WFP Demands Safe Passage to Aid Needy Palestinians

WFP
Man unloading tins of food from a truck
A worker unloads WFP ready-to-eat rations from a truck close to Alexandria, Egypt, ready for delivery to the border. Photo: WFP/Amira Moussa

The World Food Programme (WFP) is stockpiling 310 metric tons of food at the Gaza border ready for dispatch to people in desperate need - as soon as humanitarian access is granted.

WFP's supplies in Al Arish, Egypt, could feed 244,000 people for a week if unhindered access and safe passage were provided to our teams on the ground. WFP is appealing for Gazans fleeing southwards to be afforded safe passage and to be protected in areas of displacement. Humanitarian organizations - including WFP - must be allowed to access these people whose needs are increasing by the hour.

Samer Abdeljaber, WFP Palestine Country Director said: "WFP has tons of food coming in from planes and trucks around the region, piled up and ready for the green light to enter Gaza from any possible entry point. We need access into Gaza and we need to be able to reach the people inside wherever they are."

Ruined buildings
Destroyed buildings in Abu Al-Kass, Gaza. Photo: WFP

Our food supplies in Al Arish include 20 metric tons of high-energy biscuits and 2 mobile storage units for warehousing. Food supplies procured from regional suppliers are also on the way to the border - mainly canned food and date bars. Ready-to-eat rations comprise a can of chickpeas and one of beans, and a small box of juice.

Among those people needing our urgent support is Eyad Khalil and his family of eight in Gaza. ""My fear is for my children," he said. "My fear is for my relatives. My fear is for my neighbours. I fear for all of Gaza. Children are dying.

"We need everything. We need safety. We need peace. We need the necessities of life. Electricity. Water. Food. Drinking. There is no water. There is no water at all. Medicines for children. Food. Drinking. There is nothing."

A man taking groceries from a store shelf
Eyad Khalil shops for his family of eight. He says he fears for all of Gaza. Photo: WFP

Despite immense challenges, WFP has provided food and cash assistance to over 522,000 Palestinians since the start of the current crisis, reaching people every day.

On Sunday (15 October), WFP distributed fresh bread to over 107,000 internally displaced people in 19 shelters in south Gaza, while 19,000 people redeemed cash-based transfers to spend on food and other urgent needs. But with borders closed, our supplies are nearly depleted, while Gaza is on the brink of running out of food, water and electricity. Food security is also worsening rapidly in in the West Bank.

A young boy being handed bread
A boy collects bread from WFP, at a shelter in Gaza. Photo: WFP/Ali Jadallah

"The shops are going to run out of basic food items within days," said Abdeljaber. "Any existing stock can't reach the shops, or the people, because of damaged infrastructure and lack of fuel. The number of bakeries we work with is decreasing by the day. They also don't have enough water or electricity to produce bread. We have had to reduce the ration we are giving to people because, while the shelters are overcrowding, our ability to reach them is becoming more limited."

WFP Country Director Samer Abdeljaber
WFP Palestine Country Director Samer Abdeljaber says shops will soon run out food. Photo: WFP

Nearly one-third of the population of Palestine - 1.84 million people - are food insecure. WFP aims to provide a vital food lifeline to 805,000 people over the next 30 days in Gaza and the West Bank, if conditions allow, bringing desperately needed food, water and other essential supplies.

WFP requires an immediate US$74 million for the next three months to provide this emergency assistance. The current crisis erupted amid severe funding shortfalls, which in June forced us to suspend assistance to 60 percent of beneficiaries.

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