
Rising Hunger In Gaza Highlights Urgent Need For ‘Unfettered' Aid Supplies
Only around 6,000 tonnes of wheat flour have entered the war-torn enclave since Israel began to allow limited supplies back in last month.
However, 10,000 tonnes are urgently needed in the face of rising malnutrition, according to the UN aid coordination office OCHA.
' The only way to address the situation on the ground is by re-opening additional crossings,' said OCHA's Olga Cherevko, speaking to UN News from Khan Younis.
Beyond food aid
She also stressed the need to allow 'unlimited and unfettered supply of aid to enter,' which includes items that go beyond food such as shelter materials, fuel, cooking gas, 'and other necessary elements to sustain life in Gaza.'
Ms. Cherevko urged the Israeli authorities to make the task of delivering aid easier by 'providing a safe and enabling environment,' reducing waiting times for humanitarian missions and ensuring access to people in need.
People in Gaza are suffering from harsh living conditions. Since March, Israeli restrictions on border crossings have tightened, making it even more difficult for Gaza's population – more than two million people - to access food.
Senior UN officials, including Secretary-General António Guterres and Humanitarian Affairs chief Tom Fletcher, have described the aid that has entered as merely 'a trickle' or a 'a drop in the ocean'.
Difficult decisions
Although markets are crowded with people, they lack two essential elements: liquidity and goods.
Most residents thus face three bitter choices: either seek food aid from the newly established US and Israel-backed distribution mechanism, which has already claimed dozens of lives in recent days; watch their children starve; or pay dearly for what's left of the goods and looted humanitarian aid in markets.
'Prices are unnatural, much higher than in Europe,' civil servant Akram Yousef recently told our UN News correspondent in Gaza.
'The situation is very difficult, and we have been like this for two years. In addition to displacement, homelessness, bombing, destruction, and devastation, traders are raising prices, and citizens are unable to bear this burden. What can we do?'
More than 20 months of conflict have made living conditions in the Gaza Strip unbearable, and the cost of living is now among the highest in the world.
Ahmed Al-Bahri, who was displaced from Beit Lahia with his family, said a loaf of bread now sells for seven shekels, or roughly $2.
' There is no flour, no milk, no diapers for children, or anything to eat,' he said. 'We live in a state of constant hunger. Where can I get seven shekels to buy a loaf of bread for my child? What is this child's sin?'
Exorbitant fees
The cessation of Palestinian banks' operations since the start of the war in October 2023 has exacerbated the suffering.
People are forced to use phone apps to withdraw money from their bank accounts and to access their pensions through local merchants who charge exorbitant commissions.
Mr. Youssef, the civil servant, said the commission for withdrawing his salary was 20 per cent, but over time it has increased to nearly 50 per cent.
'We have become envious of the dead'
Several residents told UN News that the price of one kilogramme of flour is now 100 shekels, equivalent to roughly $29.
"If a salary is 2,000 shekels, it becomes 1,000 shekels after commission,' another man, Ashraf Al-Deiri, explained.
'The daily expenses of an average or small family are no less than 500 shekels (roughly $143). So, we are experiencing great suffering and need someone to have mercy on us and stand by us."
A young man called Raed Tafesh expressed shock over the high prices, especially since most of his peers are unemployed and lack any source of income.
' We don't earn a single shekel. We are not employed, and we don't have jobs. We are dying slowly. We have become envious of the dead," he said.
The tragic conditions are reflected in the eyes of mothers and fathers who see their children starving, such as Nimir Ghazal. She said her salary is not even enough to buy fruits, vegetables or any healthy food for her children.
'Sometimes I cry when my hungry children ask for a piece of bread. A kilo of flour costs 100 shekels, and lentils cost 50. One kilo is not enough for my family, but I buy it and share it among them,' she said.
UN efforts continue
On Monday, UN teams were able to collect some supplies, mainly flour, from the Kerem Shalom border crossing. The aid was bound for Gaza City when hungry and desperate people snatched it directly from the trucks.
There have also been previous instances of looting and attacks on truck drivers which the UN categorically rejects.
OCHA has emphasized that Israel, as the occupying power, bears responsibility for maintaining public order and safety in Gaza. This should include allowing more essential supplies to enter through multiple crossings and roads to meet humanitarian needs and help curb looting.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
3 days ago
- RNZ News
Pacific Waves for 9 July 2025
'Very happy' - Solomon Island student returns from Israel; Tonga's King and Queen in Fiji for chiefly ceremony; Vanuatu and Australia to re-ink agreement; Australian first nations fight to keep dialects alive. To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.


