
As Israel blocks aid, 'reality in Gaza is indescribable'
are running out of ways to cope and are wary of what lies ahead. The Israeli blockade on all humanitarian and commercial supplies is now 2 months old.
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And Israeli bombardments across Gaza continue.
"The reality in Gaza is indescribable,"
told DW by phone from Gaza City. "We live in tragedy, trying to survive without knowing whether we'll make it or not. We may survive, but our souls died a long time ago." Fear of bombing is one issue, he said; finding enough to eat is another. "We are consumed by the daily search for food, storing whatever we can for the coming days," he said.
"We eat frugally, and as much as possible."
Aid organizations have consistently warned that the risk of malnutrition and hunger is high as bakeries are closed, the cost of basic food items skyrockets and the borders remain shut.
Markets are still selling small quantities of vegetables, but these are now unaffordable for most people. Prices have skyrocketed and many Gazans have no more income. A kilogram (2.2 pounds) of tomatoes, a staple in Palestinian kitchens, now costs about 30 shekels (€7 or $7.90).
This is compared to 1-3 shekels per kilo before the war. And a kilo of sugar goes for over 60 shekels.
"Our lives now depend entirely on canned food, with the rare exception of some vegetables," the 44-year-old Qatawi said, adding that cooking is a challenge because of the shortage of gas. "There is no wood to light fires, so we burn whatever we can find: clothes, shoes, anything. This is our daily life."
'No safe place'
"Never in Gaza's history were we in such a situation," Amjad Shawa, director of the Palestinian Non-Governmental Organizations Network (PNGO), told DW by phone from Gaza City. "It's a catastrophe"
"We have airstrikes, artillery, attacks on tents, on shelters," Shawa said.
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"There is no safe place. And then everyone is starving. Even, speaking personally, we don't know what to eat. There is almost nothing."
Shawa said people felt that they were being pushed deeper and deeper into a corner with no end in sight. "And the worst thing for us as humanitarians is to feel that you are handcuffed, that you have nothing to give," Shawa said. "We do our best to give some hope here and there, but on the other hand we are part of the community and we cannot isolate ourselves from the situation."
In addition, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said the health care system was "on the brink of collapse, overwhelmed by mass casualties and critically hindered by the full blockade that has cut off essential medicines, vaccines, and medical equipment."
The
recently announced that it had depleted its food stocks for Gaza and distributed its last remaining supplies to community kitchens, which serve basic meals for the most vulnerable, as well as the last of the flour to bakeries.
"On March 31, all 25
-supported bakeries closed as wheat flour and cooking fuel ran out," the UN body announced in a statement. "The same week, WFP food parcels distributed to families — with two weeks of food rations — were exhausted. WFP is also deeply concerned about the severe lack of safe water and fuel for cooking — forcing people to scavenge for items to burn to cook a meal.'
Living in fear
As supplies dwindle, the worry about how to provide for loved ones overshadows everything, Mahmoud Hassouna, a resident of the city of
in southern Gaza, told DW by phone.
The 24-year-old was displaced at the beginning of the war in 2023, when his family home was destroyed by Israeli bombings.
He said he spends his day moving around his family's makeshift home and helping his mother prepare meals. "We're back living on canned food again," he said. "We don't have enough money to buy vegetables, which are sold at exorbitant prices in the market."
Hassouna said his job was to find firewood, which is hard to come by these days as most of the trees have been cut down or destroyed by bombing.
Many people risk going into bombed-out houses to salvage any doors or wooden items.
He also has to find clean drinking water and try to charge the phones nearby. The fear of bombing and displacement has become constant. "I have spent almost two years of my life under bombs, killing and death. I don't even recognize myself anymore."
A ceasefire that began in January and lasted until early March brought some relief to the people of Gaza and bought time to fill the warehouses of aid organizations.
However, the situation deteriorated again as soon as Israel broke the ceasefire and renewed its offensive on March 18 after the first phase of the ceasefire and hostage release agreement ended and talks on a second phase failed to take place.
Before breaking the ceasefire, the Israeli government had already ordered the closure of all border crossings and halted all humanitarian and commercial deliveries into Gaza.
