UN Agencies Hope Truce Will Allow Aid to Flow to Northern Gaza

 Palestinians walk through destruction in Gaza City on Friday, Nov. 24, 2023, as the temporary ceasefire between Israel and Hamas took effect. (AP)
Palestinians walk through destruction in Gaza City on Friday, Nov. 24, 2023, as the temporary ceasefire between Israel and Hamas took effect. (AP)
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UN Agencies Hope Truce Will Allow Aid to Flow to Northern Gaza

 Palestinians walk through destruction in Gaza City on Friday, Nov. 24, 2023, as the temporary ceasefire between Israel and Hamas took effect. (AP)
Palestinians walk through destruction in Gaza City on Friday, Nov. 24, 2023, as the temporary ceasefire between Israel and Hamas took effect. (AP)

UN agencies voiced hope that a shaky truce that began between Israel and Hamas on Friday would allow for a ramping-up of aid and the first flows to northern Gaza in weeks as fresh hospital rescue efforts got under way.

Aid agencies have said they are aiming to deliver supplies to the northern part of the Palestinian enclave where hospitals have collapsed due to bombings and lack of fuel and where there are major concerns about dehydration and disease in a situation described as a siege within a siege.

But they say a more permanent ceasefire is required to deliver the mass amount of aid to address Gaza's full needs, with nearly three-quarters of the population or some 1.7 million people displaced, thousands killed and many more -- both dead and alive -- thought to be trapped beneath the rubble.

"The north has suffered brutally so it's one of our big priorities across UN agencies, irrespective of what the delivery is, is to get to the north," said James Elder, a spokesperson for the UN children's agency in Gaza.

UNICEF is aiming to get 30 trucks a day into Gaza during the truce and is prioritizing delivering water and blankets, he said, describing scenes of people drinking salty water and sleeping in their cars with smashed-out windows.

He called for a longer period of sustained peace for children to recover physically and mentally, describing meeting a 7-year-old orphan who kept shutting his eyes so as not to forget his dead parents whose house was bombed.

"We cannot in all decent conscience go from a four or five day pause into killing of children again. I mean, that seems absolutely callous," he told Reuters.

Asked whether the United Nations had guarantees from Israel that it could deliver aid to the north, Jens Laerke of the UN humanitarian office said: "We proceed on the basis of the hope and the expectation that we will reach people in need, where they are."

Egypt says that during the truce 200 trucks will cross the Rafah crossing daily - more than double the recent average - and about twice the amount of fuel (130,000 liters), but it is not clear how the ramp-up is being managed.

That border crossing, intended for pedestrians, is the only one currently open and logistical limitations, bottlenecks and slow vetting processes have been constraining flows.

WHO spokesperson Christian Lindmeier said the agency was working on further hospital evacuations as soon as possible, voicing concern for some 100 patients and health care workers left in Al Shifa Hospital.

The Palestine Red Crescent said on social media that it had evacuated about 120 people from Ahli Baptist Hospital to Khan Younis in the south. It also received two new ambulances and 85 trucks with aid, it said.

Other aid groups were skeptical that the short pause would make a difference.

"For medical operations, a four-day pause is a band-aid not healthcare. This is not humanitarian access, it's a joke," said Joel Weiller, Director General at Medecins du Monde.



Israeli American Soldier Thought to Have Been Taken Hostage in Gaza Is Presumed Dead

Israeli soldiers play football near tanks and armored personnel carrier (APC), amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas, near the Israel-Gaza border, in Israel, June 2, 2024. (Reuters)
Israeli soldiers play football near tanks and armored personnel carrier (APC), amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas, near the Israel-Gaza border, in Israel, June 2, 2024. (Reuters)
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Israeli American Soldier Thought to Have Been Taken Hostage in Gaza Is Presumed Dead

Israeli soldiers play football near tanks and armored personnel carrier (APC), amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas, near the Israel-Gaza border, in Israel, June 2, 2024. (Reuters)
Israeli soldiers play football near tanks and armored personnel carrier (APC), amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas, near the Israel-Gaza border, in Israel, June 2, 2024. (Reuters)

The Israeli military said Monday an Israeli American soldier who was believed to have been taken hostage alive on Oct. 7, 2023, is now presumed to have been killed during Hamas’ attack and his body taken into Gaza.

Neutra, 21, was a New York native who enlisted in the Israeli military and was captured when Hamas attacked southern Israel.

Neutra’s parents, Ronen and Orna, led a public campaign while he was thought to be alive for their son’s freedom. They spoke at protests in the US and Israel, addressed the Republican National Convention this year and kept up ties with the Biden administration in their crusade to secure their son’s release.

In a statement announcing the death, the military did not say how it came to the conclusion over Neutra’s fate.

He was one of seven American Israelis still held in Gaza, four of whom are now said to be dead. Hamas released a video of one, Edan Alexander, over the weekend, indicating he was still alive.

In late summer, Hamas killed Hersh Goldberg-Polin, another prominent Israeli American hostage, along with five other captives, whose bodies the Israeli military recovered.

The war in Gaza began when Hamas-led fighters stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking around 250 hostage. Some 100 captives are still held inside Gaza, around two-thirds believed to be alive.