The Gaza
aid convoy that ended in bloodshed this past week was organized by Israel as
part of a newly hatched partnership with local Palestinian businessmen,
according to Israeli officials, Palestinian businessmen, and Western diplomats.
اضافة اعلان
Israel
has been involved in at least four such aid convoys to the northern Gaza Strip
over the past week. It undertook the effort, Israeli officials told two Western
diplomats, to fill a void in assistance to northern Gaza, where famine looms as
international aid groups have suspended most operations, citing Israeli
refusals to greenlight aid trucks and rising lawlessness. The diplomats spoke
on condition of anonymity given the sensitivity of the matter.
Israeli
officials reached out to multiple businessmen in Gaza and asked them to help
organize private aid convoys to the north, two of the businessmen said, while
Israel would provide security.
The
UN has warned that more than 570,000 Gaza residents — particularly in northern
Gaza — are facing “catastrophic levels of deprivation and starvation” after
nearly five months of war and an almost complete Israeli blockade of the
territory after the October 7 attacks led by Hamas.
Some
residents have resorted to raiding the pantries of neighbors who fled their
homes, while others have been grinding up animal feed for flour. U.N. aid
convoys carrying essential goods to northern Gaza have been looted — either by
civilians fearing starvation or organized gangs — amid the anarchy that has
followed Israel’s ground invasion.
“My
family, friends, and neighbors are dying from hunger,” said Jawdat Khoudary, a
Palestinian businessman who helped organize some of the trucks involved in the
Israeli relief initiative.
The
convoy that arrived in Gaza City before dawn Thursday ended tragically. More
than 100 Palestinians were killed after many thousands of people massed around
trucks carrying food and supplies, Gaza health officials said.
Israeli
and Palestinian officials and witnesses offered sharply divergent accounts of
the chaos. Witnesses described extensive shooting by Israeli forces, and
doctors at Gaza hospitals said most casualties were from gunfire. But the
Israeli military said most of the victims were trampled in a crush of people
trying to seize the cargo.
Israel
also acknowledged that its troops had opened fire at members of the crowd who,
the military, approached the troops “in a manner that endangered them.”
The
deaths sparked global outrage and increased pressure on Israel to reach a
cease-fire agreement with Hamas that would let more aid into Gaza.
The
United States has been trying to broker such a deal, and on Saturday, as the US
began its effort to airdrop aid to Gaza, American and Israeli officials said
Vice President Kamala Harris will meet with Benny Gantz, a member of the
Israeli war Cabinet, at the White House on Monday.
Israel
has agreed to a plan that would include a six-week cease-fire, the release of
dozens of the most “vulnerable” Israeli hostages in Gaza, and the entry of more
aid convoys into the territory, a US official said.
The
United States and other countries, including Egypt and Qatar, are trying to
persuade Hamas to accept the deal, the US official said Saturday, speaking on condition
of anonymity to discuss ongoing diplomacy.
On
Saturday afternoon, three US Air Force cargo planes released 66 pallets
containing 38,000 ready-to-eat meals over southwest Gaza — a tiny fraction of
the food and other supplies needed in a territory of 2.2 million people.
President Joe Biden had announced the airdrops Friday, saying, “Innocent lives
are on the line.”
Izzat
Aqel, a Gaza businessman who told The New York Times that he had helped
coordinate trucks in Thursday’s convoy, said an Israeli military officer had
asked him about 10 days earlier to organize aid trucks to northern Gaza with as
much food and water as possible.
And
on Thursday, an Israeli military spokesperson, Lt. Col. Peter Lerner, said this
particular convoy was part of humanitarian operations over several days in
northern Gaza that Israeli troops were overseeing.
“Over
the last four days, convoys like we conducted this morning — this morning was
38 truckloads — passed into northern Gaza to distribute food supplies, which
are international donations but on private vehicles,” he told Britain’s Channel
4 television.
The
convoy that ended in disaster left the Kerem Shalom crossing between Israel and
Gaza before heading for areas of northern Gaza that had not seen aid in weeks,
Aqel said. In an attempt to ensure the trucks’ safety, he added, they ventured
into northern Gaza in darkness at around 4:45 a.m.
Since
the war began, Israel has been loath to take responsibility for caring for
Gaza’s civilians. But its bombing campaign and ground invasion have decimated
Hamas’ control over northern Gaza, leaving a gaping security vacuum amid a
humanitarian catastrophe that worsens daily.
Conditions
have deteriorated rapidly. The number of aid trucks entering Gaza dropped
significantly in February, both because of rising lawlessness and Israel’s
insistence on inspecting every truck, aid groups have said.
The
signs of desperation have been growing more apparent as time passes. Gaza
residents have resorted to eating leaves and animal feed, and the health
authorities in the territory reported last week that some children have died of
malnutrition.
Biden
had said Friday that the US would begin airdropping humanitarian relief
supplies into Gaza, working with Jordan, which has been at the forefront of
such efforts recently, as well as other allies.
But
the plan met with immediate criticism from international aid groups that said
it would be ineffective and distract from more meaningful measures, including
pushing Israel to lift its siege of Gaza.
“Airdrops
do not and cannot substitute for humanitarian access,” the International Rescue
Committee, a New York-based aid organization, said in a statement Saturday.
“Airdrops are not the solution to relieve this suffering, and distract time and
effort from proven solutions to help at scale.”
Egypt,
France, Jordan, and the United Arab Emirates have participated in aid airdrops
to Gaza, but experts say they are inefficient, expensive, and cannot possibly
deliver enough aid to avert famine. Given the drawbacks, as well as dangers to
people on the ground, airdrops are typically a last resort.
The
United States and other countries should instead focus their efforts on
“ensuring Israel lifts its siege of Gaza” and getting Israel to reopen border
crossings to allow the unimpeded movement of fuel, food, and medical supplies,
the International Rescue Committee said.
As
hunger deepens across Gaza, United Nations officials have warned that famine is
imminent. Categorizing a food crisis as a famine is a technical process
requiring analysis from food-insecurity experts.
According
to the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, known as the IPC, which
the UN and major relief agencies control, three conditions must be met before a
food shortage is declared a famine: at least 20 percent of households facing an
extreme lack of food; at least 30 percent of children suffering from acute
malnutrition; and at least two adults or four children for every 10,000 people
dying each day from starvation or disease linked to malnutrition.
The
IPC has been selective in declaring famines, identifying only two since its
founding in 2004: in Somalia in 2011 and South Sudan in 2017. In Somalia, more
than 100,000 people died before famine was officially declared.
Regardless
of its technical classification, the situation in Gaza, particularly in the
north, is dire. Two weeks ago, UNICEF said that one in six children in northern
Gaza was severely malnourished. The Gaza health ministry said on Wednesday that
at least six children had died in the territory from dehydration and
malnutrition.
Arif
Husain, chief economist of the World Food Program, said his goal was to improve
conditions before famine set in.
“For
me, what is important is to say that, ‘Look, technically we haven’t met the
conditions of a famine, and frankly we don’t want to meet those conditions,’”
he said. “So please help, and please help now.”
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