Since the ceasefire, more than 10,000 assistance trucks have entered Gaza: UN
Additionally, the UN Under-Secretary-General for Emergency Relief and Humanitarian Affairs stated that he was "about to cross into northern Gaza with a convoy of aid."
The UN humanitarian head reported Thursday (February 6, 2025) that since a tenuous ceasefire began on January 19, more than 10,000 relief vehicles have entered Gaza.
In Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, trucks transporting aid travel during an Israeli-Hamas ceasefire, February 5, 2025.
Authorities in Gaza demand tents and blame Israel for impeding help.
The "most pressing" humanitarian need in Gaza, according to the Government Media Office, is to get temporary shelters.

In order to help house Palestinians whose homes have been destroyed by Israel, local officials in the Gaza Strip have urged humanitarian organizations and donors to give priority to supplying tents and temporary shelters.
Thousands of Palestinian families are sleeping outside in the bitter cold throughout the territory, according to a Monday statement from the Gaza Government Media Office.
It is now impossible to put off the urgent humanitarian imperative to secure shelters. According to a statement from the office, it is currently the most urgent demand.
The Jordan Hashemite Charity Organization, which has been assisting in the coordination of relief to Palestinians, was requested to include tents in the upcoming aid shipments along with food and other humanitarian goods.
Since Israel and Hamas agreed to a truce last month, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have moved back to the northern part of the region.
However, many discovered that their homes had been reduced to rubble when Israel destroyed huge neighborhoods in northern towns including Jabalia and Beit Hanoon as well as Gaza City.
The UN humanitarian head reported Thursday (February 6, 2025) that since a tenuous ceasefire began on January 19, more than 10,000 relief vehicles have entered Gaza.
In Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, trucks transporting aid travel during an Israeli-Hamas ceasefire, February 5, 2025.
Authorities in Gaza demand tents and blame Israel for impeding help.
The "most pressing" humanitarian need in Gaza, according to the Government Media Office, is to get temporary shelters.
In order to help house Palestinians whose homes have been destroyed by Israel, local officials in the Gaza Strip have urged humanitarian organizations and donors to give priority to supplying tents and temporary shelters.
Thousands of Palestinian families are sleeping outside in the bitter cold throughout the territory, according to a Monday statement from the Gaza Government Media Office.
It is now impossible to put off the urgent humanitarian imperative to secure shelters. According to a statement from the office, it is currently the most urgent demand.
The Jordan Hashemite Charity Organization, which has been assisting in the coordination of relief to Palestinians, was requested to include tents in the upcoming aid shipments along with food and other humanitarian goods.
Since Israel and Hamas agreed to a truce last month, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have moved back to the northern part of the region.
However, many discovered that their homes had been reduced to rubble when Israel destroyed huge neighborhoods in northern towns including Jabalia and Beit Hanoon as well as Gaza City.
Comments
Post a Comment