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ARAB AND WORLD

Fri 31 May 2024 10:37 pm - Jerusalem Time

UN: Life has become horrific in the southern Gaza Strip

The United Nations warned Friday that life has become "horrible" in some areas of the southern Gaza Strip since the start of the Israeli attack on Rafah in early May, indicating that the situation in the north is improving.


“The displacement we have witnessed over the past 20 days from Rafah is a terrible and horrific experience at the same time for a very large number of people,” said Matthew Hollingsworth, Director of the World Food Program in the Palestinian Territories.


In the south, the bakeries of this United Nations agency closed their doors due to a lack of fuel, and from May 7, when the Israeli army began its attack on the city of Rafah, until the 20th of the month, “not a single World Food Program truck used the crossings to reach Rafah from Egypt,” according to Hollingworth says.


The World Food Program can no longer access its main warehouse in the south of the region because it is located in an evacuated area.


"We lost this entire warehouse, including a stock of 2,700 tons of food that was looted or damaged due to the fighting," he explained.


One million people who fled the bombing and fighting in Rafah left for the coastal area of Al-Mawasi between Rafah and Khan Yunis, which Israel classified as a “humanitarian area” to shelter the displaced.


According to Matthew Hollingworth, they lack water, food, fuel, health services and the space to dig latrines.


The UN official stressed that "the sounds and smells of daily life are terrible and horrific." The World Food Program is currently feeding 27,000 people, "but this is not enough."


In the central Gaza areas, the agency provides about 400,000 hot meals daily and runs six bakeries.

On the other hand, the situation is improving in the northern Palestinian Strip, where UN agencies warned in March that famine was imminent.


Thanks to the opening of crossings, about 12,000 tons of aid, mostly food, have been delivered since May 1.


"There has been a change in terms of the availability of food," Hollingsworth said, although there are still major problems with health assistance, the provision of drinking water and wastewater treatment.


Out of desperation, some people leave their identity documents as security to be able to buy goods, even though they are necessary to be able to register and receive assistance.


He pointed out that since trucks began entering the Gaza Strip from Egypt through the Kerem Shalom crossing, which is controlled by Israel, a small amount of aid has arrived.


He stressed the need to create "a river of aid if we are to ensure that we do not see the most severe forms of hunger become more common," calling for "the southern corridors to be fully opened."


"What we basically need is an immediate ceasefire," Matthew Hollingsworth added.

"We know that this may not happen immediately, so in the meantime, there must be better coordination between aid and commercial shipments being delivered," he concluded.

In response to a question about Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s statements to the French station LCI that “calorie consumption in Gaza is 3,200 calories per person,” the UN official replied, “I did not see anyone, even aid workers living on protein bars.” "He consumes 3,000 calories or more in Gaza."

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UN: Life has become horrific in the southern Gaza Strip

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