‘Post-apocalyptic’:
medical staff struggle as gangs fight over aid supplies in Gaza
Militants,
clans, Hamas and criminal gangs bring violence and anarchy as they vie for
power amid Israeli strikes
Jason Burke
Jason Burke
in Jerusalem
Sun 29 Jun
2025 16.16 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jun/29/medical-staff-struggle-gangs-fight-aid-supplies-gaza
For the
beleaguered staff of Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, one new casualty brought
into the emergency department last week posed a particular challenge.
He had been
wounded moments earlier in the southern Gaza city while fighting in a battle
between rival armed gangs over hundreds of valuable sacks of flours stripped
from aid convoys and, within an hour of his arrival, men with assault rifles
had invaded the hospital. They roughed up medical staff, smashed equipment and
set fire to vehicles. Other armed men soon arrived and automatic gunfire
reverberated around the sprawling hospital compound, already battered by
successive Israeli strikes close by or on its buildings.
There was
worse to come. Soon, another force joined the shooting, dispatched by the
interior ministry in Gaza, long a bastion of Hamas, to restore order. There was
now a new gun battle, which ended only when the opposing gunmen from the two
duelling gangs fled. Overhead, throughout the fighting, Israeli drones flew by.
The
incident, described to the Guardian by medical staff and local residents, was a
microcosm of the new violence and anarchy in Gaza after almost 21 months of
war.
“You have
[these] gangs fighting and the Israeli airstrikes or troops shooting people,
and Hamas still there, while there are miles and miles of ruins where desperate
people are cooking on fires and living in tents and very hungry,” one
humanitarian official said. “It’s like some kind of post-apocalyptic sci-fi
film.”
The war in
Gaza was triggered by a surprise attack launched by Hamas militants into
southern Israel in October 2023, which led to the killing of 1,200 people,
mostly civilians, and the abducton of 251, 50 of whom remain in the territory.
So far, the Israeli offensive has killed more than 56,500 Palestinians, mostly
civilians, displaced most of the 2.3 million population and reduced much of
Gaza to rubble.
In recent
months, more armed actors have joined the fighting, and a fierce struggle for
power and influence has intensified even as the Israeli offensive continues.
These now include various other militant factions, a dozen armed militias
representing major local families or clans, new coalitions organised by
independent community leaders, and criminal gangs empowered by the deepening
anarchy.
The result
is that Gaza is fragmenting into individual fiefdoms. The Israel Defense Forces
(IDF) holds much of the territory, including a wide “buffer zone” cleared of
buildings along the territory’s perimeter and a swath of the south along the
border with Egypt, where it works closely with the Popular Forces, a new
militia run by a former convict and smuggler called Yasser Abu Shabab. Benjamin
Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, has confirmed that Israel provides weapons
to clans that oppose Hamas.
Abu Shabab,
who denies getting support from Israel or contacts with the Israeli army, also
controls territory along Gaza’s eastern perimeter near the main entry point
from Israel – though the militia’s influence there is contested by several
armed local families.
The chaos
has encouraged other traditionally important families and clans to assert their
control over much of the rest of south and central Gaza.
In the
north, Hamas remains a force in Gaza City and the shattered neighbourhoods of
Jabaliya and Shujaiya. Though the Islamist militant organisation’s military
capabilities are now much reduced and most of its veteran leaders have been
killed by Israel, many civilian technocrats remain in their posts in key
ministries, and other officials, operating secretly, run neighbourhood
administrations.
“They’re
hiding because they are being instantly hit by [Israeli] planes but they appear
here and there, organising queues in front of bakeries, protecting aid trucks,
or punishing criminals,” said a 57-year-old construction worker in Gaza City.
“They’re not like before the war, but they exist.”
Hamas and
its paramilitary police forces have clashed with criminal gangs too – as shown
by the firefight at Nasser hospital.
“All the
people in Khan Younis are blaming [the fighters] for spoiling the hospital and
have asked them to apologise,” said a senior medical official at the hospital.
The police
have also been repeatedly targeted by the IDF. Several members of the Sahm
force, set up by Hamas to crack down on looters, profiteers and thieves, were
killed last week in an Israeli airstrike on Deir al-Balah, a central town,
which also killed about a dozen civilians. The IDF denied reports from
witnesses that the police were distributing aid seized from looters when
attacked.
Stocks of
aid built up during the two-month ceasefire early this year ran out during the
subsequent 11 weeks when Israel allowed nothing into Gaza.
“The
shortage is completely artificial and it means [aid] is the most valuable
commodity now, so basically if you’ve got guns and you can get aid, you can use
it to get money and power, and so that’s causing a lot of the violence,” said
one aid official, pointing out that a single 25kg sack of flour can sell for up
to $500.
Community
leaders and heads of powerful families in Gaza say their aims are simply to
serve the population.
“The clans
came … to form a stance to prevent the aggressors and the thieves from stealing
the food that belongs to our people,” said Abu Salman Al Moghani, a community
leader, after gunmen from the Supreme Tribal Committee in Gaza guarded one aid
convoy that entered last week.
In recent
weeks, the UN and other agencies have been allowed to bring in about 70 trucks
a day. Most carry flour for Gaza’s community kitchens but they are usually
stopped by barricades made of concrete blocks and then stripped of their
cargoes, sometimes by armed gangs but most often by desperate civilians who
gather in massive numbers at points the convoys are expected to pass.
“The scenes
are appalling. You have 50 trucks, spread over two kilometres, and there are
50,000 on the road trying to get the flour,” said another aid official in Gaza.
Many
civilians have been killed as they tried to reach food distribution hubs opened
last month by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a secretive US- and
Israel-backed private organisation. The GHF said on Sunday that it had safely
delivered more than 51m meals despite “a highly volatile environment”.
Statistics
from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) confirm ministry of
health counts of more than 500 deaths from live fire on those seeking aid by
Israeli forces in recent weeks, as well as a small number in clashes between
looters.
A report by
Haaretz last week quoted multiple Israeli soldiers describing orders to fire at
civilians. The report revealed the IDF had launched an investigation into
potential war crimes.
An officer
quoted in the report told the newspaper about the growing chaos in Gaza. “I’m
stationed there, and even I no longer know who’s shooting at whom,” he said.
Reuters
contributed to this report
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