
Gaza Humanitarian Foundation accused of using charity logo without consent
US-based charity Rahma Worldwide has accused the newly created Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) of using photos of aid deliveries in Gaza containing its logo as part of its press pack without consent.
The charity told The Guardian it had allowed GHF to take "custody" of its aid; however, on its Facebook account, it said GHF "took custody", leading to confusion over whether Rahma had provided consent.
Rahma Worldwide is a Michigan-based charity that, according to its website, provides 'aid and assistance to the most vulnerable communities around the world'.
Rahma said in a Facebook statement that it had been waiting for four days to transport 4,000 boxes of food and 16 containers of wheat into Gaza, but the logistics organisation that was supposed to transport aid 'did not deliver.' It said that GHF took custody of the aid and asked Rahma to 'assist with distribution', but Rahma refused.
Rahma told The Guardian that it had asked for its logo to be removed from aid parcels.
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Photos of the logo in GHF's press materials include both Rahma and a partner organisation called Heroic Hearts, based in Illinois.
The controversial privately-run GHF, which is backed by Tel Aviv and Washington, was formed to oversee aid distribution across Gaza, with the intention of sidelining all existing structures, including the United Nations.
Most humanitarian organisations, including the UN, have distanced themselves from GHF, arguing that the group violates humanitarian principles by restricting aid to south and central Gaza, requiring Palestinians to walk long distances to collect aid, and only providing limited aid, among other critiques.
A former spokesperson for Unrwa has condemned the initiative as 'aid washing', a strategy meant to obscure the reality that 'people are being starved into submission'.
Rahma Worldwide's logo on GHF's press materials implies a formal partnership and lends credibility to GHF, which has no experience with aid distribution and is being shunned by aid agencies.
In the Facebook statement released on Thursday, Rahma said that it 'had noticed images of our food boxes with logo being distributed without Rahma's direct involvement".
'Rahma did not authorize such distribution and none of our team was allowed to participate in this process."
It also added that it did not 'support or permit the presence' of armed groups during the distribution of aid.
Siraj Muhammad, president of Heroic Hearts, told Middle East Eye in a statement that 'we are not in partnership with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) and are not involved in the aid distribution currently circulating in the media that features our branding'.
'These food parcels were part of a one-time shipment prepared in collaboration with Rahma Worldwide. Heroic Hearts and Rahma arranged the shipment to support vulnerable families in Gaza and coordinated the required approvals and logistics to ensure proper delivery,' Muhammad added.
Muhammad said he regretted 'any confusion this may have caused'.
Chaotic aid roll-out
Chaos and violence erupted during GHF's first attempts to roll out aid at its distribution site in Rafah on Tuesday, as thousands of Palestinians, who have been denied food, water, and aid for 11 weeks, overwhelmed the distribution centre.
What's inside the boxes of aid being distributed in Gaza? Read More »
The Israeli military was accused of killing at least three civilians and injuring almost 50 others after it fired shots at people collecting aid, according to the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. An Israeli military spokesperson said they were just firing 'warning shots'.
Aid that has been distributed so far has been considered inadequate, with food boxes containing just a handful of ingredients.
Jonathan Whittall, who heads the UN aid coordination office, said in a UN press release that 'People are being starved and then drip-fed in the most undignified way possible.'
In addition, the executive director of GHF resigned from his position earlier this week, saying that Israeli restrictions meant that GHF could not adhere to 'humanitarian principles'.
Controversy
GHF has been rocked with controversy since its inception. Under the group's proposals, more than two million of Gaza's residents will be forced to collect food from one of four 'secure distribution sites'.
None of the proposed sites are located in northern Gaza, a region that Israel has attacked and occupied, meaning those still living there will be forced to flee south to access life-saving aid. The deprivation of aid as a means to forcibly transfer a population is recognised as a crime against humanity.
GHF's official announcement about its plans made no mention of Israel's repeated attacks on pre-existing food distribution centres, bakeries and aid convoys, in which hundreds of Palestinians have been killed while trying to feed their families, or Israel's obstruction of the pre-existing humanitarian system.
Israel banned Unrwa, the primary UN aid agency for Palestinian refugees, from the country in January.
The UN's emergency relief coordinator, Tom Fletcher, has described the plans put forward by GHF as a 'fig leaf for further violence and displacement'.
Despite the January 2024 ruling by the International Court of Justice, which demanded immediate protection for civilians in Gaza and the widespread provision of humanitarian assistance, the situation has continued to deteriorate precipitously.
