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Can Israel's ‘tactical pause' and airdrops help tackle the hunger crisis in Gaza?
Children and youths gather as a C-130 Hercules military transport aircraft flies over during an aiddrop on the northern Gaza Strip on Sunday, July 27. Two Jordanian and one Emirati plane on dropped 25 tonnes of humanitarian aid over the Gaza Strip, Jordanian state television reported on July 27. AFP
'We are expected to save lives while our own are slowly being consumed. This is not just about hunger, but about the slow destruction of life, ability, and humanity.'
This remark rightly sums up the situation in Gaza where everyone and anyone is starving. In fact, the World Health Organisation (Who) has warned that malnutrition has reached 'alarming levels' in Gaza with rates on a 'dangerous trajectory', while UN's Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA) has noted that one in five children in Gaza City is malnourished and cases are increasing every day.
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Amid this situation, on Sunday morning (July 27), Israel announced it would begin a daily 'humanitarian pause' in three densely populated areas of Gaza as well as announced the resumption of airdropped aid.
Following the announcement, Jordanian and Emirati planes began dropping food into Gaza. But the question is — is it enough? Will it help alleviate the hunger crisis unfolding in the besieged enclave?
How bad is the situation in Gaza?
Even before the war began following the attacks on October 7, 2024, the situation in Gaza was not too good — the enclave has often been referred to as Israel's open-air prison. But ever since the war broke out, a humanitarian crisis has been unfolding in the enclave.
As a result of the war, thousands of Gazans have been displaced; forced to live in the streets or makeshift tents. As Gaza's infrastructure has been destroyed, access to water and power has become more difficult.
Moreover, the delivery of food aid has been interrupted as a result of the war and restrictions laid down by the Israeli military. In fact, before the conflict, some 3,000 aid and commercial trucks would enter Gaza every week. This number has drastically plummeted since then.
Palestinians crowd at a lentil soup distribution point in Gaza City in the northern Gaza Strip. AFP
As a result, starvation, extreme hunger and malnourishment have taken root in Gaza. According to the World Food Programme (WFP), 90,000 women and children are in urgent need of treatment for malnutrition, while one in three people are going without food for days. More than 100 aid and human rights groups warned last week that 'mass starvation' was spreading.
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On July 23, the Palestinian health ministry announced that the death toll due to hunger in the past five days had risen to 43, whereas, the Who announced that more than 50 children have died of malnutrition since March.
Doctors and nurses are struggling with the food crisis in Gaza. Doctors describe their battle to keep up with the number of patients coming in, seeking treatment. As Dr Ahmad al-Farra, the director of paediatrics at Nasser medical complex, told _The Guardia_n, 'Our malnutrition ward in the hospital is extremely overcrowded. Due to the large number of cases, some children are forced to sleep on the floor.'
Dr Nick Maynard, a British surgeon who is volunteering at the Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza recounts the scenes unfolding at the facility. 'The expression 'skin and bones' doesn't do it justice. I saw the severity of malnutrition that I would not have thought possible in a civilized world. This is man-made starvation being used as a weapon of war and it will lead to many more deaths unless food and aid is let in immediately,' he told the New York Times.
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A Palestinian woman holds her five-month-old daughter, who is malnourished, according to medics, at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip. Reuters
Doctors also note that the lack of food has resulted in many to die of other conditions, as they were too weak to fend it off. Starvation is causing more mothers to suffer miscarriages or give birth prematurely, to malnourished babies with weakened immune systems and medical abnormalities.
'The result is a rise in infections, dehydration and even immune collapse in infants,' said Dr Hani al-Faleet, a paediatric consultant at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in central Gaza. 'The immediate cause of death in some of these cases is simple: The baby doesn't get enough to eat, and neither does the mother.'
The situation is so dire that even journalists reporting from the ground are now struggling to stay alive. Some have even had to cut back on their coverage of the war, now in its 22nd month, with one journalist saying 'we have no energy left due to hunger'.
The hunger crisis has affected virtually everyone in the Gaza Strip, with the UN describing their staff as 'walking corpses'.
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So, what has Israel announced now?
Facing intense international criticism, Israel, on Sunday, announced a limited pause in fighting in three populated areas of Gaza for 10 hours a day as part of a series of steps that it says would give the United Nations and other aid agencies secure land routes to tackle a deepening hunger crisis.
