Gaza aid deliveries still facing Israeli roadblocks a week into ceasefire

Despite repeated international requests to allow large-scale aid deliveries, Israel has continued to seal Gaza’s Rafah crossing with Egypt a week into the ceasefire. In northern Gaza, several Palestinians were killed and injured in the wake of Israeli-caused attacks.

The UN has warned for several days that aid needs to be delivered to Gaza at a rapid pace and that it must travel across all border crossings to meet urgent humanitarian needs. Israel was authorized to increase aid deliveries in accordance with the agreement to put an end to Israel’s genocide, which has resulted in the deaths of more than 67, 000 Palestinians in two years.

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Aid convoys were battling it out in northern Gaza on Friday due to bombed-out roads and the ongoing closure of other important routes into the region’s north, according to the UN.

Since the ceasefire broke out last week, the World Food Programme (WFP) has delivered 560 tonnes of food to Gaza on average every day, but the amount is still below what is required. The UN agency estimated that Gaza would need three months of food to feed it all.

This week, Tom Fletcher, the UN’s director of humanitarian affairs, announced that thousands of aid vehicles would need to travel to the country to combat widespread malnutrition, displacement, and the collapse of infrastructure.

According to WFP spokesman Abeer Etefa, “We’re still below what we need, but we’re getting there.” The ceasefire has opened a window of opportunity, and the organization is expanding its food assistance program very quickly and expeditely.

The WFP claimed that the humanitarian crisis in Gaza City was still averted by the ongoing closure of Zikim and Beit Hanoon, with Israeli forces stationed in the north of the city, where it is most acute.

Israeli forces are still present in roughly 53% of Gaza as part of the US-brokered ceasefire agreement, which calls for their gradual withdrawal.

According to Etefa, “access to Gaza City and northern Gaza is extremely difficult,” adding that south of the territory’s roads were preventing traffic flow of convoys of wheat flour and ready-to-eat food items.

“These openings in the north, where the famine began, are very important. It is crucial to get these openings in order to turn the tide on this famine.

Many relief organizations have not fully returned to the north, where hospitals are hardly operating, leaving many people unable to access regular care, according to global medical charity Doctors Without Borders, which is known by its French name MSF.

More Palestinians are killed.

Israeli attacks on Palestinians in Gaza continue unabated as much urgent aid is demanded.

After an Israeli artillery strike struck a small bus carrying displaced families east of Zeitoun, Gaza’s civil defense said its teams are conducting rescue operations.

According to the organization, the attack resulted in “several deaths and injuries.” As attempts to reach the area continue, one injured boy was saved, but the fate of the others is still unknown. “Due to the danger at the site,” the site’s residents continue to try to get there.

Three Palestinians were injured in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, in separate incidents, with varying degrees of injury, according to the Wafa news agency.

Hamas meanwhile vowed to return the remains of Israeli prisoners who are still unaccounted for beneath Gaza’s ruin. The group’s armed wing claimed that all the bodies it recovered had been returned, but that returning more remains would require allowing heavy machinery and excavation equipment into Gaza, which has been much of the body parts since Israeli bombardment.

According to Hani Mahmoud, a journalist for Al Jazeera from Gaza City, there is “a clear disconnect” between what the Israeli government demands of an area that has been “reduced to rubble.”

Israel is making it difficult for the residents of Gaza who are experienced and have the expertise to search and extract bodies from under the rubble because the Israeli military is preventing access to large amounts of equipment and machinery.

He noted that “thousands of Palestinian bodies buried and missing and trapped under tonnes and tonnes of rubble and debris” rather than just the bodies of Israeli prisoners who had died underground.

Authorities in Gaza have been having trouble locating the bodies of dozens of Palestinians who were killed earlier this week. The Health Ministry reports that only six of the 120 bodies have been officially identified so far.

The bodies&nbsp, according to the ministry, show signs of torture, including bound hands and feet, hanging and rope marks, and gunshot at close range.

According to Gaza’s Government Media Office, the bodies displayed “conclusive evidence of field executions and brutal torture.”

Hamas’ disarmament

The next steps of the truce are expected to address Hamas’ disarmament, possible amnesty for its leaders who lay down their weapons, and who will rule Gaza after the war.

Mohammad Nazzal, a member of the Hamas political party, stated that the organization plans to keep security in place in Gaza for the duration of that time, adding that he was unable to end the conflict.

He claimed that if there was “horizons and hope” for a five-year ceasefire, Hamas would be prepared to rebuild Gaza.

