
UN labels US-Israel-backed Gaza aid program a 'failure'
DaysofPal – A harsh evaluation of the recently established US- and Israel-backed aid program, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), was delivered by the UN, which referred to it as a humanitarian 'failure' and charged it with escalating the suffering in the besieged Gaza Strip.
Jens Laerke, spokesperson for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), stated in a press briefing in Geneva on Friday:
'GHF, I think it's fair to say, has been, from a principled humanitarian standpoint, a failure. They are not doing what a humanitarian operation should do, which is providing aid to people safely and securely.'
The GHF, a private organization launched on May 26 after Israel had fully sealed off Gaza's aid corridors for more than two months, claims to have distributed over 18 million meals. However, the UN and major international aid organizations have refused to cooperate with the initiative, citing its lack of transparency, politicization of aid, and close alignment with Israeli military objectives.
Critics argue that the GHF operates outside the international humanitarian framework and has effectively militarized aid distribution. UN agencies accuse it of failing to ensure the safe delivery of life-saving supplies and contributing to further chaos by enabling Israeli control over humanitarian access.
Humanitarian organizations have reported dozens of civilian casualties near GHF-operated aid distribution points, largely attributed to Israeli forces opening fire on crowds. According to the Palestinian Civil Defense, around 30 Palestinians were killed in early June while attempting to collect aid. The Israeli military claimed it had only fired warning shots, a claim widely contradicted by eyewitnesses.
Laerke emphasized the UN's willingness to resume broad-scale humanitarian operations in Gaza if Israel allows the safe and consistent entry of sufficient aid:
'We are ready to operate at scale again, but it requires real, regular, safe, and principled access.'
Surge in civilian deaths during aid distribution
Since the GHF began its work, aid distributions have become flashpoints for violence, resulting in repeated massacres of Palestinians. On Friday alone, at least 20 Palestinians were killed by Israeli strikes during aid collection efforts, including at the Nablus roundabout and near the American School in northern Gaza. Another direct strike killed nine people near Deir al-Balah in central Gaza.
Hospitals across the Strip documented at least 27 deaths on Saturday, including 11 people shot while waiting for food. A new massacre was reported near an aid distribution site in the Wadi Gaza area.
According to Gaza's Ministry of Health, as of Thursday, 245 Palestinians have been killed and more than 2,152 wounded near GHF-linked distribution points. These figures are part of a broader toll from Israel's ongoing military campaign.
UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, has also denounced the GHF mechanism, labeling it a 'degrading' and 'lethal' aid system. The UN had rejected involvement with the GHF from its inception, asserting that it lacks neutrality and integrity.
The GHF has drawn criticism not only for failing to meet humanitarian standards but also for serving what many observers see as a political and military agenda: controlling food access as a method of displacement and collective punishment.
Israel, with full backing from the United States, stands accused of committing acts that many international bodies and human rights organizations characterize as genocide, including deliberate starvation, destruction of civilian infrastructure, and forced displacement.
The war on Gaza has left over 182,000 Palestinians dead or wounded, with more than 11,000 reported missing, most of them women and children. The enclave is already experiencing a devastating famine that is killing a lot of people, especially babies. Entire neighborhoods have been leveled, and hundreds of thousands remain homeless.
Shortlink for this post: https://daysofpalestine.ps/?p=64780
Hashtags

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


Days of Palestine
4 hours ago
- Days of Palestine
Israel Kills 72 in 24 Hours as Gaza Genocide Enters Day 617
The Israeli war machine continues its assault on the Gaza Strip for the 617th consecutive day, escalating what Palestinian sources describe as a campaign of genocide against civilians. Amid a suffocating blockade, dozens more were killed Sunday as Israeli forces carried out fresh massacres, primarily targeting displaced Palestinians searching for food aid. At least 26 Palestinians, most of them aid seekers, were killed early Sunday in multiple Israeli attacks across the besieged territory. In the past 24 hours alone, Israeli airstrikes and artillery fire have killed more than 72 people in various parts of Gaza. In one attack, one person was killed and several others were injured when Israeli forces shelled the Asdaa area northwest of Khan Younis in southern Gaza. Elsewhere, Hussein Osama Abu Hasira was killed in a direct artillery strike on an apartment along Salah al-Din Street in the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza. According to medical sources at Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis, 13 bodies were transferred to the hospital Sunday morning. The victims were identified as: Muhammad Hassan Muhammad Darwish, Subhi Muhammad Subhi Al-Sha'er, Shadi Ahmad Muhammad Qudeir, Hassan Muhammad Muhammad Qudeir, Fatima Muhammad Suleiman Awadallah, Amal Yasser Abdulaziz Abu Anza, Ahmad Kamel Ahmad Al-Ghalban, Hamza Nabil Muhammad Othman, Amina Eid Sami Al-Mallaha, Ghina Basel Mahmoud Abu Ishaq, Muhammad Jihad Salman Qabalan, Taher Hussein Ahmad Al-Satari, and Khaled Muhammad Youssef Al-Falit. Local sources confirmed that three people were killed near a food aid distribution point in Netzarim, central Gaza, while two others were killed near another aid site in Rafah, in the south. Four Palestinians were killed at the aid truck entry route in Sudaniya, northwest of Gaza City, and three others were killed in an Israeli strike on a crowd in Beit Lahiya. Seven more bodies were transferred to Al-Shifa Medical Complex after Israeli attacks in Al-Tawam and Beit Lahiya early Sunday. Meanwhile, three more victims were taken to Al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat, also killed while waiting for food aid near the Netzarim corridor. Israeli naval forces opened fire on displaced civilians along Al-Rashid Street west of Gaza City, killing one and injuring several others as they waited for food. Additional injuries were reported from shelling that targeted people waiting for aid east of Deir al-Balah and northwest of Gaza City. Israeli artillery also struck southeastern Deir al-Balah, adding to the rising toll of casualties in the central Gaza Strip. As the war on Gaza grinds on with no end in sight, Palestinians face mounting death, starvation, and despair—trapped in what humanitarian organizations are increasingly calling one of the world's worst ongoing atrocities.