A January 2025 survey of 35 humanitarian organisations working in Gaza revealed an overwhelming consensus: 100 percent reported that the approach taken by Israel was either ineffective, inadequate or had systematically impeded aid delivery.
Rights groups say that warnings about mass malnutrition and the collapse of Gaza's health and social infrastructure have been ignored for years, and the imminent famine now afflicts a population that has been systematically deprived of food.
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Middle East Eye
5 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
Amid Gaza food distribution chaos, Palestinian-led group steps up
Hala Sabbah's team has spent weeks trying to source a bag of flour in Gaza. 'We're not finding flour - or at least clean flour. It's all infested or mixed with sand,' she told Middle East Eye, speaking from London. Sabbah works with a Palestinian-led mutual aid group, coordinating with local volunteers who purchase and distribute supplies in Gaza, using funds raised through the project. Over a year ago, Sabbah and two other members of the Palestinian diaspora launched the Sameer Project - a grassroots initiative named in honour of Sabbah's uncle, who was killed by Israeli forces in Gaza. Amid Israel's ongoing blockade of the Gaza Strip since 2 May, which has cut off all aid and forced many NGOs to suspend their services, their work has become even more challenging. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters With flour scarce, the group has turned to rice distribution, but Sabbah is still doing all she can to find a bag of flour. 'People in Gaza really prefer bread. If you give them a plate of rice or a piece of bread, they will always take the bread,' Sabbah explained to MEE. On Tuesday, a fledgling US-backed initiative to distribute aid via private contractors descended into chaos, as Israeli forces opened fire on starving Palestinians near the aid hub, killing three and wounding at least 46 others. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) said it distributed just 14,000 boxes - each containing only 1,750 calories - well below the 2,100-calorie per day minimum set by the World Health Organization (WHO) for emergency meals. For Sabbah, the contents of the GHF parcels were not just inadequate, but 'offensive". 'There were no vegetables, no meat, no fruit - nothing fresh,' Sabbah said. The entire enterprise runs starkly counter to the work she and her colleagues have been doing over the last year - working closely with Palestinians in Gaza and adapting quickly to respond to the needs of those on the ground. Agile and flexible Sabbah coordinates the Sameer Project with two other Palestinians living in the diaspora - California-based Lena Dajani, who organises medical aid, and an anonymous activist who runs the Instagram page, 'Translating Falasteen'. The trio have raised thousands of dollars and coordinated with people on the ground in Gaza to respond to requests for food, medicine and emergency aid via Whatsapp groups. With a skeleton team and a strong web of contacts, the group is agile and flexible in their approach, able to adapt quickly to the daily flurry of requests. While Israel's ongoing blockade has forced many international NGOs to halt or curtail their services in Gaza, the small network has doggedly pursued its work. 'Our biggest struggle is food. So, right now a plate of rice is around 8.5 dollars, with commission it adds up to over $10. This is a plate of rice that's barely enough for two people,' Sabbah said. A Palestinian child receives a Sameer Project food parcel (Supplied) The project also has to contend with war profiteering by armed gangs who loot and hoard the scraps of aid that have made it past the border, reportedly under Israeli military protection. But the Sameer Project's agility means they can buy products from a variety of sources, from street vendors and traders, unlike big NGOs which bring in their own aid and equipment through the border. 'These international organisations run under western frameworks are super process heavy and bureaucratic. They're not flexible, they're not agile. They don't make exceptions. They spend a lot on overhead,' Sabbah said. 'We create our own invoices, we just find a way to make it work. We don't stall the process'. 'Our end goal is the liberation of Palestine' Water distribution is another urgent task. The group rents two water trucks, which transport around 100,000 litres a day from desalination plants in the north of the Strip, where Israeli attacks have destroyed much of the infrastructure. The water costs around $46 per 1,000 litres, according to the group. 'After the [January] ceasefire, suddenly you had almost a million people move up north in the space of a week. In places like Jabalia and Beit Lahia, there's no infrastructure whatsoever,' Sabbah told MEE. 'We made sure that we delivered to those places that are not reachable to aid organisations, that don't have wells or where the infrastructure has been completely ruined'. Scarcity of clean water means children have to haul heavy jerry cans of water over long distances. The project recently documented a case of a child who tore his groin due to the weight of the jerry can he was carrying. 'The men of the family have to go and look for food or try to make money… so, that leaves the kids to go and get the water,' Sabbah said. A Palestinian child sits near Sameer Project water deliveries in Gaza City's Al Shati camp (Supplied) Sabbah emphasised that the project is not just driven by the urgent humanitarian demand on the ground. The water deliveries in Gaza's north for example, are needed to keep the areas habitable. 