Nazzal responded, “I can’t respond with a yes or no,” when asked whether Hamas would give up its weapons. It depends largely on the project’s nature. What does the disarmament project you’re referring to mean? Who will be the recipient of the weapons?

Portugal’s parliament approves far-right party’s bill to ban face veils

The far-right Chega party proposed a bill that would prohibit the use of face veils for “gender or religious purposes” in most public spaces. It also targets Muslim women’s burqas and niqabs.

The proposed fines for wearing face veils in public would range from 200 to 4 000 euros ($234 to $4, 670), as per the proposed legislation, which was approved by parliament on Friday. A person who is forced to wear one would face prison sentences of up to three years.

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Face veils could still be worn on diplomatic aircraft, in diplomatic buildings, and in places of worship.

The parliamentary committee on Constitutional Affairs, Rights, Freedoms, and Guarantees, a body charged with reviewing constitutional legislation, is scheduled to hear the bill right away, according to local media reports.

Portugal would join other European nations like France, Austria, Belgium, and the Netherlands, which are already subject to full or partial bans, if passed into law.

The bill could still be vetoed by President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa or sent for review to the Constitutional Court.

Chega leader Andre Ventura was confronted by several left-wing lawmakers who opposed the bill during the parliamentary session on Friday, but it was supported by the centre-right coalition.

“We are today preventing female members of parliament, your daughters, our daughters from being required to wear burqas in this country one day,” Ventura said.

He wrote, “Today is a historic day for our democracy, the protection of our values, our identity, and women’s rights,” in a post on X.

Before the vote, Social Democratic Party lawmaker Andreia Neto stated: “This is a debate about gender equality.” No woman should be made to cover her face.

According to local media reports, two of the ten parliamentarian parties, including the People’s Animals-Nature party and the Together for the People party, disqualified from the vote.

The parties claim that the proposal promoted discrimination.

In Portugal, these veils are uncommon, and only a small minority of Muslim women in Europe cover their faces.

The six problems a Gaza ceasefire has brought Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu

In the eyes of some observers, peace has still come too soon for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu despite the staggering death toll and human suffering Israel has caused Gaza over the past two years.

The Israeli leader has been accused of using the war to divert attention away from his position and even his freedom. None of those issues have been resolved because of the current ceasefire in Gaza.

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Even former Israeli ambassador Alon Pinkas, who was pressured into the White House over the growing financial and diplomatic costs of the Israeli conflict, sees the ceasefire as being stage-managed and forced upon him.

What issues does Netanyahu face before the upcoming Israeli elections and beyond, and how dangerous are they if he can’t find a second war?

Let’s examine this more closely.

Will the Israeli prime minister face isolation from other countries?

Netanyahu has become the face of Israel’s isolation on a global scale for many.

More than 67, 000 Palestinians were killed by Israel in the past two years, and Gaza is where it is now in the midst of a famine. The increased coverage of what his government has done to the enclave is likely to cement Israel’s pariah status for the time being until Netanyahu’s government can permanently ban international journalists from reaching Gaza.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses the UN’s 80th General Assembly (UNGA) in New York City, US, on September 26, 2025 [Caitlin Ochs/Reuters]

Israel’s growing isolation has been apparent for months, and in September, Netanyahu appeared to be setting the stage for it to continue. In a reference to the martial ancient Greek state, Netanyahu depicted his vision for a future “Super Sparta” as a form of economic and diplomatic isolation and persistent conflict.

It wasn’t very well received. The shekel sank almost immediately in comparison to other currencies, and the Israeli stock exchange plummeted. We are not Sparta, according to the 200-strong Israel Business Forum, which stands for 200 of the country’s largest businesses.

Could Netanyahu’s coalition be scuttled by the right?

Netanyahu is already taking steps to prevent it, but it might.

Netanyahu has heavily relied on the support of Israel’s far right throughout the conflict and the earlier public disputes over the judiciary’s independence.

Italel Smotrich, the country’s finance minister, and Itamar Ben-Gvir, the country’s top security official, have both expressed opposition to the ceasefire while governing the country’s coalition, for the time being.

In the hope that this will lead to the return of ultra-Orthodox parties in the parliament and help his government survive in the event of any defections, Netanyahu is reported to be proposing legislation to exempt ultra-Orthodox yeshiva students from the draft.

Netanyahu and Israel could still be found guilty by the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the International Court of Justice (ICJ)?

They could .

Israeli Prime Minister Yoav Gallant, former defense minister, and Hamas’s military commander Mohammed Deif, who Israel has since killed, were all the subjects of an international arrest warrant issued by the ICC in November 2024 for war crimes.

