
First UN fuel for Gaza in four months
UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said 75,000 litres of fuel were delivered on Thursday to war-shattered Gaza, home to hundreds of thousands of people in urgent need of humanitarian aid.
However, he stressed the quantity fell far short of what was required.
"The amount entered yesterday isn't sufficient to cover even one day of energy requirements," Dujarric said yesterday in New York.
The fuel is critical for powering generators at hospitals, bakeries and other essential facilities in Gaza, which remains under an Israeli blockade.
Dujarric warned of the consequences of continued shortages, noting: "One partner, for instance, reported to us this week that, in a matter of days, fuel shortages could cut off supplies to clean drinking water to about 44,000 children that depend on that water source," he said.
Meanwhile, renewed Israeli airstrikes across the Gaza Strip killed at least 55 people yesterday, according to reports in the Hamas-run territory, citing medical sources. The figures could not be independently verified.
Palestinian news agency WAFA reported Israeli strikes targeted multiple areas, including the central city of Deir al-Balah, where 16 people were reportedly killed, 10 children being among them. Hospital officials said the victims had been waiting for food aid.
The UN children's agency Unicef confirmed the aid, which was being provided by a partner organisation, had been intended for children and condemned the deaths.
"The killing of families trying to access life-saving aid is unconscionable," Unicef executive director Catherine Russell said.
She urged Israel to conduct an independent investigation.
"This is the cruel reality confronting many in Gaza today after months of insufficient aid being allowed into the territory, and parties to the conflict failing to uphold basic responsibilities to protect civilians," she said.
Israel's military said it had targeted a Hamas operative in the area who was involved in the group's October 7, 2023, massacre in Israel.
"The incident is currently under review," the army said, adding it regretted "any harm caused to uninvolved individuals" and sought to minimise civilian suffering.
WAFA also reported deadly strikes in Khan Younis in the south and Gaza City in the north.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said yesterday he hoped to reach a deal in a few days for the release of more Israeli hostages held by Hamas.
He said Israel and Hamas would likely have a 60-day ceasefire, which the two sides could use to try to end the conflict, although there were several sticking points in the ongoing ceasefire talks. — dpa/Reuters

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2 days ago
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First UN fuel for Gaza in four months
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UNFPA's presence in crisis zones was not only logistical, but symbolic. In Sudan, Syria, and Gaza, a simple tent stocked with menstrual pads, a blanket, and a bar of soap could serve as sanctuary. 'It represents the respite that a woman needs in a time of crisis,' she said. 'You know, we call our kits 'dignity kits' for that reason.' Shifting the conversation Beyond delivering services, Dr. Kanem elevated UNFPA's role as a thought leader in a polarised world. She steered the agency into difficult public conversations – about teen pregnancy, climate anxiety, fertility rates, and online harassment – with an unflinching insistence on rights. 'The 10-year-old girl exists,' she said. 'What her parents and her religious leaders and her community think is vital for her to be well prepared, for her to know what to do when she's challenged by coercive practices.' That leadership extended to data. Under Dr. Kanem, UNFPA invested heavily in supporting national censuses and building dashboards to help lawmakers shape reproductive health policy with real-time insight. This year's State of World Population report, the agency's annual deep dive into demographic trends, reframed conventional narratives around so-called 'population collapse' – noting that many women and men delay having children not out of ideology, but because they cannot afford to raise them. Dr. Kanem praised the altruism of young people who say they're choosing not to have children for fear of worsening the climate crisis. But that's not what the data shows. 'The world replacement fertility rate is not endangering the planet,' she explained. 'The facts really say: you can have as many children as you can afford.' A rights-based compass in turbulent times Dr. Kanem's tenure coincided with mounting attacks on reproductive rights, rising nationalism, and growing scepticism of multilateral institutions. She faced years of US funding cuts – including under the current administration – even as demand for UNFPA's services surged. 'UNFPA has more money than we've ever had,' she noted. 'But it's never going to be enough to stop the flow of need.' Resources alone won't secure the agency's future – credibility and persistence are just as vital. 'The multilateral system itself has come under question at a time when it is needed now more than ever,' she warned. 'We do have to prove ourselves each and every day. And when we make mistakes, we've got to get up and rectify them and find partners who are going to be allies.' One such partner has been the private sector. In 2023, UNFPA teamed up with tech firms to launcha development impact bond in Kenya, delivering mobile-based sexual health services to prevent teenage pregnancy and new HIV infections among adolescent girls. Changing mindsets UNFPA has long worked to end harmful practices such as female genital mutilation (FGM) and child marriage. 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Her own future includes what she calls a 'mini-sabbatical' – more time for music, her family, and, finally, herself. But she won't stay silent for long. 'I know that my passion for issues of women and girls is not going to recede,' she said. 'It's been a labour of love.' Her parting thought? One final return to the girl at the centre of it all. 'When that 10-year-old girl succeeds, everyone succeeds,' she said. 'It is a better world.'