Palestinians ‘desperate for food but getting bombs’, says UN as it criticises Israel’s Gaza aid plan – Middle East crisis live


‘Palestinians in Gaza are desperate for food and water but are getting bombs instead’ – UN

We have some more quotes from Jens Laerke, spokesperson for the UN’s humanitarian office (OCHA), who has been speaking to reporters in Geneva.

“The bottom line is that there’s no aid to distribute anymore because the aid operation has been strangled… There’s no more to give,” he said after news broke that the Israeli cabinet had approved a plan to deliver aid through private companies.

In Gaza “there’s a desperate need for food getting in; they’re getting bombs”, he said. “They need water, they’re getting bombs. They need health care, they’re getting bombs.”

Israel needs to allow border crossings to reopen and for life-saving aid to go through to alleviate the suffering, Laerke said. “We have aid pre-positioned outside of Gaza, ready to go in,” he added.

Key events

Israel’s plan to expand its Gaza offensive, displace people within the territory and take control of aid distribution has horrified Palestinians in Gaza who have already suffered multiple displacements and food shortages during 19 months of conflict.

Israel has been blocking all aid from entering Gaza since 2 March, when a two-month ceasefire with Hamas that had improved access to food and medicine in Gaza and allowed many Palestinians to go home, fell apart.

Reuters reported:

For Aya, a 30-year-old Gaza City resident who returned home with her family during the ceasefire after months in the southern part of the strip, Israel’s announcement on Monday raised fears of being killed or indefinitely displaced.

“Are we going to die this time?” she said in a message on a chat app.

“Are they going to displace us again? Are we going to end up in Rafah, and will this be the last time, or are they going to force us out of Gaza after Rafah?” she said, referring to the Rafah area in southern Gaza, next to Egypt’s border.

Attending a funeral on Monday for several people killed in an Israeli air strike on a building in Gaza City, Mohammed al-Seikaly said things were so dire it was hard to comprehend Israel’s plans to intensify its assault.

“There is nothing left in the Gaza Strip that has not been struck by missiles and explosive barrels, and there are still threats to expand the operation,” he said.

“I’m asking in front of the whole world, what’s left to bomb?”

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