Famine fears rise in Gaza as UN agency stops food deliveries citing Israeli failure to protect convoys

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  • After pausing deliveries to the north after strike hit aid truck, World Food Programme tried resuming this week but faced gunfire and crowds of hungry Palestinians
  • WFP has called for opening of crossing points for aid directly into northern Gaza from Israel and better coordination with the Israeli military
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WFP has temporarily suspended the delivery of food aid to the north of the Gaza Strip, which has been under Israeli bombardment for months. Photo: dpa

Food deliveries to isolated northern Gaza have been halted by the World Food Programme (WFP) because of rising chaos across the territory, hiking fears of potential starvation. The United Nations’ children’s agency conducted a study which indicates that one in six children in the region are acutely malnourished.

UN and relief workers said intake of trucks and distribution have been crippled by Israeli failure to ensure convoys’ safety amid its bombardment and ground offensive and by a breakdown in security, with hungry Palestinians frequently overwhelming trucks to take food.

The weakening of the aid operation threatens to deepen misery across the territory, where Israel’s air and ground offensive, launched in response to Hamas’ October 7 attack, has killed over 29,000 Palestinians, obliterated entire neighbourhoods and displaced more than 80 per cent of the population of 2.3 million.

A UN agency conducted a study which indicates that one in six children in northern Gaza are acutely malnourished. Photo: dpa

Heavy fighting and air strikes have flared in the past two days in areas of northern Gaza that the Israeli military said had been largely cleared of Hamas weeks ago. The military on Tuesday ordered the evacuation of two neighbourhoods on Gaza City’s southern edge, an indication that militants are still putting up stiff resistance.

The north, including Gaza City, has been isolated since Israeli troops first moved into it in late October. Large swathes of the city have been reduced to rubble, but several hundred thousand Palestinians remain largely cut off from aid.

They describe famine-like conditions, in which families limit themselves to one meal a day and often resort to mixing animal and bird fodder with grains to bake bread.

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WFP had first suspended deliveries to the north three weeks ago after a strike hit an aid truck. It tried resuming this week, but convoys on Sunday and Monday faced gunfire and crowds of hungry people stripping goods and beating one driver.

WFP said it was working to resume deliveries as soon as possible. It called for the opening of crossing points for aid directly into northern Gaza from Israel and a better notification system to coordinate with the Israeli military.

It warned of a “precipitous slide into hunger and disease,” saying, “People are already dying from hunger-related causes.”

WFP had first suspended deliveries to the north three weeks ago after a strike hit an aid truck. Photo: dpa

Unicef official Ted Chaiban said in a statement that Gaza “is poised to witness an explosion in preventable child deaths, which would compound the already unbearable level of child deaths in Gaza”.

More than 90 per cent of children under five in Gaza eat two or fewer food groups a day, known as severe food poverty, the report said. A similar percentage are affected by infectious diseases, with 70 per cent experiencing diarrhoea in the last two weeks. More than 80 per cent of homes lack clean and safe water.

In Gaza’s southernmost city of Rafah, where most humanitarian aid enters, the acute malnutrition rate is 5 per cent, compared to 15 per cent in northern Gaza. Before the war, the rate across Gaza was less than 1 per cent, the report said.

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A UN report in December found that Gaza’s entire population is in a food crisis, with one in four facing starvation.

Soon after Hamas’ October 7 attack, Israel blocked entry of all food, water, fuel, medicine and other supplies into Gaza. Under US pressure, it began to allow a trickle of aid trucks to enter from Egypt at the Rafah crossing, and in December opened one crossing from Israel into southern Gaza, Kerem Shalom.

The trucks have become virtually the sole source of food and other supplies for Gaza’s population. But the average number entering per day has fallen since February 9 to 60 a day from more than 140 daily in January, according to figures from the UN office for humanitarian coordination, known as OCHA.

A UN report in December found that Gaza’s entire population is in a food crisis, with one in four facing starvation. Photo: dpa

Even at its height, UN officials said the flow was not enough to sustain the population and was far below the 500 trucks a day entering before the war.

The cause of the drop was not immediately clear. For weeks, right-wing Israeli protesters have held demonstrations to block trucks, saying Gaza’s people should not be given aid. UN agencies have also complained that cumbersome Israeli procedures for searching trucks have slowed crossings.

But chaos within Gaza appears to be a major cause.

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Moshe Tetro, an official with COGAT, an Israeli military body in charge of civilian Palestinian affairs, said the bottleneck was because the UN and other aid groups can’t accept the trucks in Gaza or distribute them to the population. He said more than 450 trucks were waiting on the Palestinian side of Kerem Shalom crossing, but no UN staff had come to distribute them.

Eri Kaneko, a spokesperson for OCHA, said the UN and other aid groups have not been able to regularly pick up supplies at the crossing points because of “the lack of security and breakdown of law and order”. He said the Israeli military has a responsibility to facilitate distribution within Gaza, and “aid piling up at the crossing is evidence of an absence of this enabling environment”.

UN and other aid groups have not been able to regularly pick up supplies at the crossing points because of “the lack of security”. Photo: Reuters

In a rare public criticism of Israel, a top US envoy, David Satterfield, said this week that its targetted killings of Gaza police commanders guarding truck convoys have made it “virtually impossible” to distribute the goods safely.

Besides crowds of Palestinians swarming convoys, aid workers say they are hampered by heavy fighting, strikes hitting trucks and Israeli failure to guarantee deliveries’ safety. The UN says that from January 1 to February 12, Israel denied access to 51 per cent of its planned aid deliveries to north Gaza.

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