Politics

Humanitarian agencies urge greater access to Gaza amid situation of ‘chaos, despair and dysfunction’

Aid agencies are pleading for more access to the Gaza Strip, amid concerns that a potential ground offensive by Israel could worsen the humanitarian situation.

“I think desperate is an understatement” when describing the situation in Gaza, Robert Mardini, the director general of the International Committee of the Red Cross, said in an interview on Rosemary Barton Live airing Sunday.

“I think what we’re seeing today is nothing comparable to what we’ve seen in the past,” Mardini told CBC chief political correspondent Rosemary Barton.

On Saturday, a convoy of 20 trucks was allowed to enter Gaza, where roughly two million people have been living under what Israel called a “complete siege.” Israel has pounded Gaza with airstrikes and cut supplies to the territory since Hamas militants crossed the border into Israel and conducted a series of deadly attacks and kidnappings against civilians on Oct. 7.

A second convoy was allowed to enter on Sunday, but humanitarian workers say the amount of aid entering the region is inadequate.

“People are starving in Gaza,” said Cindy McCain, executive director of the World Food Programme, in a separate interview.

“People don’t have water, don’t have electricity and most of all they don’t have any food…. We need to get trucks in and get them in now.”

WATCH | What you need to know about the Israel-Hamas war:

Examining the Israel-Hamas war

Featured VideoHamas is isolated in the Gaza Strip but it’s not alone — who stands with whom in the Israel-Hamas war. And with the threat of a ground invasion looming, Andrew Chang examines the potential strategies on both sides.

See also  Doctors and aid workers prepare for mass polio vaccinations in Gaza amid pause in fighting

Aid agencies, countries and individuals have been navigating a complex situation at the Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt. While aid agencies are hoping to get food, water and fuel into Gaza, countries are also looking to extract citizens who are stuck there.

That includes hundreds of Canadians, permanent residents and their families who have not been able to cross the border into Egypt.

The Rafah crossing, the main route people in Gaza could take to leave, has been closed for most of the conflict. Opening the crossing is the subject of complex negotiations involving Egypt, Israel and the United States.

Far more aid needed, agencies say

Reacting to the news that some trucks would be let into the area on Saturday, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken welcomed the opening but echoed a warning from Israel that no aid should end up in Hamas’s hands.

“We have been clear: Hamas must not interfere with the provision of this life-saving assistance,” Blinken said in a statement.

Aid that gets into Gaza, which is controlled by Hamas, is distributed by the Palestinian Red Crescent.

McCain said it’s positive that some trucks are allowed in, but the number of shipments need to be in the hundreds per day.

“Politics should not even play a part in this, this is a humanitarian crisis,” McCain said.

“We have 40 trucks waiting outside [Gaza] that have food for half a million people on them right now, and we haven’t been able to get them all in.”

WATCH | Two hostages released by Hamas:

American mother and daughter released by Hamas now in Israel

Featured VideoIsrael has confirmed two U.S. hostages freed by Hamas are now safely inside Israeli territory and being cared for by the military. Judith and Natalie Raanan, a mother and daughter from the Chicago area, were visiting relatives in the Nahal Oz kibbutz when militants stormed out of Gaza on Oct. 7 and took them.

See also  Canada Post lost $748 million last year, warns of 'critical' financial situation

Tamer Jarada, a Canadian who has family in Gaza, told Barton that his family was struggling to get access to basic needs.

“Whenever they are able to get some water, it’s just polluted water. It’s not healthy, it’s not for drinking…. For food, they are able to get some bread every other day,” he said.

The humanitarian situation could be further exacerbated by an Israeli ground offensive, while the Israeli Defence Forces also said Saturday that the frequency of airstrikes will only increase in the days before a ground assault.

Mardini said his organization is doing everything it could to keep people safe and deliver aid.

“We are in contact with Israeli authorities, with Hamas, to ensure that there is a carve-out for humanity in the midst of chaos, despair and dysfunction,” he said.

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Back to top button