Israel's 'maximum pressure'
The blockade is part of what Israeli officials say is a "maximum pressure" strategy to force Hamas release the remaining hostages under a new temporary ceasefire agreement and ultimately topple the Palestinian militant group. Israeli officials have accused Hamas of stealing aid and using it for its own forces.
Israeli media report that the security cabinet is set to approve operational plans to expand the current military offensive, including calling up tens of thousands of reservists.
It not clear when such an expansion would take place.
Hamas has rejected all calls for its disarmament and insists on an agreement that guarantees an end to the war.
Israel launched the war after a Hamas-led terror attack on October 7, 2023, in which gunmen killed nearly 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took about 250 hostages. Israeli officials say 59 hostages remain in Gaza, less than half of whom are believed to be alive.
Israel retaliated immediately to the Hamas-led attack with a massive military operation and ground offensive in Gaza. The death toll in the strip has now risen to over 52,000, the Hamas-run Health Ministry said last week. Thousands more are believed to be buried under the rubble.
Strategically withholding aid?
Aid groups and the
accuse Israel of using humanitarian and food aid as a political tool. This is a potential war crime that affects the whole of Gaza's population of 2.2 million.
This week, UN Undersecretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Tom Fletcher reminded Israel in a statement that "international law is unequivocal: As the occupying power, Israel must allow humanitarian support in. Aid, and the civilian lives it saves, should never be a bargaining chip."
Over the course of the war, Gaza's population has become almost entirely dependent on aid and commercial supplies from outside.The constant displacement of people and the creation of a large buffer zone held by the Israeli military in the north, along the eastern border and in the south has denied Palestinians access to Gaza's most fertile agricultural land.
"Put simply, Israel is not only preventing food from entering Gaza, but has also engineered a situation in which Palestinians cannot grow their own food, and cannot fish their own food,' Gavin Kelleher, a Norwegian Refugee Council aid worker recently returned from working in in Gaza, told a press briefing.
Gazans say there have also been incidents of looting of warehouses and a general atmosphere of chaos and limited internal security during Israel's bombardment.
OCHA reported on Thursday that "recent strikes have reportedly hit residential buildings and tents sheltering displaced people, especially in Rafah and eastern Gaza city. As of this Tuesday, our humanitarian partners estimate that more than 423,000 people in Gaza have been displaced once again, with no safe place to go."
This is a nightmare for Mahmoud Hassouna. "My only wish is not to be displaced again," Hassouna said. "After that, I want this crazy war to stop."
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First Post
8 hours ago
- First Post
Why is Gaza starving even as Israel eases blockade?
Gaza is currently facing the 'worst-case scenario of famine', according to food experts. This comes even after Israel paused fighting for a few hours and is allowing nations to airdrop food. But, this aid isn't making it to the UN warehouses for distribution. Here's why? read more International outcry over images of emaciated children and increasing reports of hunger-related deaths has pressured Israel to let more aid into the Gaza Strip. This week, Israel paused fighting in parts of Gaza and airdropped food. But aid groups and Palestinians say the changes have only been incremental and are not enough to reverse what food experts say is a 'worst-case scenario of famine' unfolding in the war-ravaged territory. The new measures have brought an uptick in the number of aid trucks entering Gaza. But almost none of it reaches UN warehouses for distribution. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Instead, nearly all the trucks are stripped of their cargo by crowds that overwhelm them on the roads as they drive from the borders. The crowds are a mix of Palestinians desperate for food and gangs armed with knives, axes or pistols who loot the goods to then hoard or sell. Many have also been killed trying to grab the aid. Witnesses say Israeli troops often open fire on crowds around the aid trucks, and hospitals have reported hundreds killed or wounded. The Israeli military says it has only fired warning shots to control crowds or at people who approach its forces. The alternative food distribution system run by the Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation has also been marred by violence. International airdrops of aid have resumed. But aid groups say airdrops deliver only a fraction of what trucks can supply. Also, many parcels have landed in now-inaccessible areas that Palestinians have been told to evacuate, while others have plunged into the Mediterranean Sea, forcing people to swim out to retrieve drenched bags of flour. Here's a look at why the aid isn't being distributed: A lack of trust The UN says that longstanding restrictions on the entry of aid have created an unpredictable environment, and that while a pause in fighting might allow more aid in, Palestinians are not confident aid will reach them. 