Humanitarian aid during the Gaza war

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Workers unloading Iranian aid shipment to Gaza, late October 2023

During the

October 7 attacks, prevented the entry of humanitarian aid for several weeks. As the war progressed, aid was allowed at limited quantities. Entities such as Oxfam, the European Union, United Kingdom, and United Nations stated that Israel is deliberately blocking humanitarian aid.[1] These limitations have contributed to a severe humanitarian crisis and a risk of famine. Israeli airstrikes and continued restrictions on aid entry led to widespread shortages of food and supplies. Distribution of aid within Gaza has also been an issue, as police have refused to protect aid convoy after airstrikes killed eight police in Rafah.[2]

Humanitarian aid agencies warned of the dire humanitarian consequences of aid restrictions, particularly after major Western donors announced they would cease funding UNRWA, the major aid relief agency in Gaza, and Israel passed legislation to ban UNRWA from working in or with the State of Israel.[3]

According to Palestinian analyst Elhasan Bakr, the prewar amount of aid trucks into Gaza was 500-600 a day, with estimates of 1,000-1,500 trucks needed to alleviate starvation. Israel has failed to reach any of these goals.

Janez Lenarcic, stated the majority of people in Gaza were "fully dependent" on humanitarian aid.[6] In October 2024, the United Nations found that Israel had arbitrarily blocked 83 percent of aid entering Gaza in the prior year.[7] According to UNICEF, more aid workers had been killed in Gaza than in any war since the founding of the United Nations, with at least 278 killed.[8][9]

Background