'Our end goal is the liberation of Palestine and making sure that everyone stays on their land,' she said. 'So, part of our way to support people in returning to their homes, even though they're completely destroyed, is to make sure that at least they have access to water and food'. Putting out a fire with a drop of water Shortages of medical supplies and personnel mean the group also has to scramble to plug the gaping holes in Gaza's severely-damaged health system. The group's medical coordinator, Lena Dajani, receives some 25 critical patient referrals via Instagram and Whatsapp daily, which she passes onto a medical point at the Refaat Al Areer camp, which the project set up in central Gaza to ease the burden on the Strip's hospitals. The medical point then contacts the patients, and Dajani purchases the medication, which has become nearly impossible to source due to the Israeli blockade. However, by being plugged into a network of pharmacies and clinics, Dajani is still able to meet most of the requests she receives. 'For one patient, we have to call maybe 10 pharmacies to just find a simple medication, and then we only give them a month's worth, because we obviously have to spread that amount between all the patients that need immediate care,' Dajani told MEE. The scarcity and soaring cost of medication is producing rising cases of treatable conditions. 'Epilepsy is really rampant, and they just cannot afford their seizure medication,' Dajani said. With hunger stalking Gaza, the project has been inundated with malnutrition cases amongst children. At least 60 are reported to have died since October 2023. 'Epilepsy is really rampant, and they just cannot afford their seizure medication,' -Lena Dajani, Sameer Project co-founder Despite baby formula being hard to come by, the group managed to buy around $51,000 in nutritional supplements. With the blockade and escalating Israeli attacks halting Unrwa and WHO-led efforts to control viral outbreaks across the enclave, the group now treats 300-500 patients a day for skin rashes, scabies, eye infections, and viral and bacterial diseases. 'Scabies cream is also incredibly difficult to source. You're supposed to take it over a long period of time. We're trying to put out a fire with a drop of water,' Dajani told MEE. The project is also grappling with cases of children with respiratory and gastrointestinal infections, due to drinking contaminated water. In one case, a three-year-old drank a bottle of detergent thinking it was water. The project rushed the child to hospital to have their stomach pumped. Painkillers and insulin are also near impossible to source. The nerve blocker Gabapentin was being widely used as an alternative painkiller - although even this is also now unavailable. 'We had a patient who had shrapnel lodged in his brain, and it's causing him so much pain that when he's off his medication, he smashes things around him because he is in so much pain,' Dajani told MEE. There are no wheelchairs in Gaza. Along with crutches and cochlear implants, the Israeli authorities consider them to be "dual use" items, meaning they could be used for "military purposes". Dajani has to wait for someone to pass away in order to buy one from a medical supplier. The chairs cost $550 each, with payment in cash - which is also difficult to come by in Gaza, with commission rates soaring to 35 percent. 'The entire healthcare system is now almost entirely being propped up by smaller groups like ours, who can source on the ground, who can take out cash at 35 percent,' Dajani said. 'Whereas the organisations with all these processes aren't standing up to Israel to allow them to operate here. We're not waiting. We're taking action'. No case like Gaza For Sabbah, the unravelling of the GHF came as no surprise. She said the fiasco is reflective of problems with international aid in Gaza. 'A lot of them come in with their own agendas. They have a lot of red tape. There's a lot of things that they can't do,' Sabbah said. Most importantly, she noted that international organisations lack cultural sensitivity and an understanding of Gaza. The Sameer Project had attempted to work with a US-led mutual aid group who wanted them to construct long drop toilets. 'They told us 'We need to do long drop toilets, because this is what we do in the US, and it's the best way to do toilets',' Sabbah said. When Sabbah explained this method was not practiced in Gaza, the group refused to work with them. 'Dehumanisation by design': US-Israeli Gaza aid operation descends into chaos Read More » 'There are always these impositions by western organisations, enforcing what they call international standards, which in reality were written by people from the West who have never experienced a genocide or a siege for 19 months,' Sabbah said. 'Our mutual aid group and a couple of others that we really trust, centre the people in Gaza,' she added. 'We're not here to manage the initiative. We are here to facilitate, we're here to make sure the money gets to the right hands'. For Sabbah and her colleagues, this is the only way to help people in Gaza, to let them dictate the aid they require, rather than having it imposed on them by NGOs headquartered in the global north. 'There's no case that is similar to Gaza,' Sabbah said. 'There have been genocides that happened for long periods of time, but a siege on top of that, and also an intentional famine all happening at the same time with no one being able to leave. 'I think that, after 12 plus years of working in NGOs and international organisations, I assure you, the UN would have had massive challenges in making this work, let alone an organisation like GHF that's run by a bunch of snipers and mercenaries."


The National
6 hours ago
- The National
Israeli gunfire at Gaza aid distribution point kills 30
Thirty Palestinians were killed with more feared dead on Sunday after Israeli troops opened fire at an aid distribution point run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) in Rafah, Palestinian media reported. The Israelis shot at hundreds of civilians as they attempted to reach the GHF food centre, Palestinian news agency Wafa said. At least 115 people were injured, it added. The GHF, which is backed by the US and Israel, recently started operating after Israel relaxed an aid blockade on Gaza in recent days. The UN and other international aid organisations have refused to work with the foundation, saying its operations are an affront to international humanitarian principles. Israel has faced mounting international criticism over the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, where the UN has warned the entire population faces famine. It imposed an aid blockade on the besieged strip in March and has only relaxed it in recent days. Nearly 20 months into the war, negotiations on a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas remain deadlocked. A brief truce collapsed in March, and Israel has since intensified operations to 'destroy' Hamas. Aid is now trickling in after Israel partially lifted its blockade, but the UN has reported looting of its lorries and warehouses. The UN's World Food Programme called on Israel 'to get far greater volumes of food assistance into Gaza faster', saying desperation was 'contributing to rising insecurity'. More than 80 WFP lorries entered Gaza loaded with flour on Saturday and were stopped by starving people, a representative for the agency told The National. 'Many of these lorries drove directly into communities and were stopped en route and food was offloaded by hungry people,' the representative said. 'But these aid deliveries are nowhere near enough. The fear of starvation remains high.' The UN representative said the agency needs 'to flood communities with food for the next few days to calm anxieties and rebuild the trust with communities that more food is coming'. 'To scale up, we need operating conditions to improve – more safe and dependable convoy routes, faster permission approvals, and additional border crossings open.' The WFP has more than 140,000 tonnes of food, enough to feed the entire population of 2.2 million Gazans for two months, ready to be brought into Gaza. The wrangling over aid comes as US President Donald Trump' s special envoy Steve Witkoff on Saturday said Hamas had submitted a 'totally unacceptable' response to a US-backed ceasefire plan signed off by Israel. The 60-day truce proposal was presented to Hamas on Thursday and now appears to be in the balance. Hamas had given a conditional agreement to the plan, sources told The National, with the group's reservations focused on assurances it seeks on Israel's withdrawal from the Palestinian territory and the distribution of aid. The US envoy's position towards Hamas was 'unfair' and showed 'complete bias' towards Israel, the Palestinian group said.


Khaleej Times
7 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Israeli gunfire kills 10, injures over 100 near aid site in Gaza
Gaza rescuers said Israeli gunfire killed at least 10 Palestinians and wounded more than 100 early Sunday as thousands of people headed towards a US-backed aid distribution site. "At least 10 Palestinians were killed and more than 100 others... were wounded due to gunfire from Israeli vehicles towards thousands of citizens" approaching the US aid site west of Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP. The dead and wounded were transferred to Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis, he said. More than 18 months into the war in Gaza, Israel has come under increasing international criticism over the dire humanitarian situation in the Palestinian territory, where the United Nations has warned the entire population was at risk of famine. Aid is only trickling in after the partial lifting by Israel of a more than two-month total blockade, and the UN reported looting of its trucks and warehouses last month. The UN's World Food Programme has called on Israel "to get far greater volumes of food assistance into Gaza faster", saying desperation was "contributing to rising insecurity". The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which is administered by contracted US security with support from Israeli troops, began distributing food in the Gaza Strip on May 26. The UN and other major aid groups have refused to cooperate with the organisation, saying it violated basic humanitarian principles, and appeared crafted to cater to Israeli military objectives. Officially a private effort, GHF said it had distributed 2.1 million meals as of Friday.