Days of Palestine
4 hours ago
- Days of Palestine
Mass Protests Erupt Across European Capitals against Gaza Genocide
DaysofPal- Thousands of demonstrators took to the streets in several major European cities on Saturday, protesting the continued Israeli aggression on the Gaza Strip. Mass rallies were held in Paris, Madrid, and dozens of other Spanish cities, Berlin, Brussels, and the UK city of Manchester, with participants expressing solidarity with the Palestinian people and demanding an immediate ceasefire and the entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza. Protesters waved Palestinian flags and held signs condemning the atrocities committed by the Israeli occupation against the Palestinian population. Demonstrators also called for an end to double standards in international policy and urged that Israel be held accountable for its crimes, particularly the massacres of children and civilians. Since October 7, 2023, Israeli forces have launched a genocidal war on the Gaza Strip, ignoring international pleas and defying orders by the International Court of Justice to halt the assault. The onslaught has resulted in approximately 180,000 Palestinians killed or wounded, most of them women and children, in addition to over 11,000 missing persons, hundreds of thousands displaced, and a famine that has claimed the lives of a majority of Gaza's population. Shortlink for this post:


Days of Palestine
4 hours ago
- Days of Palestine
Israel Imposes Total Lockdown on West Bank, Detains Dozens
Israeli occupation forces have intensified their military lockdown across the occupied West Bank for the third consecutive day, closing nearly all entrances and exits to cities, towns, and villages, while carrying out widespread raids and arrests. According to reports, Israeli forces have blocked major roads with concrete blocks and metal gates, severely restricting the movement of Palestinians. Simultaneously, a large-scale arrest campaign has swept through several districts, with dozens of young men detained. In occupied Jerusalem, all access points to surrounding towns remain shut. On Sunday at dawn, Israeli forces stormed Shu'fat refugee camp in northeast Jerusalem and arrested two young men after raiding their homes. In the town of Abu Dis, southeast of the city, soldiers reportedly assaulted youths during field interrogations and stormed several homes. In Ramallah and al-Bireh, Israeli troops reinforced their presence at key entrances, erecting military checkpoints and closing routes to several surrounding villages, including Rawabi, Ras Karkar, Deir Ammar, Turmus Ayya, and Sinjil. The main entrance to the town of al-Taybeh was also sealed. Nablus continues to be encircled by Israeli checkpoints. Soldiers closed off most village gates around the city and targeted civilian vehicles with sound bombs and tear gas, particularly near the Deir Sharaf checkpoint. Only two narrow routes—through Askar refugee camp and the town of al-Badhan—remain partially accessible. In Qalqilya, occupation forces shut the city's eastern entrance and locked gates leading to villages east of the city, including Nabi Elias, Immatin, and Hajja, restricting residents' movement. Al-Khalil faced the most extensive crackdown. Israeli troops sealed the main entrance to Idhna, barred movement on bypass roads, and closed all dirt paths leading in and out of the city. They detained at least 19 Palestinians on Sunday alone from across Hebron governorate, raiding neighborhoods, commercial shops, and homes in the process. In Idhna, detainees included Mohammad Abdulaziz al-Batran, Raafat Rashid al-Batran, Khattab Ismail al-Nattah, brothers Mohammad and Akram al-Fseisi, and Omar al-Nattah. Additional arrests took place in other areas of Al-Khalil, including the towns of Sa'ir and al-Dhahiriya, where dozens more were seized. Meanwhile, in the northern Jordan Valley, the Israeli military continues to block the Hamra and Tayasir checkpoints in both directions for the third day in a row. The closures are severely affecting residents, especially farmers trying to reach their lands or transport agricultural products to markets. The Palestinian Prisoners Society and the Commission for Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs said in a joint statement that over 40 Palestinians were arrested between Saturday night and Sunday morning, including minors and former detainees. Most of the arrests were concentrated in Hebron, with others in Ramallah, Nablus, Bethlehem, and Jerusalem. Since the beginning of Israel's war on Gaza in October 2023, approximately 17,500 Palestinians have been arrested across the West Bank. This figure includes those later released and does not account for thousands more detained in Gaza. The groups noted that arrests are increasingly accompanied by field interrogations, beatings, destruction of property, and even extrajudicial executions, particularly in Jenin and Tulkarm. The ongoing campaign has sparked fears among Palestinians of further escalations, with many communities effectively cut off and under siege. Shortlink for this post: