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New Gaza aid group met with chaos, gunfire in its first week
New Gaza aid group met with chaos, gunfire in its first week

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

New Gaza aid group met with chaos, gunfire in its first week

In the southern tip of Gaza, along a dusty road that is mostly desolate — but for an Israeli military presence — thousands of Palestinians gathered on Friday for the latest aid distribution from the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF). The lines were long, the road was dangerous and the possibility of leaving empty handed was high. But people were, and remain, desperate. And after weeks of aid not getting into Gaza, they'll go to any lengths to secure some food. "I'm coming to face death so I can feed my children," Imran Wafi told CBC News, from the side of a road leading to a distribution point. "We know it's dangerous but the big catastrophe is there's no food for us to eat." GHF claims it has delivered over two million meals in Gaza in its first week of operations in the enclave. The U.S.-backed startup was established in February in Switzerland, and has already drawn widespread condemnation from other aid agencies operating in the territory. In a statement to CBC News, GHF said its distributions occurred "without incident" and that it plans to expand its presence in the enclave "including in the northern region" in the weeks to come. It currently runs two sites, one in Rafah and one in central Gaza in the Natsarim corridor. WATCH | GHF delivers aid in Gaza: But eyewitness reports from the ground say many of those distributions have been chaotic, and that at least one person was killed at a GHF hub — a claim which the organization denies. Video footage from throughout the week shows droves of people breaking through fences and running in every direction amid gunshots. Gaza resident Ahmed Al-Qadi says his friend, Mohamed Abdelhadi, was killed getting aid from GHF at Natsarim on Wednesday. "He went to get aid and on his way home... he turned his back and he got hit," he said. "This aid is with blood, it's dipped in blood." GHF denies anyone was killed during its operations this week. "No civilians or individuals involved with the distribution of aid were injured, no lives were lost," it said in a statement to CBC News. And yet, aid distributions by the group, which started on Monday, have not been without hiccups, many ending with warning shots or chaotic breaks by Palestinians through fences set up to control the lineups. GHF has also faced criticism from organizations including the United Nations, which opposes its operations in Gaza. The previous leading aid group in Gaza, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine (UNRWA), was banned from the territory last year by Israel over its staffers' alleged involvement in the Oct. 7, 2023, attack by Hamas which sparked the current war in Gaza. Despite that, UNRWA continued operating and the ban was met with concern from international leaders. The UN said Friday that GHF is an "attempt to circumvent the UN and its agencies on the ground" which have been present in Gaza for a long time "in accordance with international law." The statement went on to say that GHF "fails the test of humanitarian principles." CBC News caught up with people walking back from the distribution point in central Gaza. One man showed the contents of a box containing flour, sugar, pasta and oil. But not everyone was as lucky. Gaza resident Muhammad Abu Gharqud said Thursday was the second time he came to a distribution point and left empty handed. Leaning on a crutch because of his amputated leg, the 45-year-old looked exhausted. "I can't find food for my kids," he said. "I can't find anything." Desperation mounted for Palestinians in the Gaza Strip as looting became more frequent this week. Some aid trucks were allowed in but were met with mobs of civilians looking for any food they can get their hands on and particularly flour. Muhammad Shamlakh was at the scene when a truck was looted in Gaza City on Thursday. He said people were "eating each other alive." "The people are dying of hunger," he said. "There's no flour, everything was stolen." WATCH | Palestinians loot aid truck:

New Gaza aid group met with chaos, gunfire in its first week
New Gaza aid group met with chaos, gunfire in its first week

CBC

time2 days ago

  • General
  • CBC

New Gaza aid group met with chaos, gunfire in its first week

In the southern tip of Gaza, along a dusty road that is mostly desolate — but for an Israeli military presence — thousands of Palestinians gathered on Friday for the latest aid distribution from the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF). The lines were long, the road was dangerous and the possibility of leaving empty handed was high. But people were, and remain, desperate. And after weeks of aid not getting into Gaza, they'll go to any lengths to secure some food. "I'm coming to face death so I can feed my children," Imran Wafi told CBC News, from the side of a road leading to a distribution point. "We know it's dangerous but the big catastrophe is there's no food for us to eat." GHF claims it has delivered over two million meals in Gaza in its first week of operations in the enclave. The U.S.-backed startup was established in February in Switzerland, and has already drawn widespread condemnation from other aid agencies operating in the territory. In a statement to CBC News, GHF said its distributions occurred "without incident" and that it plans to expand its presence in the enclave "including in the northern region" in the weeks to come. It currently runs two sites, one in Rafah and one in central Gaza in the Natsarim corridor. WATCH | GHF delivers aid in Gaza: Controversial U.S. company distributes aid in Gaza amid sounds of gunshots 3 days ago Duration 1:17 But eyewitness reports from the ground say many of those distributions have been chaotic, and that at least one person was killed at a GHF hub — a claim which the organization denies. Video footage from throughout the week shows droves of people breaking through fences and running in every direction amid gunshots. Gaza resident Ahmed Al-Qadi says his friend, Mohamed Abdelhadi, was killed getting aid from GHF at Natsarim on Wednesday. "He went to get aid and on his way home... he turned his back and he got hit," he said. "This aid is with blood, it's dipped in blood." GHF denies anyone was killed during its operations this week. "No civilians or individuals involved with the distribution of aid were injured, no lives were lost," it said in a statement to CBC News. And yet, aid distributions by the group, which started on Monday, have not been without hiccups, many ending with warning shots or chaotic breaks by Palestinians through fences set up to control the lineups. GHF has also faced criticism from organizations including the United Nations, which opposes its operations in Gaza. The previous leading aid group in Gaza, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine (UNRWA), was banned from the territory last year by Israel over its staffers' alleged involvement in the Oct. 7, 2023, attack by Hamas which sparked the current war in Gaza. Despite that, UNRWA continued operating and the ban was met with concern from international leaders. The UN said Friday that GHF is an "attempt to circumvent the UN and its agencies on the ground" which have been present in Gaza for a long time "in accordance with international law." The statement went on to say that GHF "fails the test of humanitarian principles." CBC News caught up with people walking back from the distribution point in central Gaza. One man showed the contents of a box containing flour, sugar, pasta and oil. But not everyone was as lucky. Gaza resident Muhammad Abu Gharqud said Thursday was the second time he came to a distribution point and left empty handed. Leaning on a crutch because of his amputated leg, the 45-year-old looked exhausted. "I can't find food for my kids," he said. "I can't find anything." Desperation mounted for Palestinians in the Gaza Strip as looting became more frequent this week. Some aid trucks were allowed in but were met with mobs of civilians looking for any food they can get their hands on and particularly flour. Muhammad Shamlakh was at the scene when a truck was looted in Gaza City on Thursday. He said people were "eating each other alive." "The people are dying of hunger," he said. "There's no flour, everything was stolen." WATCH | Palestinians loot aid truck: Aid trucks are looted in central Gaza Strip 3 days ago Duration 0:50 As aid trucks made their way to central Gaza, hundreds of civilians looted them in an effort to secure food after weeks of hunger as aid slowly trickles into the territory.

Thousands of Palestinians grab UN warehouse
Thousands of Palestinians grab UN warehouse

Daily Tribune

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • Daily Tribune

Thousands of Palestinians grab UN warehouse

AFP | Deir el-Balah Thousands of Palestinians stormed a UN warehouse in Gaza's Deir el-Balah yesterday, AFP footage showed, as the UN's World Food Programme said its warehouse there was broken into. AFP footage showed crowds of Palestinians breaking into a World Food Programme (WFP) warehouse and taking bags and cartons of food supplies as gunshots rang out. 'Hordes of hungry people broke into WFP's Al-Ghafari warehouse in Deir Al-Balah, Central Gaza, in search of food supplies that were pre-positioned for distribution,' WFP said in a statement on X. 'Initial reports indicate two people died and several were injured in the tragic incident,' it said, adding: 'WFP is still confirming details.' The issue of aid has come sharply into focus amid a hunger crisis after Israel imposed a full blockade on Gaza for over two months, before allowing supplies in at a trickle last week. 'Humanitarian needs have spiralled out of control after 80 days of complete blockade of all food assistance and other aid into Gaza,' the WFP statement said. Intense criticism has been levelled at the the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a USbacked group that has bypassed the longstanding UN-led system in the territory. The UN yesterday condemned the US-backed aid system in Gaza after 47 people were injured during a chaotic food distribution the day before when thousands of Palestinians desperate for food rushed into a GHF aid distribution site. A Palestinian medical source said at least one had died. 'WFP urgently calls for safe, unimpeded humanitarian access to enable orderly food distributions across Gaza immediately,' its statement said. Israel stepped up its military offensive in Gaza, ignited by an attack by Palestinian group Hamas on October 7, 2023, earlier this month.

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