The Israel Defense Forces said it would begin a tactical pause in Gaza City, Deir al-Balah and Muwasi, three areas of the territory with large populations, to 'increase the scale of humanitarian aid' entering the Gaza Strip. It said the pause would begin every day at 10 am local time, effective Sunday, and continue until further notice.
A pro-Palestinian activist holds a placard as they protest over hunger crisis in Gaza, along Sea Point Promenade in Cape Town, South Africa. Reuters
And following the announcement, airdrops began in the region with Israel, Jordan, and the UAE airdropping 28 aid packages. The Jordanian military said its planes, working with the United Arab Emirates, had delivered 25 tonnes of aid in three parachute drops over Gaza on Sunday. Moreover, truckloads of flour were also seen arriving in northern Gaza through the Zikim area crossing from Israel, according to AFP journalists.
Will this improve the situation in Gaza?
The answer, according to aid agencies, is that it won't be enough. NGOs note that these steps may help ease access but as mass starvation is already underway, much more is needed. Groups have called for a full ceasefire in order to get civilians the help they need.
UNICEF spokesman Joe English told CNN: 'We do airdrops in places around the world but it works where there are remote communities in big, wide open spaces. That's not the case in the Gaza Strip.'
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Other aid agencies also noted that Israel's move to allow for aid drops is merely a 'grotesque distraction' from the horror that is unfolding on the ground level. Ciarán Donnelly, of the International Rescue Committee, said aid drops could 'never deliver the volume or the quality' of aid needed.
Humanitarian aid is dropped on the Gaza Strip as pictured from a position along the border in southern Israel on July 27. AFP
The head of the UNRWA, Philippe Lazzarini, also noted that airdrops are 'expensive, inefficient, and can even kill starving civilians' if they go awry. 'Driving aid through is much easier, more effective, faster, cheaper & safer. It's more dignified for the people of Gaza.'
Moreover, it is unclear about how long it will maintain the pause, allowing for the airdrops. Humanitarians have said consistency is key to their work.
Oxfam's regional policy chief Bushra Khalidi, welcomed Israel's move but noted that it wasn't sufficient. Echoing other humanitarian officials who are sceptical about the airdrops being able to tackle the hunger crisis, she told AFP, 'Starvation won't be solved by a few trucks or airdrops. What's needed is a real humanitarian response: ceasefire, full access, all crossings open and a steady, large-scale flow of aid into Gaza. We need a permanent ceasefire, a complete lifting of the siege.'
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What's been the reaction on the ground so far?
It's only been one day since Israel announced the pause and allowing for airdrops, which means that it will take some more time before one can see any noticeable difference. However, The Guardian noted that the price of flour had dipped 20 per cent overnight.
Palestinian walk carrying sacks of flour near Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip, on July 27, 2025, after trucks carrying humanitarian aid entered into northern Gaza coming from the Zikim border crossing. AFP
Doctors have also warned that resolving this crisis is far from easy. People who are suffering from acute malnutrition need specialised treatment, as they can develop refeeding syndrome if they resume eating normally after a prolonged period of hunger. 'All of these folks who have been deprived for so long, we worry about the complications that they may have developed,' Dr Thaer Ahmad, a doctor who has worked on medical missions in Gaza, told The Guardian.