Otago Daily Times
04-07-2025
- Otago Daily Times
New citizens say family in Gaza wish they were dead
A woman from Gaza who has made a home in Dunedin says the last news she heard of her family was they wished they were dead. Sabreen Alsaadoni took an oath to become a New Zealand citizen at the Dunedin Town Hall on Wednesday after escaping Gaza in 2015. Three of her cousins have died in the war and she has an aunt and uncle living in a camp in Gaza because their home had been destroyed. One of her cousins had been targeted and killed by a Israeli drone strike on his home. Mrs Alsaadoni said she was in contact with her aunt two weeks ago and life had become very difficult for them. "They don't have food and they can't buy anything because it's very expensive. "Their children have several diseases because there is pollution in the air. "They prefer to die." Her family in Gaza was waiting for peace, but at this stage they wanted to leave as soon as possible. Sugar cost about $NZ100 per gram and one onion was about $70, she said. They had applied for a visitor visa for New Zealand, but their application was declined. Mrs Aslaadoni's elderly grandmother, Aughia Alsaadoni, had escaped to Egypt, but was on her own with no-one to look after her. Her application to come to New Zealand was denied because she needed to have health insurance, which cost about $15,000. Mrs Alsaadoni said her mother, Jamila Alsaadoni, who is also a New Zealand citizen, cried every time she heard about an attack because she could not bring the rest of her family to New Zealand. "I can't tell you how they suffer. "My mother is crying all the time because she is afraid to lose her brothers and her sister." Although the war had escalated in October 2023, Palestinians had been under attack for a long time, she said. Mrs Alsaadoni's father, Nasouh Alsaadoni, was shot in the leg when he was just a year-old. She said some of her family escaped to Malaysia in 2015 and waited for their refugee status to be granted in New Zealand before moving here five years ago. "For a long time, we waited to be here. "We are very happy because we are in a place that respects humans and I don't feel I am different from others." When her family family arrived in New Zealand, they had just $1 to their name. Mrs Alsaadoni, who is studying tourism at the University of Otago, works with the Red Cross to help other refugees from Gaza. Dunedin Mayor Jules Radich oversaw the citizenship ceremony on Wednesday and another 138 people also became New Zealand citizens yesterday across two ceremonies.


Scoop
01-07-2025
- Scoop
50 Years Of CITES: Shielding Wildlife From Trade-Driven Extinction
1 July 2025 Originally conceived in 1963 at a meeting of the International Union for Conservation of Nature, the Convention entered into force in 1975, as the first global agreement of its kind. It continues to serve as a vital tool to help prevent the rapid decline of species. Why CITES matters? The urgency of CITES' mission is clear: international wildlife trade is now worth billions of dollars, and unregulated trade – alongside habitat loss and overexploitation – continues to drive vulnerable species towards extinction. Because such trade span borders, international cooperation is critical. 'CITES is not a static agreement or self-sustaining,' said Ivonne Higuero, Secretary-General of CITES, marking the anniversary. 'It is a living promise to invest in nature – a commitment to the future, to each other and to the millions of species with whom we share this planet.' With 185 parties – States or regional economic organizations – where the Convention has entered into force, CITES regulates trade for over 40,000 plant and animal, covering live animals, timber and herbal products. Real world impact CITES has established itself as one of the most effective multilateral environmental agreements by developing consensus-based governance and implementation tools such as the CITES Trade Database – the world's most comprehensive source of global wildlife trade data – and guidelines for legal acquisition, permitting and enforcement. Thanks to the Convention, international collaboration has brought critically endangered species from the brink, like African elephants, pangolin and crocodiles. A key initiative, the Monitoring the Illegal Killing of Elephants (MIKE) Programme, operates at over 70 sites across Africa and Asia, covering roughly half of the pachyderm population. MIKE data has contributed to a downward trend in illegal killings, especially in Africa. Looking ahead CITES Secretary-General Higuero called on the international community to remain committed to the cause. 'Let the next 50 years be marked by deeper unity, sharper focus and bolder action,' she said. 'We must continue aiming high and build a world where wild animals and plants thrive in their natural habitats, where trade supports – not threatens – biodiversity, and where people and planet prosper in harmony.' UN and CITES The CITES secretariat is supported by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), which it with administrative and operational backing. CITES complements the work of other UN entities, such as the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) to improve fisheries management, capacity building and technical cooperation with the Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), and initiatives focusing on the youth with the UN Development Programme.