'This has resulted in many of our convoys offloaded directly by starving, desperate people as they continue to face deep levels of hunger and are struggling to feed their families,' said Olga Cherevko, a spokesperson for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or Ocha. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD 'The only way to reach a level of confidence is by having a sustained flow of aid over a period of time,' she said. Israel blocked food entirely from entering Gaza for two and a half months starting in March. Since it eased the blockade in late May, it allowed in a trickle of aid trucks for the UN, about 70 a day on average, according to official Israeli figures. That is far below the 500-600 trucks a day that UN agencies say are needed — the amount that entered during a six-week ceasefire earlier this year. Much of the aid is stacked up just inside the border in Gaza because UN trucks could not pick it up. The UN says that it was because of Israeli military restrictions on its movements and because of the lawlessness in Gaza. Israel has argued that it is allowing sufficient quantities of goods into Gaza and tried to shift the blame to the UN 'More consistent collection and distribution by UN agencies and international organizations = more aid reaching those who need it most in Gaza,' the Israeli military agency in charge of aid coordination, Cogat, said in a statement this week. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD With the new measures this week, Cogat, says 220-270 truckloads a day were allowed into Gaza on Tuesday and Wednesday, and that the UN was able to pick up more trucks, reducing some of the backlog at the border. Aid missions still face 'constraints' Cherevko said there have been 'minor improvements' in approvals by the Israeli military for its movements and some 'reduced waiting times' for trucks along the road. But she said the aid missions are 'still facing constraints.' Delays of military approval still mean trucks remain idle for long periods, and the military still restricts the routes that the trucks can take onto a single road, which makes it easy for people to know where the trucks are going, UN officials say. Palestinians hold onto an aid truck returning to Gaza City. AP Antoine Renard, who directs the World Food Program's operations in Gaza and the occupied West Bank, said Wednesday that it took nearly 12 hours to bring in 52 trucks on a 10-kilometre (6 mile) route. 'While we're doing everything that we can to actually respond to the current wave of starvation in Gaza, the conditions that we have are not sufficient to actually make sure that we can break that wave,' he said. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Aid workers say the changes Israel has made in recent days are largely cosmetic. 'These are theatrics, token gestures dressed up as progress,' said Bushra Khalidi, Oxfam's policy lead for Israel and the Palestinian territories. 'Of course, a handful of trucks, a few hours of tactical pauses and raining energy bars from the sky is not going to fix irreversible harm done to an entire generation of children that have been starved and malnourished for months now,' she said. Breakdown of law and order As desperation mounts, Palestinians are risking their lives to get food, and violence is increasing, say aid workers. Muhammad Shehada, a political analyst from Gaza who is a visiting fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, said aid retrieval has turned into the survival of the fittest. 'It's a Darwin dystopia, the strongest survive,' he said. A truck driver said Wednesday that he has driven food supplies four times from the Zikim crossing on Gaza's northern border. Every time, he said, crowds a kilometre long (0.6 miles) surrounded his truck and took everything on it after he passed the checkpoint at the edge of the Israeli military-controlled border zones. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD He said some were desperate people, while others were armed. He said that on Tuesday, for the first time, some in the crowd threatened him with knives or small arms. He spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing for his safety. Ali al-Derbashi, another truck driver, said that during one trip in July armed men shot the tires, stole everything, including the diesel and batteries and beat him. 'If people weren't starving, they wouldn't resort to this,' he said. Israel has said it has offered the UN armed escorts. The UN has refused, saying it can't be seen to be working with a party to the conflict – and pointing to the reported shootings when Israeli troops are present. Uncertainty and humiliation Israel hasn't given a timeline for how long the measures it implemented this week will continue, heightening uncertainty and urgency among Palestinians to seize the aid before it ends. Palestinians say the way it's being distributed, including being dropped from the sky, is inhumane. 'This approach is inappropriate for Palestinians, we are humiliated,' said Rida, a displaced woman. Momen Abu Etayya said he almost drowned because his son begged him to get aid that fell into the sea during an aid drop. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD 'I threw myself into the ocean to death just to bring him something,' he said. 'I was only able to bring him three biscuit packets'.


NDTV
10 hours ago
- NDTV
Israel Eases Gaza Blockade, But Aid Still Fails To Reach Starving People
International outcry over images of emaciated children and increasing reports of hunger-related deaths have pressured Israel to let more aid into the Gaza Strip. This week, Israel paused fighting in parts of Gaza and airdropped food. But aid groups and Palestinians say the changes have only been incremental and are not enough to reverse what food experts say is a " worst-case scenario of famine" unfolding in the war-ravaged territory. The new measures have brought an uptick in the number of aid trucks entering Gaza. But almost none of it reaches UN warehouses for distribution. Instead, nearly all the trucks are stripped of their cargo by crowds that overwhelm them on the roads as they drive from the borders. The crowds are a mix of Palestinians desperate for food and gangs armed with knives, axes or pistols who loot the goods to then hoard or sell. Many have also been killed trying to grab the aid. Witnesses say Israeli troops often open fire on crowds around the aid trucks, and hospitals have reported hundreds killed or wounded. The Israeli military says it has only fired warning shots to control crowds or at people who approach its forces. The alternative food distribution system run by the Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation has also been marred by violence. International airdrops of aid have resumed. But aid groups say airdrops deliver only a fraction of what trucks can supply. Also, many parcels have landed in now-inaccessible areas that Palestinians have been told to evacuate, while others have plunged into the Mediterranean Sea, forcing people to swim out to retrieve drenched bags of flour. Here's a look at why the aid isn't being distributed: The UN says that longstanding restrictions on the entry of aid have created an unpredictable environment, and that while a pause in fighting might allow more aid in, Palestinians are not confident aid will reach them. "This has resulted in many of our convoys offloaded directly by starving, desperate people as they continue to face deep levels of hunger and are struggling to feed their families," said Olga Cherevko, a spokesperson for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or OCHA. "The only way to reach a level of confidence is by having a sustained flow of aid over a period of time," she said. Israel blocked food entirely from entering Gaza for 2.5 months starting in March. Since it eased the blockade in late May, it allowed in a trickle of aid trucks for the UN, about 70 a day on average, according to official Israeli figures. That is far below the 500-600 trucks a day that UN agencies say are needed - the amount that entered during a six-week ceasefire earlier this year. Much of the aid is stacked up just inside the border in Gaza because UN trucks could not pick it up. The UN says that was because of Israeli military restrictions on its movements and because of the lawlessness in Gaza. Israel has argued that it is allowing sufficient quantities of goods into Gaza and tried to shift the blame to the UN. "More consistent collection and distribution by UN agencies and international organisations = more aid reaching those who need it most in Gaza," the Israeli military agency in charge of aid coordination, COGAT, said in a statement this week. With the new measures this week, COGAT, says 220-270 truckloads a day were allowed into Gaza on Tuesday and Wednesday, and that the UN was able to pick up more trucks, reducing some of the backlog at the border. Cherevko said there have been "minor improvements" in approvals by the Israeli military for its movements and some "reduced waiting times" for trucks along the road. But she said the aid missions are "still facing constraints." Delays of military approval still mean trucks remain idle for long periods, and the military still restricts the routes that the trucks can take onto a single road, which makes it easy for people to know where the trucks are going, UN officials say. Antoine Renard, who directs the World Food Program's operations in Gaza and the occupied West Bank, said Wednesday that it took nearly 12 hours to bring in 52 trucks on a 10-kilometer (6 mile) route. "While we're doing everything that we can to actually respond to the current wave of starvation in Gaza, the conditions that we have are not sufficient to actually make sure that we can break that wave," he said. Aid workers say the changes Israel has made in recent days are largely cosmetic. "These are theatrics, token gestures dressed up as progress," said Bushra Khalidi, Oxfam's policy lead for Israel and the Palestinian territories. "Of course, a handful of trucks, a few hours of tactical pauses and raining energy bars from the sky is not going to fix irreversible harm done to an entire generation of children that have been starved and malnourished for months now," she