With inputs from agencies

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Time of India
5 hours ago
- Time of India
'All the signals are there': UN warns Gaza near famine; compares disaster to Biafra, Ethiopia starvations
Children in queue waiting for food in Gaza (AP) The United Nations agency World Food Programme on Tuesday warned about the famine-like humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza as reminiscent of disasters seen in Ethiopia and Biafra, Nigeria in the last century, reported news agency AFP. "This is unlike anything we have seen in this century," WFP emergency director Ross Smith told reporters in Geneva. "It reminds us of previous disasters in Ethiopia or Biafra in the past century, " he said, speaking via video-link from Rome. 'We need urgent action now." The warning came shortly after the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification Initiative (IPC) issued a stark alert, stating that "the worst-case scenario of famine is now unfolding in the Gaza Strip." The IPC's assessment highlights the rapidly deteriorating humanitarian conditions in the region. The IPC, a UN-backed consortium of organisations that monitors malnutrition levels, stressed that "immediate, unimpeded" humanitarian access into Gaza is the only way to halt the rapidly escalating "starvation and death." "Disaster is unfolding in front of our eyes, in front of our television screens," Smith said. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Up to 70% off | Shop Sale Libas Undo "This is not a warning: this is a call to action," he added, reported AFP. Israel enforced a complete blockade on Gaza on March 2 following the collapse of ceasefire talks. By late May, it permitted a limited amount of aid to enter the territory, amid growing warnings of widespread starvation. The IPC reported that its latest data indicates "famine thresholds" have been reached in "most of the Gaza Strip." While the alert does not constitute a formal famine declaration, it aims to highlight the severity of the crisis using "the latest available evidence" up to July 25, according to AFP Jean-Martin Bauer, director of food security and nutrition analysis at the World Food Programme (WFP), emphasized the situation, stating, "what we're seeing is mounting evidence that a famine is there," adding, "all the signals are there now."


NDTV
7 hours ago
- NDTV
Gangs, Merchants Sell Food Aid In Gaza At Exorbitant Prices Amid Security Breakdown
Dier-al-balah: Since Israel's offensive led to a security breakdown in Gaza that has made it nearly impossible to safely deliver food to starving Palestinians, much of the limited aid entering is being hoarded by gangs and merchants and sold at exorbitant prices. A kilogram (2.2 pounds) of flour has run as high as $60 in recent days, a kilogram of lentils up to $35. That is beyond the means of most residents in the territory, which experts say is at risk of famine and where people are largely reliant on savings 21 months into the Israel-Hamas war. Israel's decision this weekend to facilitate more aid deliveries - under international pressure - has lowered prices somewhat but has yet to be fully felt on the ground. Bags of flour in markets often bear UN logos, while other packaging has markings indicating it came from the Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation - all originally handed out for free. It's impossible to know how much is being diverted, but neither group is able to track who receives its aid. In the melees surrounding aid distributions in recent weeks, residents say the strong were best positioned to come away with food. Mohammed Abu Taha, who lives in a tent with his wife and child near the city of Rafah, said organized gangs of young men are always at the front of crowds when he visits GHF sites. "It's a huge business," he said. The UN says up to 100,000 women and children are suffering from severe acute malnutrition, aid groups and media outlets say their own staffers are going hungry, and Gaza's Health Ministry says dozens of Palestinians have died from hunger-related causes in the last three weeks. When the UN gets Israeli permission to distribute aid, its convoys are nearly always attacked by armed gangs or overwhelmed by hungry crowds in the buffer zone controlled by the military. The UN's World Food Program said last week it will only be able to safely deliver aid to the most vulnerable once internal security is restored - likely only under a ceasefire. "In the meantime, given the urgent need for families to access food, WFP will accept hungry populations taking food from its trucks, as long as there is no violence," spokesperson Abeer Etifa said. In the alternative delivery system operated by GHF, an American contractor, Palestinians often run a deadly gantlet. More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli troops while seeking food since May, mainly near the GHF sites, according to the UN human rights office, witnesses and local health officials. The military says it has only fired warning shots when people approach its forces, while GHF says its security contractors have only used pepper spray or fired in the air on some occasions to prevent stampedes. A man in his 30s, who insisted on anonymity for fear of reprisal, said he had visited GHF sites about 40 times since they opened and nearly always came back with food. He sold most of it to merchants or other people in order to buy other necessities for his family. Heba Jouda, who has visited the sites many times, said armed men steal aid as people return with it and merchants also offer to buy it. "To get food from the American organization, you have to be strong and fast," she said. Footage shot by Palestinians at GHF sites and shared broadly shows chaotic scenes, with crowds of men racing down fenced-in