Israel still blocking most Gaza aid as military carries out more attacks

Authorities in Gaza claim that since the ceasefire agreement, which was signed by the United States, only partially allowed humanitarian aid into the region.

Between October 10 and October 31, Gaza’s Government Media Office reported in a statement on Saturday that 3, 203 commercial and aid trucks had flown goods there. Just 24 percent of the 600 trucks that are scheduled to enter Gaza daily as part of the deal, according to the statement. This is an average of 145 aid trucks per day.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

The Israeli occupation’s obstructing humanitarian aid and commercial trucks is “absolutely unacceptable,” the statement from the office read.

Additionally, it demanded that mediators of the ceasefire agreement press Israel to allow humanitarian aid into Gaza “without restrictions and conditions.”

Despite the truce’s effect, Palestinians in Gaza continue to be short of essential supplies due to Israeli restrictions, including food, water, medicine, and other supplies.

Many families are without adequate shelter because Israel’s two-year military bombardment completely destroyed their homes and neighborhoods.

UN’s humanitarian office reported on Thursday that aid collection has been “limited” as a result of the “rerouting ordered by the Israeli authorities,” according to a spokesman for Antonio Guterres.

“Convoises are now required to travel through the Philadelphi Corridor along the Egyptian border and then up the constricting coastal road. Farhan Haq told reporters that this road is congested, sever, and damaged.

To expand collections and response, “Additional crossings and internal routes are required.”

In addition, the Israeli military continues to attack Gaza in violation of the ceasefire agreement.

Israeli fighter jets, artillery, and tanks shelled areas of Khan Younis in the south of the country on Saturday. In northern Gaza, the army also destroyed residential structures east of the Jabalia refugee camp.

Beyond the so-called “yellow line,” where Israeli forces are stationed, witnesses in Khan Younis described “constant heavy shelling and drone fire hitting what’s left of residential homes and farmland,” according to Tareq Abu Azzoum of Al Jazeera.

The Civil Defense Agency in Gaza has also informed us that some sites are struggling to get to close to the yellow line because of continued airstrikes and Israeli drones hovering overhead, according to Abu Azzoum.

Since the ceasefire’s implementation, the enclave’s ministry of health claims that at least 222 Palestinians have been killed and 594 others have been injured by Israeli attacks on Gaza.

Israeli leaders have criticized Hamas for violating the ceasefire agreement by refusing to return all of the dead’s bodies from the enclave.

However, according to the Palestinian group, Israeli restrictions on the entry of heavy equipment and bulldozers to aid in the search have made the retrieval efforts more difficult.

The International Committee of the Red Cross announced late on Friday that Hamas had given the bodies of three people to Israel.

Two more suspects charged over Louvre heist

Ukraine sends special forces to eastern city Pokrovsk amid Russia offensive

Israeli attacks on olive harvest ‘threaten Palestinian way of life’: UN

The UN warned that this year’s olive harvest is on track to be the most violent in more than a decade, and Israeli settlers have launched additional attacks against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank.

On Saturday, the official Palestinian news agency Wafa reported several instances of settler violence, including one in fields close to Beita and Huwara, near Nablus in the West Bank, and another in Sinjil, a town close to Ramallah.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

After Israeli settlers opened fire on three Palestinian farmers as they were picking their olives, three others were hurt in al-Maniya, southeast of Bethlehem.

Since Israel launched its Gaza war in 2023, there have been more settler and military attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank. However, the olive harvest season this year, which started last month, has seen an even higher increase in violent incidents.

October is on track to be the most violent month since UNRWA began tracking settler violence in 2013, according to UNRWA’s agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA).

In a statement released on social media, Roland Friedrich, director of UNRWA affairs in the West Bank, stated that “the olive trees are deeply rooted in Palestinian heritage and identity. …

According to Friedrich, “attacks on the olive harvest threaten the very way of life for many Palestinians” and “increase the occupied West Bank’s coercive environment further.” Families should be able to harvest their olives without fear of harming their land, according to the article.

At least 126 Israeli settlement attacks have been reported in 70 Palestinian towns and villages this olive-picking season, according to the most recent UN statistics released on Thursday.

According to the UN’s humanitarian office (OCHA), more than 4, 000 olive trees and saplings have also been vandalized.

OCHA in addition claimed that the expansion of Israeli-occupied West Bank settlements has “further undermined Palestinian farmers’ ability to harvest their olive trees.”

In the wake of the Gaza War, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s administration has been quickly launching settlements, drawing international human rights organizations’ condemnations and warnings.

Israeli far-right politicians have been calling for Israel’s formally annexation of the West Bank, including members of Netanyahu’s ruling coalition.

The UN human rights office warned in July that Israeli security forces are collaborating with them to increase settler violence in the West Bank and supporting them there.

Egypt unveils Grand Egyptian Museum dedicated to its ancient civilisation