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0032 02 7322568Desperate, hungry, terrified': Gazans stopping aid trucks in search of food
Desperate, hungry, terrified': Gazans stopping aid trucks in search of food
Speaking later in the day at UN Headquarters, the deputy head of the UN World Food Programme (WFP), confirmed that following a food assessment, around half of all Gazans "are starving", with no idea where their next meal is coming from.
Briefing journalists in Geneva uon his return from Rafah governorate, Philippe Lazzarini, Commissioner-General of UNRWA, explained that people were “desperate, hungry and are terrified”, 69 days since the Israeli military bombardment began in response to the 7 October Hamas terror attacks in southern Israel.
Desperation, not diversion
Hunger is something Gazans have “never, ever experienced” in their troubled history, the veteran UN humanitarian continued. “I saw it with my eyes that people in Rafah have started to decide to help themselves directly from the truck out of total despair and eat what they have taken out of the truck on the spot...This has nothing to do with aid diversion.”
Only a significant upscaling of humanitarian relief to the enclave will help avoid a deepening of the already dire humanitarian situation there – and their sense of betrayal and abandonment by the international community - the UNRWA chief insisted, as he called for the reopening of the Kerem Shalom crossing from Israel to commercial vehicles and the lifting of the “siege” of Gaza.
Epicentre of displacement
Rafah governorate near the Egyptian border has now become the “epicentre of displacement” with more than one million people looking for shelter there, Mr. Lazzarini explained. UNRWA facilities are massively overcrowded, meaning that countless tens of thousands have “absolutely nowhere to go”.
“The lucky ones are those who have a place inside our premises,” he said, especially now that winter had begun. Those outside have to live in the open, “in the mud and under the rain”.
Fear of being forgotten
Mr. Lazzarini said that people in Gaza believe that their lives are “not equal to others’ lives” and that they have the feeling that “human rights, international humanitarian law does not apply to them”.
He highlighted the sense of isolation prevalent in the enclave, stressing that people there “just long for safety and stability”, wishing for a normal life which they are “very far away from right now”.
“What continues to shock me is the ever-increasing level of dehumanisation”, he said, deploring the fact that some can “cheer wrongdoing in this war…What is happening in Gaza should outrage everyone” and make us “rethink our values”, he insisted.
“This is a make or break moment for all of us and our shared humanity.”
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