corridors and scrambling to grab boxes off the ground. GHF says it has installed separate lanes for women and children and is ramping up programs to deliver aid directly to communities. The UN's deliveries also often devolve into deadly violence and chaos, with crowds of thousands rapidly overwhelming trucks in close proximity to Israeli troops. The UN does not accept protection from Israel, saying it prefers to rely on community support. The Israeli military did not respond to emails seeking comment about the reselling of aid. Israel denies allowing looters to operate in areas it controls and accuses Hamas of prolonging the war by not surrendering. "There is no policy of starvation in Gaza, and there is no starvation in Gaza," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday. For much of the war, UN agencies were able to safely deliver aid, despite Israeli restrictions and occasional attacks and theft. Hamas-led police guarded convoys and went after suspected looters and merchants who resold aid. During a ceasefire earlier this year, Israel allowed up to 600 aid trucks to enter daily. There were no major disruptions in deliveries, and food prices were far lower. The UN said it had mechanisms in place to prevent any organized diversion of aid. But Israel says Hamas was siphoning it off, though it has provided no evidence of widespread theft. That all changed in March, when Israel ended the ceasefire and halted all imports, including food. Israel seized large parts of Gaza in what it said was a tactic to pressure Hamas into releasing hostages abducted in its Oct. 7, 2023, attack that ignited the war. As the Hamas-run police vanished from areas under Israeli control, local tribes and gangs - some of which Israel says it supports - took over, residents say. Israel began allowing a trickle of aid to enter in May. GHF was set up that month with the stated goal of preventing Hamas from diverting aid. Since then, Israel has allowed an average of about 70 trucks a day, compared to the 500-600 the UN says are needed. The military said Saturday it would allow more trucks in - 180 entered Sunday - and international airdrops have resumed, which aid organizations say are largely ineffective. Meanwhile, food distribution continues to be plagued by chaos and violence, as seen near GHF sites or around UN trucks. Even if Israel pauses its military operations during the day, it's unclear how much the security situation will improve. With both the UN and GHF, it's possible Hamas members are among the crowds. In response to questions from The Associated Press, GHF acknowledged that but said its system prevents the organized diversion of aid. "The real concern we are addressing is not whether individual actors manage to receive food, but whether Hamas is able to systematically control aid flows. At GHF sites, they cannot," it said. Hamas has denied stealing aid. It's unclear if it's involved in the trade in aid, but its fighters would be taking a major risk by operating in a coordinated way in Israeli military zones that UN trucks pass through and where GHF sites are located. UN officials have called on Israel to fully lift the blockade and flood Gaza with food. That would reduce the incentive for looting by ensuring enough for everyone and driving down prices. Another ceasefire would include a major increase in aid and the release of Israeli hostages, but talks have stalled. Hamas started the war when its fighters rushed into Israel, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting 251 hostages. Fifty captives are still being held in Gaza. Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed over 59,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which has said women and children make up more than half the dead. It does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count. The ministry is part of the Hamas-run government and is run by medical professionals. Israel has disputed its figures without providing its own.
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Business Standard
10 hours ago
- Business Standard
Gangs, merchants sell food aid in Gaza, where IDF shattered security
Since Israel's offensive led to a security breakdown in Gaza that has made it nearly impossible to safely deliver food to starving Palestinians, much of the limited aid entering is being hoarded by gangs and merchants and sold at exorbitant prices. A kilogram of flour has run as high as $60 in recent days, a kilogram of lentils up to $35. That is beyond the means of most residents in the territory, which experts say is at risk of famine and where people are largely reliant on savings 21 months into the Israel-Hamas war. Israel's decision this weekend to facilitate more aid deliveries under international pressure has lowered prices somewhat but has yet to be fully felt on the ground. Bags of flour in markets often bear UN logos, while other packaging has markings indicating it came from the Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation all originally handed out for free. It's impossible to know how much is being diverted, but neither group is able to track who receives its aid. In the melees surrounding aid distributions in recent weeks, residents say the strong were best positioned to come away with food. Mohammed Abu Taha, who lives in a tent with his wife and child near the city of Rafah, said organised gangs of young men are always at the front of crowds when he visits GHF sites. It's a huge business, he said. Every avenue for aid is beset by chaos The UN says up to 100,000 women and children are suffering from severe acute malnutrition, aid groups and media outlets say their own staffers are going hungry, and Gaza's Health Ministry says dozens of Palestinians have died from hunger-related causes in the last three weeks. When the UN gets