said. As desperation mounts, Palestinians are risking their lives to get food, and violence is increasing, say aid workers. Muhammad Shehada, a political analyst from Gaza who is a visiting fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, said aid retrieval has turned into the survival of the fittest. "It's a Darwin dystopia, the strongest survive," he said. A truck driver said Wednesday that he has driven food supplies four times from the Zikim crossing on Gaza's northern border. Every time, he said, crowds a kilometer long (0.6 miles) surrounded his truck and took everything on it after he passed the checkpoint at the edge of the Israeli military-controlled border zones. He said some were desperate people, while others were armed. He said that on Tuesday, for the first time, some in the crowd threatened him with knives or small arms. He spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing for his safety. Ali al-Derbashi, another truck driver, said that during one trip in July armed men shot the tires, stole everything, including the diesel and batteries and beat him. "If people weren't starving, they wouldn't resort to this," he said. Israel has said it has offered the UN armed escorts. The UN has refused, saying it can't be seen to be working with a party to the conflict - and pointing to the reported shootings when Israeli troops are present. Israel hasn't given a timeline for how long the measures it implemented this week will continue, heightening uncertainty and urgency among Palestinians to seize the aid before it ends. Palestinians say the way it's being distributed, including being dropped from the sky, is inhumane. "This approach is inappropriate for Palestinians, we are humiliated," said Rida, a displaced woman. Momen Abu Etayya said he almost drowned because his son begged him to get aid that fell into the sea during an aid drop. "I threw myself in the ocean to death just to bring him something," he said. "I was only able to bring him three biscuit packets."


News18
14 hours ago
- News18
Desperation, Fight For Survival: Satellite Image Shows Starving Gazans Swarming Aid Trucks
Last Updated: A satellite image shows thousands of Palestinians around aid trucks in Gaza, highlighting the severe humanitarian crisis. Conditions are catastrophic, with malnutrition rampant. As human suffering continues in Gaza amid conflict with Israel, a recent satellite image captured by US geospatial firm Planet Labs shows a harrowing scene in the war-torn strip. The image shows thousands of Gazans surrounding aid trucks, desperate for basic food supplies like flour, according to a report in India Today. At first glance, the mass of people resembles a colony of ants — but in reality, it reflects one of the gravest humanitarian crises that the millennial and Gen Z generations have experienced so far. Shot near the Morag corridor, an Israeli military partition dividing the southern cities of Khan Younis and Rafah, the image was geolocated by open-source analyst Jaks Godin. The pic reveals a line of aid seekers stretching nearly 2 km north toward Khan Younis, underlining the overwhelming desperation at food distribution points. '25% Kids, Pregnant Women Malnourished In Gaza' Conditions in the besieged strip have reached catastrophic levels. Charity Doctors Without Borders reports that 25 per cent of young children and pregnant women are malnourished. The organization has accused Israel of using starvation as a weapon and condemned the deadly violence at aid sites. UNICEF has voiced similar concerns. With severe food shortages, children are resorting to searching for food from garbage piles. 'Children are dead, pale, turning to skeletons, only bones. They forgot what eggs, meat and fruits are. The men are all without jobs. There is nothing to live by. Life here is completely lost," Reuters quoted a Gaza woman, mother of three, as saying. She also lamented the lack of fuel to cook food. As the crisis continues to hit people hardest, adults return from food queues humiliated and injured. Access to aid remains severely limited. Israel has heavily restricted food truck entries, prompting several nations to airdrop supplies — a method Gazans say is chaotic and inefficient. In one such instance, a package landed on a rooftop, inciting a mob, said a Gazan man. Tragically, aid distribution has also turned deadly. The Gaza Health Ministry claims over 600 Palestinians have been killed while seeking food at sites managed by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which is supported by the US and Israel. A Sky News analysis linked spikes in civilian deaths to GHF aid distributions, often announced with less than 30 minutes' notice. As famine tightens its grip on Gaza, the images and testimonies reveal a population pushed to the edge — battling not just hunger, but violence, humiliation, and despair. view comments Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.