Many people are certain that Netanyahu will be held accountable for the genocide against Israel if a guilty verdict is handed down.

A verdict in the ICC case against Gallant and Netanyahu is not anticipated until the end of 2027, at the very least. The ICC may impose a 30-year prison sentence if found guilty, while the ICJ would typically send the guilty verdict to the UN Security Council for review.

Trump might choose Netanyahu over him.

It is a real possibility.

In the face of hostility from other countries, the US is currently Israel’s primary economic and military sponsor as well as its diplomatic bulwark. Without it, Netanyahu and Israel would be in serious trouble.

Whatever Netanyahu might say, there are bounds to the support of US President Donald Trump. When Netanyahu became one of the first leaders to congratulate former US President Joe Biden on his victory in the 2021 election, Trump reportedly expressed anger.

In May, he is said to have stopped speaking with the Israeli prime minister over concerns that Netanyahu was attempting to manipulate him.

During a recent alleged uproar over Israel’s alleged assault on Hamas negotiators in Doha in September, Trump reportedly said, “He’s screwing me.”

Trump and Netanyahu
Netanyahu’s relationship with the notoriously unpredictable [Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters] has a significant impact.

Trump has described how he “had it out” with Netanyahu and how he wouldn’t allow Israel to redeploy to Gaza until “I say the word” when describing the process of the ceasefire.

Trump later described the ceasefire as having been in place for 3, 000 years, telling his audience, “And it’s going to hold up, too” as he formally inaugurated it at the Israeli parliament.

He’s unlikely to enjoy being gambled away well.

Will Israel conduct an investigation into Netanyahu’s misdeeds ahead of the September 7 attack?

It appears to be getting more and more likely.

Separate investigations into the army’s and intelligence service’s failures in the months leading up to the Hamas-led attack on October 7, 2023, which claimed 1, 139 lives and about 250 were abducted, revealed flagrant errors and confusion in Israel’s security services as they struggled to deal with an assault they had not anticipated.

Following each inquiry, both the intelligence and army made their resignations.

Netanyahu did not object to those inquiries, but he has resisted one into the role of his own government, arguing that it would be politically biased and impossible to carry out in a wartime.

However, Israel’s High Court unanimously decided there was no longer “any real argument” to delay it, giving the government 30 days to respond.

FILES-COMBO-ISRAEL-PALESTNIAN-CONFLICT-ICC-JUSTICE
[Abir Sultan/AFP] Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former defense minister Yoav Gallant are both charged with war crimes at the International Criminal Court.

Netanyahu might spend some time behind bars.

The Israeli prime minister’s option for jail time is still a possibility.

Trump almost made up his mind about Netanyahu’s corruption trial on Monday and Israel’s protracted war in Gaza.

Trump demanded that Israeli President Isaac Herzog pardon Netanyahu for what he characterized as “cigars and champagne” during his address to the Israeli parliament.

In reality, Netanyahu has been tried in three corruption cases throughout the war, all of which have continued despite lengthy delays.

How will Putin travel to Hungary to meet Trump with ICC arrest warrant?

Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia, will travel to Hungary in the near future to meet with Donald Trump, the US’s ambassador, for a second summit on ending the Ukrainian conflict. The first, which occurred in Alaska in August, failed to lead to any agreement.

How will the fugitive from justice make it to the bargaining table given that a 2023 International Criminal Court (ICC) warrant was issued for Putin’s arrest over the alleged illegal deportation of Ukrainian children during Russia’s conflict with Ukraine?

The Hague-based court established by the 1998 Rome Statute in 2002 must detain those who are subject to warrants as soon as they enter their country, which theoretically includes airspace, which is also regarded as sovereign territory under international law.

Countries would be bound by the agreement, including Hungary, which recently announced its intention to leave. This would make it a safe haven for Putin.

However, the ICC, which has 125 member states, has no means of imposing arrests.

What awaits Putin on his upcoming travels, then?

Israel’s “Wing of Zion,” which briefly flew over Greek and Italian territory before transporting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to New York for the UN General Council meeting last month, can be seen at the Athens International Airport.

Isn’t Hungary a member of the ICC as well?

On paper, the answer is yes. However, it is leaving.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited the country in April when right-wing populist Prime Minister Viktor Orban announced the country would abandon the ICC’s founding document. In addition to his arrest warrant, which was issued earlier this year, Netanyahu is also listed as one of the most wanted by the ICC for his involvement in the war crimes committed in Gaza.