Israeli permission to distribute aid, its convoys are nearly always attacked by armed gangs or overwhelmed by hungry crowds in the buffer zone controlled by the military. The UN's World Food Program said last week it will only be able to safely deliver aid to the most vulnerable once internal security is restored likely only under a ceasefire. In the meantime, given the urgent need for families to access food, WFP will accept hungry populations taking food from its trucks, as long as there is no violence, spokesperson Abeer Etifa said. In the alternative delivery system operated by GHF, an American contractor, Palestinians often run a deadly gantlet. More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli troops while seeking food since May, mainly near the GHF sites, according to the UN human rights office, witnesses and local health officials. The military says it has only fired warning shots when people approach its forces, while GHF says its security contractors have only used pepper spray or fired in the air on some occasions to prevent stampedes. You have to be strong and fast A man in his 30s, who insisted on anonymity for fear of reprisal, said he had visited GHF sites about 40 times since they opened and nearly always came back with food. He sold most of it to merchants or other people in order to buy other necessities for his family. Heba Jouda, who has visited the sites many times, said armed men steal aid as people return with it and merchants also offer to buy it. To get food from the American organization, you have to be strong and fast," she said. Footage shot by Palestinians at GHF sites and shared broadly shows chaotic scenes, with crowds of men racing down fenced-in corridors and scrambling to grab boxes off the ground. GHF says it has installed separate lanes for women and children and is ramping up programs to deliver aid directly to communities. The UN's deliveries also often devolve into deadly violence and chaos, with crowds of thousands rapidly overwhelming trucks in close proximity to Israeli troops. The UN does not accept protection from Israel, saying it prefers to rely on community support. The Israeli military did not respond to emails seeking comment about the reselling of aid. Israel denies allowing looters to operate in areas it controls and accuses Hamas of prolonging the war by not surrendering. There is no policy of starvation in Gaza, and there is no starvation in Gaza, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday. The situation changed dramatically in March For much of the war, UN agencies were able to safely deliver aid, despite Israeli restrictions and occasional attacks and theft. Hamas-led police guarded convoys and went after suspected looters and merchants who resold aid. During a ceasefire earlier this year, Israel allowed up to 600 aid trucks to enter daily. There were no major disruptions in deliveries, and food prices were far lower. The UN said it had mechanisms in place to prevent any organized diversion of aid. But Israel says Hamas was siphoning it off, though it has provided no evidence of widespread theft. That all changed in March, when Israel ended the ceasefire and halted all imports, including food. Israel seized large parts of Gaza in what it said was a tactic to pressure Hamas into releasing hostages abducted in its Oct 7, 2023, attack that ignited the war. As the Hamas-run police vanished from areas under Israeli control, local tribes and gangs some of which Israel says it supports took over, residents say. Israel began allowing a trickle of aid to enter in May. GHF was set up that month with the stated goal of preventing Hamas from diverting aid. Since then, Israel has allowed an average of about 70 trucks a day, compared to the 500-600 the UN says are needed. The military said Saturday it would allow more trucks in 180 entered Sunday and international airdrops have resumed, which aid organizations say are largely ineffective. Meanwhile, food distribution continues to be plagued by chaos and violence, as seen near GHF sites or around UN trucks. Even if Israel pauses its military operations during the day, it's unclear how much the security situation will improve. With both the UN and GHF, it's possible Hamas members are among the crowds. In response to questions from The Associated Press, GHF acknowledged that but said its system prevents the organized diversion of aid. The real concern we are addressing is not whether individual actors manage to receive food, but whether Hamas is able to systematically control aid flows. At GHF sites, they cannot, it said. Hamas has denied stealing aid. It's unclear if it's involved in the trade in aid, but its fighters would be taking a major risk by operating in a coordinated way in Israeli military zones that UN trucks pass through and where GHF sites are located. The UN says the only solution is a ceasefire UN officials have called on Israel to fully lift the blockade and flood Gaza with food. That would reduce the incentive for looting by ensuring enough for everyone and driving down prices. Another ceasefire would include a major increase in aid and the release of Israeli hostages, but talks have stalled. Hamas started the war when its fighters stormed into Israel, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting 251 hostages. Fifty captives are still being held in Gaza. Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed over 59,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which has said women and children make up more than half the dead. It does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count. The ministry is part of the Hamas-run government and is run by medical professionals. Israel has disputed its figures without providing its own. (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)