Gaza Aid Set to Deploy Upon Timetable Agreement

The United Nations

Humanitarians continued to stand ready on Thursday to deliver lifesaving aid to Gaza following reports of an agreement brokered by the United States for 20 aid trucks to enter the enclave from Egypt.

Some 3,000 tonnes of supplies have been awaiting entry on the Egyptian side of the crossing since Saturday. On Wednesday, the UN Security Council failed to agree on a resolution that would have called for "humanitarian pauses" for aid delivery.

UN chief expected in Cairo

UN Secretary-General António Guterres was expected to arrive in Cairo on Thursday to pursue his diplomatic efforts, following his call for an "immediate humanitarian ceasefire" in the wake of a strike on Al Ahli Arab Hospital in City on Tuesday, which killed 471 people according to Gaza's de facto authorities.

UN humanitarian coordination office OCHA said that this was the deadliest incident in Gaza since hostilities escalated and that children, health care staff and internally displaced people were among the victims.

Lives on the line

Commenting on the news of a US-brokered deal, UN health agency WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus welcomed "USA's leadership and Israel's agreement to allow food, water and medical aid" into the sealed off enclave through the Rafah border crossing, stressing on social media platform X that "many lives depend on this happening".

Briefing the Security Council on Wednesday, UN relief chief Martin Griffiths stressed the need for humanitarian actors to be able to "deliver relief to civilians in need throughout Gaza, without impediment, in places of their choice, in places where they consider themselves to be safe and where we can seek to ensure that safety."

Disastrous situation

Gaza's population has been facing an increasingly disastrous situation, with a full electricity blackout since 11 October, rising food insecurity and a health system on the brink of collapse.

According to OCHA, the average water consumption for all needs, including drinking, cooking and hygiene is estimated at only three litres per day per person in Gaza. The UN office also warned that people consume water from unsafe sources "risking death and placing the population at risk of infectious disease outbreaks".

One in two displaced

OCHA reported that about one million people, or close to half of Gaza's entire population, have been displaced since the start of the conflict.

Over 500,000 are staying in emergency shelters designated as such by the UN agency for Palestine refugees, UNRWA, while Israeli bombardments of the enclave continue.

More to come on this developing story…

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