Gaza aid falls to lowest level since start of war despite US warning to Israel

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Aid to Gaza has fallen to its lowest level than in any month since the war began, despite the US warning Israel that military assistance could be at risk if conditions did not improve.

US secretary of state Antony Blinken and secretary of defence Lloyd Austin wrote to the Israeli government on October 13 giving Israel 30 days to “surge all forms of humanitarian assistance” in the strip and “end isolation of northern Gaza” immediately.

But humanitarian officials say that conditions have deteriorated still further since the leaked letter was sent two weeks ago.

Only 704 truckloads of humanitarian aid entered the strip between October 1 and October 22, according to the UN, a sharp decline from the rate of entries the previous month; 3,000 truckloads entered the strip in September.

The aid arrivals represent a fraction of the quantities demanded by the US, which said in its warning letter that a minimum of 350 truckloads should enter Gaza each day. A total of 246 truckloads entered the strip in the week before the letter, UN data showed, and 232 the following week.

Gaza’s north remains largely cut off from aid and under heavy bombardment, with tens of thousands of residents displaced under forced evacuation orders.

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“The situation in northern Gaza is worse today than it was when the letter was written,” said Scott Paul, Oxfam America’s director for peace and security. “The areas that are being depopulated right now have received nothing.”

Almost 800,000 people in Gaza are enduring “emergency” or “catastrophe” levels of food scarcity, according to the IPC, a multi-agency initiative for measuring food security.

Cogat, the arm of the Israeli ministry of defence that deals with the occupied Palestinian territories, did not reply to a list of detailed questions about the aid shortage.

The further squeeze on aid provision comes as Israel’s parliament on Monday approved legislation that will ban the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, from operating within Israeli territory once it takes effect. Several allies of Israel have warned that the measures would have devastating consequences for humanitarian assistance to Gaza.

The Israeli government said in a recent court filing that it had forbidden the entry of humanitarian food aid into Jabalia, the northern refugee camp where the most intense attacks are taking place in an Israeli military operation that began earlier this month.

However, Israeli officials reject claims that there are obstacles to the entry of aid into northern Gaza more broadly. They said aid declined earlier in October because crossings were closed for holidays, while military operations had restricted access to other areas, but argued there were sufficient aid stockpiles already in the strip.

“We’re not preventing it — we are working very hard to make sure [aid] goes in, [approximately] dozens of trucks a day,” an Israeli official said.

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Despite the US letter’s demands, humanitarian missions largely cannot cross from south to north and few enter through northern crossings, though Cogat said on Tuesday that 50 trucks had entered the north through the Erez crossing.

The few deliveries that do arrive in the north are making their way to Gaza City but do not reach the areas most affected by the current military operation, aid officials said.

Humanitarian officials in the strip say much of the aid is looted before it can reach distribution points after a breakdown of law and order resulting from the conflict, and after several aid convoys were hit by Israeli strikes.

“The entire population of North Gaza is at risk of dying,” acting UN relief chief Joyce Msuya said this week. An Israeli military official said on Monday that some 50,000 civilians had left Jabalia in recent days, but they remained in northern Gaza. An estimated 10,000 people were still in Jabalia, the official said.

The US’s letter requested specific steps to improve the humanitarian situation, including approving more drivers and items and opening a new crossing point.

Blinken told reporters in Tel Aviv on October 23 that the US had “seen progress”, citing the opening of a fifth crossing into Gaza. State department spokesperson Matthew Miller said on Monday that more trucks had been entering Gaza and that Israel had taken “some other steps”, but that these were not enough.

Aid officials said that pointing to small logistical improvements while the overall situation deteriorated allowed the US to claim a diplomatic success without alleviating the crisis for Palestinians.  

“You cannot look at the erasure of northern Gaza and then go back to these narrow metrics and decide that ‘we’re making progress slowly, slowly’,” Paul said. 

Data visualisation by Aditi Bhandari

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