Israel’s Gaza aid blockade could breach humanitarian law: European nations

Three European foreign ministers have stated in a statement that the blockade of aid to the Gaza Strip could be considered a violation of international humanitarian law.
The governments of Israel must abide by its international obligations, according to the foreign ministers of the United Kingdom, France, and Germany, in a joint statement released on Wednesday to “ensure full, rapid, safe, and unhinged provision of humanitarian assistance to the population in Gaza.”
Israel thwarted Gaza’s aid shipment on Sunday, just after the first phase of its ceasefire with the Palestinian group Hamas expired, causing fears of hunger and additional hardships during the holy month of Ramadan, which started over the weekend.
According to the three ministers, “a halt on goods and supplies entering Gaza, such as that announced by the Government of Israel, would risk violating international humanitarian law.”
Calling on all parties to support the ceasefire, “humanitarian aid should never be dependent on a ceasefire or used as a political tool,” the statement continued.
Five European members of the UN Security Council, including the UK and France, also urged parties to “find a way forward to the next phases of the ceasefire agreement and hostage release agreement.”
Israel has allegedly harmed Palestinians by blocking aid, violating international law, and by committing crimes against humanity. After 15 months of relentless Israeli bombardment, nearly 50 000 Palestinians have died and 70 percent of Gaza’s buildings and roads have been damaged.
Israel violated the ceasefire that brought the Gaza War to an end, according to Hamas. Instead of going through the second phase as originally agreed, Israel now wants to extend the first phase by 50 days. At the conclusion of the first phase on March 1, Israel was scheduled to leave the Philadelphi Corridor, but it has since refrained. Steve Witkoff, Trump’s Middle East envoy, is reportedly scheduled to visit the area in the coming days to break the deadlock.
desperate need for assistance
The Palestinian enclave will receive food supplies from the World Food Programme (WFP), which announced on Wednesday that it had received them.
Hani Mahmoud, a journalist from Gaza, reported on how the aid embargo had “a significant negative impact across the Gaza Strip.”
He claimed that the market is declining and that people have been starving here.
“We see that many of the items that were once available and common, such as flour, medicine, and other basic necessities, are now either expensive or unavailable.”
The UN’s Children’s Agency’s Rosalia Bollen, a spokesperson for the organization, predicted that the block of humanitarian aid, including ventilators and vaccines, “will have devastating real-life consequences” for both children and their parents.
She said, “Rutine vaccination will come to a standstill if we’re unable to do that.” This is a real-life consequence that we will have to deal with very quickly if we are unable to resume the aid supplies coming in because neonatal units won’t be able to care for preterm babies.
Existing supplies have already been largely distributed throughout the enclave, according to Bollen, who is in Gaza.