The withdrawal process begins one year after the United Nations Secretary-General receives a written notification of the decision after the Hungarian parliament approved a bill back in May.

Putin appears safe from arrest on Hungarian soil given Peter Szijjarto’s comments on the “sovereign” nation’s intentions to host the president with “respect” and ensure he has “successful negotiations, and then returns home” on Friday.

Orban Putin
Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia, and Viktor Orban, the prime minister of Hungary, speak at a press conference in Moscow, Russia, on July 5, 2024 [Evgenia Novozhenina/Reuters]

How about the atmosphere? He might be intercepted in midair, right?

“Many questions must be solved before Putin embarks on his journey,” according to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Friday. The president’s flight path is likely to be the subject of one of those inquiries.

Following recent Russian jet infiltrations of Estonia’s airspace, which has put the region on high alert for a potential overspill from the Ukraine war, Putin will likely want to stay away from the Baltic states. A hard landing could be made by the Baltics.

Poland, which has historically had strained relations with the Kremlin, and which is friendly Belarus might offer a convenient corridor between the Baltics and Ukraine further south. This would set the president on course for this and warn Europe of a “deep” Russian strike on its territory. Recently, Russian drones have also entered Polish airspace.

Russia’s populist Robert Fico, who is in charge of Slovakia, continues to guzzle Russian energy in defiance of Trump’s orders to stop imports of oil and gas, and may be more accommodating. In fact, Fico and other EU members are engaged in conflict due to sanctions against Moscow. However, before reaching Slovakia, Putin would need to cross Poland first.

Therefore, Putin’s direct route to Budapest appears to be riddled with obstacles.

What about a route that is more congested?

Netanyahu, a fellow ICC fugitive wanted for crimes including using starvation as a weapon of war against Palestinian civilians in Gaza, who traveled to several European nations last month to attend the UN General Assembly (UNGA) in New York. Putin may have inspired him.

According to FlightRadar24, the Wing of Zion plane of the Israeli Prime Minister briefly flew over Greek and Italian territory before veering off into the Atlantic.

Putin might consider taking a southbound flight. Georgia is a signatory to the Rome Statute but has the potential to turn a blind eye when its ruling party, the Georgian Dream, suspends Tbilisi’s application to join the EU.

And Turkiye, which is not party to the Rome Statute but has long hosted negotiations between Russian and Ukrainian negotiators and has treaded a tightrope, might be able to persuade the Russian president to step down.

Greece would serve as the main barrier from there, opening a way for Orban’s warm welcome through the Balkan states.

Orban Netanyahu
On April 3, 2025, Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban addresses Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a ceremony held at the Lion’s Courtyard in Budapest, Hungary.

Has Putin traveled extensively since he was a war criminal wanted on international grounds?

Since the ICC warrant was issued, Putin has clearly restricted his travels.

He rode his horseback through Mongolia last year and was treated to a lavish ceremony with Mongolian President Ukhnaagiin Khurelsukh.

Russia and Mongolia depend on one another for fuel and electricity, but they have very friendly relations. It was surprising to see the red carpet being drawn out because the nation has abstained during UN votes on the conflict and has abstained from condemning Russia’s offensive in Ukraine.

Since Trump was able to fly directly to Alaska for a bilateral with him in August, he was able to fly over his nation’s enormous landmass over the Bering Strait to the US, which is not a signatory of the Rome Statute.

Since China is not a member of the ICC, the “old friend” and neighbor Xi Jinping’s annual parade and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit presented no issues this year.

The Russian president met with leaders from Central Asia this month, and he wants to strengthen ties with Tajikistan, which has ratified the Rome Statute.

ICC
On September 22, 2025, the International Criminal Court (ICC) established itself in The Hague, Netherlands.

Putin: When will he be detained?

Although it is nearly inconceivable to capture Russia’s president, the arrest warrants represent the first step toward a trial.

Only a select few foreign leaders have visited The Hague.

Rodrigo Duterte, the ex-president of the Philippines, turned himself in earlier this year to face crimes against humanity. The charges relate to extrajudicial killings committed during his infamous “war on drugs,” which resulted in the deaths of countless others.

Charles Taylor, a former leader of Liberia and a warlord, was found guilty in 2012 by the UN-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone, which held trial in The Hague. He was found guilty of 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Would a future Russian leader choose to forcibly hand Putin over for crimes against humanity committed during the former Yugoslavian wars, as happened with Slobodan Milosevic, who was removed in 2000 after being excommunicated from Serbia?