been killed by military action. The UN and several expert studies have said the number is probably an undercount.
Drivers coming from Egypt go to the Israeli crossing of Kerem Shalom where shipments undergo checks.
Kamel Atteiya Mohamed, an Egyptian truck driver, estimated that of the 200 or 300 trucks trying to get through this route every day, only 30 to 50 make it.
"They tell you, for example, that the pallet doesn't have a sticker, the pallet is tilted, or the pallet is open from the top. This is no reason for us to return it."
He said while the Egyptian crossing was open day and night, drivers often arrived at Kerem Shalom only to find it closed, as it does not normally operate beyond weekday business hours.
"Every day it's like this," he said. "Honestly, we're fed up."
A logistics site set up by the Egyptian Red Crescent near El Arish town, 40km from the border, where shipments coming from Egypt to Gaza are loaded, has a tarp tent warehouse devoted to goods turned back from the border.
A Reuters reporter saw rows of white oxygen tanks, as well as wheelchairs, car tyres and cartons labelled as containing generators and first-aid kits and with logos of aid groups from countries such as Luxembourg and Kuwait, among others.
Reuters was not able to verify when the items at the Red Crescent site were turned back or on what grounds. Aid workers describe such rejections as routine.
The writer is from Reuters
Hashtags

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


Malaysiakini
15 minutes ago
- Malaysiakini
M'sia condemns 'Greater Israel' agenda, settlement expansion
Malaysia unequivocally condemns, in the strongest terms, the latest statements by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, propagating the unlawful and illegal expansionist vision of a 'Greater Israel'. In a statement yesterday, the foreign minister said the planned actions constitute a blatant violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention and are to entrench the illegal occupation of the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT)...


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
S. Korea to end some military activity on border with North
SEOUL: South Korea will end some military activities along its border with North Korea, President Lee Jae-myung said, in his government's latest effort to improve ties between the neighbours still technically at war. In a speech yesterday to mark the 80th anniversary of Korea's liberation from Japanese colonial rule, Lee said he would restore the so-called Sept 19 Comprehensive Military Agreement, a de-escalation measure that halted some military activities at the border between North Korea and South Korea. The pact was signed at an inter-Korean summit in 2018, but broke down as cross-border tensions spiked. How Pyongyang will respond to Seoul's latest overture remains unclear. Top North Korean officials in recent weeks have dismissed other moves taken by Lee, a liberal who won a snap election in June, to ease tension between the two countries. The Korean War ended in 1953 with an armistice rather than a formal peace treaty and entrenched the peninsula's division. 'Everyone knows that the long drawn-out hostility benefits people in neither of the two Koreas,' Lee said in Seoul. Lee cited his government's efforts to lower tensions, including halting the launch of balloons floated by activists with anti-North Korea leaflets and dismantling loudspeaker propaganda broadcasts across the heavily militarised border. — Reuters

The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
Prabowo touts economy and social welfare drive
Parliament speech: Prabowo delivering his State of the Nation Address ahead of Indonesia's independence day in Jakarta. — Reuters JAKARTA: Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto emphasised an expectation-defying economy, low unemployment rate and slew of ambitious social welfare initiatives as he delivered his first state address to parliament. The ex-special forces commander took office in October after a campaign to rehabilitate an image tainted by allegations of rights abuses committed during the Suharto dictatorship in the late 1990s. The 73-year-old populist leader has pledged fast, state-driven growth to transform South-East Asia's largest country into a major global powerhouse. But his hallmark schemes, including a free school meal programme to address childhood stunting, have strained state coffers, stoked investor fears and triggered student protests. In his speech, Prabowo defended his social policies and pointed to positive second-quarter economic results after his government set an ambitious goal of eight per cent growth. 'Amid political conflict, global economic conflict, (and the US) trade war ... Indonesia still managed to grow above five per cent,' he told parliament yesterday. After US President Donald Trump threatened Indonesia with a heavy tariff rate of 32% in April, Prabowo negotiated a lower levy of 19% in return for bringing down trade barriers for American goods. Last week, the statistics agency showed 2Q growth had accelerated to 5.12%, beating forecasts and up from 4.87% the previous quarter. He also pointed to the unemployment rate, which has dropped to its lowest since the Asian financial crisis. On his social welfare agenda, Prabowo shrugged off criticism of the billion-dollar free lunch programme for schoolchildren and pregnant mothers, touting its reach of 20 million people. 'Our goal ... is to be free from poverty, free from hunger, free from suffering,' he added. He faced protests across Indonesia in February for widespread cuts to fund the scheme – which has been dogged by reported delays and food poisonings – as well as a new sovereign wealth fund. Prabowo succeeded the popular Joko Widodo last year in a third attempt at the presidency after a campaign in which he pledged policy continuity. Prabowo will also unveil the 2026 budget later, ahead of the archipelago nation's independence day, which will be celebrated tomorrow. — AFP