Xinhua
12 Jun 2025, 02:45 GMT+10
OCHA called for an enabling environment for aid operations in Gaza, including safe, rapid and unfettered access so that humanitarians can address the immense needs of more than 2 million people.
UNITED NATIONS, June 11 (Xinhua) -- Amid reports of killing and injuries among civilians seeking food in Gaza, UN humanitarians on Wednesday warned that failing logistics, including fuel and telecommunications, threaten vital deliveries.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said it continues to receive casualty reports.
Deadly encounters occur when throngs of civilians attempt to reach through militarized zones the few new designated aid distribution hubs sponsored by the United States and approved by Israel. The system compares with the UN and partners' method of handing aid to Gazans in their local communities.
"We reiterate in the strongest terms possible that no one should be forced to risk their lives to receive aid as people across Gaza are at risk of famine," OCHA said.
The office said a shortage of accessible fuel could force more health, water and sanitation facilities to shut down, affecting the most basic of relief programs. Vaccines, for one, require fuel for cold chain systems.
"The collapse of telecommunications systems, internet connectivity and emergency communication systems is a real threat," OCHA said. "This would cripple life-saving coordination and prevent affected communities from receiving critical information."
OCHA said UN attempts to access available stocks of fuel in Rafah continue to be rejected.
The office said that between April 13 and Monday, 29 out of 35 attempts to access fuel were denied by the Israeli authorities. A mission early Wednesday was also rejected.
OCHA added that on Tuesday alone, at least 12 out of 24 attempts to coordinate humanitarian movements inside Gaza were denied by the Israeli authorities, including new attempts to truck potable water to vulnerable people who remain in northern Gaza, retrieve critical fuel and nutrition supplies from Rafah in the south and repair vital roads.
The humanitarian office called for an enabling environment for aid operations in Gaza, including safe, rapid and unfettered access so that humanitarians can address the immense needs of more than 2 million people.
"International humanitarian law is crystal clear: If the population is inadequately supplied with the essentials for their survival, Israel must agree to humanitarian relief and facilitate it by all the means at its disposal," said OCHA.
Farhan Haq, deputy spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, said that since the limited resumption of humanitarian assistance into Gaza on May 19, the World Food Programme (WFP) reported it has only been able to bring in small amounts of life-saving food and aid, mainly due to delays or denials of permission.
Haq said during a regular briefing that expanded military operations were cited as a reason for the denials.
The WFP said that as of Tuesday, it was allowed to transport between May 19 and May 30 approximately 700 trucks of aid to the Kerem Shalom/Karem Abu Salem border crossing compared to the 600 to 700 trucks per day during the cease-fire earlier this year. The 700 trucks carried over 11,000 metric tons of food. But only 6,000 metric tons were allowed entry to Gaza, enough to support fewer than 300,000 people for a month with minimal daily food requirements.
"This is a small fraction of what is needed for a population of 2.1 million people and far too slow to meet the overwhelming needs," the WFP said.
The World Health Organization (WHO) and other partners continue to sound the alarm over shrinking access to the remaining health care facilities in Gaza, particularly Al Amal and Al Nasser hospitals in Khan Younis.
The WHO said that Al Amal Hospital, although still partially operational, is unable to accept new patients due to hostilities and its location within an area under displacement orders. The WHO reiterates that health care facilities must never be militarized and must always be protected.
The interim UN special coordinator for the Middle East peace process, Sigrid Kaag, with Sarah Poole, the deputy special coordinator and UN resident coordinator for the occupied Palestinian territory, visited Gaza City, where they met with partners to discuss challenges and UN engagement at all levels to advocate for a meaningful scale-up of humanitarian support and access in Gaza.
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