The
Lethal Risk of Seeking Food in Gaza
Hundreds of
Palestinians have been killed over the past month near aid hubs set up under a
new Israel-backed system, according to Gaza health officials.
Rawan Sheikh
Ahmad Adam Rasgon
By Rawan
Sheikh Ahmad and Adam Rasgon
June 26,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/26/world/middleeast/gaza-aid-violence.html
A month
after the launch of a new Israeli-backed aid system for Gaza, reaching the
heavily guarded distribution hubs has become a life-risking endeavor for
Palestinians, hampering efforts to get enough food to a hungry population.
Deadly
violence has erupted frequently around the approaches to the aid sites, most of
them in southern Gaza. The Gaza health ministry said on Wednesday that hundreds
have been killed over the past month near the distribution points, which are
run by American security contractors and guarded by Israeli troops stationed
nearby.
In a
separate aid effort that has also become engulfed in chaos, the United Nations
and other international organizations have been delivering a trickle of food
handouts to northern Gaza. Desperate crowds have been ransacking the trucks
carrying flour and other goods minutes after they enter the enclave, according
to witnesses.
Jens Laerke,
a spokesman for the U.N. agency for coordination of humanitarian affairs,
described the new aid distribution hubs as “death traps" for Gazans.
“Gaza is the
hungriest place on earth,” he said on Wednesday. “When we are able to bring
anything in, it’s getting plundered immediately by the population. That’s the
level of desperation.”
The new aid
system, run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, has just a few operational
hubs, primarily in the south. It was put into place after Israel blocked aid
deliveries to Gaza for nearly three months from March to May. Restrictions on
the entry of aid were partially lifted on May 19.
It was part
of an effort to try to replace an aid operation led by the United Nations with
hundreds of distribution points. The United Nations and other international aid
organizations have criticized the new system, saying the aid it delivers falls
far short of needs and that it forces people to walk for miles in dangerous
conditions for a chance to find food. They accuse Israel of turning aid into a
weapon.
Witnesses on
a number of occasions have reported that Israeli troops opened fire on the
approaches to the new aid hubs. The Israeli military has said repeatedly that
its forces have fired “warning shots” when people approached its forces in what
it described as a threatening manner.
Israeli
officials have said the G.H.F. sites were needed to allow for the delivery of
aid without Hamas benefiting. They say that in the past, Hamas has taken
control of much of the food and other aid reaching the territory, keeping some
for its own people, selling some on the black market and restricting supplies
for ordinary Gazans.
France on
Tuesday condemned what it said was Israeli gunfire at civilians gathered around
an aid distribution point in Gaza, saying it had left dozens of dead and
wounded.
The
International Committee of the Red Cross said it had treated people who had
been shot on Tuesday near a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation site in the southern
city of Rafah. The Red Cross said that its field hospital in Rafah, which is
near the aid hub, received 149 patients after that incident, including 16 who
were declared dead on arrival and three others who died from their wounds. It
was not possible to verify the figures independently.
The Israeli
military said it was “not aware of the incident in question at the Rafah aid
distribution site.”
The Gaza
Humanitarian Foundation did not comment specifically on that incident, but has
said that there have been false allegations of attacks near its aid
distribution sites, and that the international media has been mistakenly
linking its operations to violence near U.N. convoys.
“Ultimately
the solution to ending the violence is more aid, which will create more
certainty and less urgency,” it said in a statement. “There is not yet enough
capacity or food to feed everyone in need in Gaza.”
The group
appealed to the United Nations and others to work with them.
Since the
Gaza Humanitarian Foundation started distributing aid in mid-May, the Red Cross
said its field hospital in Rafah has activated “mass casualty procedures” 20
times.
“We condemn
with maximum strength the fact that for one month now, people are being injured
and killed every day while trying to get urgently needed food in a war zone,”
Christian Cardon, the chief spokesman of the Red Cross, said on Thursday.
In a
separate statement on Monday, the chief of the Israeli military’s southern
command defended the importance of continuing the Gaza war, which was launched
to crush Hamas after it led the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel.
“We cannot
tolerate Hamas here,” said the commander, Maj. Gen. Yaniv Asor. “We will not
end this war until the threat has been eliminated.”
In recent
months, cease-fire talks between Israel and Hamas have repeatedly failed to
produce a breakthrough.
A key
sticking point is the permanence of a cease-fire. Hamas has insisted on a
lasting end to the war in Gaza. But Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel
has rejected that demand, saying Hamas’s military and governing capabilities
must first be dismantled.
On
Wednesday, Israeli officials signaled they wanted to change the procedures for
trucks affiliated with the United Nations and other international organizations
to enter northern Gaza. Mr. Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz said
Hamas was taking control of the aid entering northern Gaza and was stealing it
from civilians.
The two
Israeli leaders said they instructed the military to “present within 48 hours
an action plan to prevent Hamas from taking control of the aid.”
The Israeli
defense ministry body that oversees aid delivery to Gaza said that 71 trucks
carrying food, flour, medicines and other supplies entered Gaza on Tuesday
after steps had been taken to ensure that the aid does not fall into the hands
of Hamas.
While hunger
remains widespread in Gaza, there were signs that food was becoming somewhat
more available after a month of aid flows.
The G.H.F.
has said it has distributed more than 800,000 boxes of food aid since it
started operations, including nearly 40,000 on Thursday.
World
Central Kitchen, the charity set up by the celebrity chef José Andrés, said
this week that it had resumed operations in Gaza after a seven-week pause.
The United
Nations said that Gaza still faced catastrophic hunger and more than 20 months
with insufficient supplies has added up to a cumulative deficit.
“Families in
Gaza are risking their lives to access food, with nearly daily mass casualties
reported as people attempt to reach supplies,” the U.N. humanitarian agency
said in a report on Thursday. “Most families survive on just one nutritiously
poor meal per day, while adults routinely skip meals to prioritize children,
the elderly, and the ill amid deepening hunger and desperation.”
Ahmad Samier
Kafina, from Nuseirat in central Gaza, said he had risked going three times to
an aid distribution point in central Gaza because his extended family relied on
him to find food.
Mr. Kafina
said that each time, he had left the place where the family was living around
midnight and walked for 45 minutes toward the site, often in the company of
neighbors and relatives because it felt safer in a group. Only once had he
managed to secure even a small quantity of food, but he said that he faced
gunfire.
“I saw death
there,” he said.
He said he
feared a stampede and had seen people in the crowds using sharp implements to
steal food from those who had secured it. Despite the risks, he said, he had no
choice.
“We have no
other source of food.”
Matthew
Mpoke Bigg contributed reporting.
Adam Rasgon
is a reporter for The Times in Jerusalem, covering Israeli and Palestinian
affairs.


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