Rights body calls for safe delivery of aid to Gaza after airdrop deaths

Edited by Ed Newman
2024-03-27 13:23:59

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Geneva, March 27 (RHC)-- The Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor has called for urgent international intervention to help provide Gazans with safe access to food after nearly 20 Palestinians were killed trying to reach aid.

In a statement, the organization, based in Switzerland, called for finding “appropriate mechanisms” to increase and diversify aid delivery to Gaza City and its northern part safely and respectfully.

“Given the Israeli crime of genocide that has been ongoing since October 7, 2023, the international community must act quickly to determine appropriate mechanisms to ensure that humanitarian supplies reach the hungry and impoverished in a way that preserves their dignity and lives,” the statement said.  It cited repeated casualties resulting from the unsafe dropping of aid from aircraft or during unsecured entry of aid trucks into northern Gaza.

“Palestinians who escaped Israeli bombing, gunfire, or starvation in the Gaza Strip have now been killed as a result of the disorderly entry of international aid, either by aid falling on their heads, drowning while attempting to reach it, or being suffocated or crushed in a stampede,” the statement by the organization said.

Palestinian officials say 12 Palestinians drowned Monday after being entangled with ropes of parachutes of aid parcels dropped by planes and falling into the sea in northern Gaza. Bodies of seven of them were recovered and five others went missing.

Six others were killed on Monday in stampedes to obtain aid airdrops as famine forced residents to scramble for the sake of getting some aid boxes to feed their hungry children.   Five people were killed and 10 injured by an airdrop earlier this month when parachutes malfunctioned, a Gaza medic said.
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Several countries, including the United States, France, and Jordan, have been airdropping aid into northern Gaza, where land deliveries have effectively been blocked.  Gaza officials have condemned such operations and called for an immediate end to the airdrop landings.  However, Washington on Tuesday said it will continue the aid drop operations.

The human rights organization warned against the Israeli military’s continued shooting at aid seekers, which has so far led to the martyrdom of at least 563 people and the injury of hundreds of others.  “These shootings suggest the existence of a systematic Israeli policy to deny hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip safe access to aid.”

“Since early February, Israel has been attacking aid warehouses and limiting the amount of humanitarian aid and other supplies that are required to maintain the civilian population at the necessary level.”

Only around 150 lorries a day carrying aid are now getting into Gaza compared with at least 500 before the war, according to UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees.

The Palestinian resistance movement Hamas has on several occasions stated that airdropping of humanitarian aid into Gaza is “useless” as the aid is not sufficient even to meet one percent of the demand.  Hamas says people in Gaza would have had access to thousands of tons of aid if the US had done enough to pressure Israel to open border crossings into the besieged territory.

Israel ignited its bloody war machine in Gaza on October 7 after Hamas-led resistance groups carried out Operation Al-Aqsa Storm against the usurping entity in retaliation for its intensified atrocities against the Palestinian people.

Since then, the regime has killed more than 32,300 Palestinians and injured over 74,000 others.



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