Continued border closures force UN to suspend food aid to 750,000 Gazans
13 November 2008 – The United Nations agency assisting Palestinian refugees was forced to suspend food distributions to
half of Gaza’s 1.5 million residents today since continued border closures have prevented the delivery of vital supplies
for over a week.
The UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) said it is unprecedented for its
warehouses to be empty of food.
“It’s been a week since we’ve been able to get any food supplies into Gaza, which has caused us to fall into this
particular crisis,” John Ging, the head of UNRWA in Gaza, told UN Radio.
“We have quite simply run out because again we haven’t been allowed for many months to build up a reserve and that’s why
we are in such a precarious situation. This evening, our stores are now empty and we won’t be able to resume our food
distribution until such time as we get a re-supply together,” he added.
“It’s very harrowing for the population here, not just physically but psychologically as well.”
All Gaza commercial crossings remained closed today for the eighth day in row, with no humanitarian or commercial goods
being allowed in.
UNRWA said it is not clear when the crossings will reopen or when it will be able to resume its distributions. It
stressed that “having hundreds of thousands of hungry and desperate people in Gaza is not in the interests of anyone who
believes in peace.”
Meanwhile, the Office of the UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process (UNSCO) reports that fuel was
prevented from entering Gaza today, with the Israeli Government citing as its reason the firing of mortars and rockets
into Israel.
As a result, Gaza’s power plant will shut down today and probably remain closed until Sunday. Supplies of diesel and
petrol are also running low, according to UNSCO.
ENDS