As Gaza's humanitarian crisis worsens amid ongoing war, a mix of symbolic gestures and limited policy shifts is playing out on the ground.
With global criticism mounting over the scale of civilian casualties and the near-collapse of aid operations, Israel has begun a daily "tactical pause" in parts of Gaza to allow humanitarian deliveries, though deadly strikes continue.
Meanwhile, Jordan and the UAE have stepped in with emergency airdrops.
Here's a breakdown of the latest key developments:
Jordan, UAE drop 25 tonnes of aid over Gaza
With global criticism mounting over the scale of civilian casualties and the near-collapse of aid operations, Israel has begun a daily "tactical pause" in parts of Gaza to allow humanitarian deliveries, though deadly strikes continue.
Meanwhile, Jordan and the UAE have stepped in with emergency airdrops.
Here's a breakdown of the latest key developments:
Jordan, UAE drop 25 tonnes of aid over Gaza
- Two Jordanian planes and one from the UAE carried out airdrops on Sunday, delivering 25 tonnes of food and humanitarian aid, according to the Jordanian military.
- The drops targeted multiple areas across Gaza, responding to warnings of looming famine and rising deaths linked to hunger.
- The Israeli military has launched a daily 10-hour “tactical pause” in three areas: Gaza City, Deir al-Balah, and Muwasi (10 am to 8 pm local time), to allow movement of aid convoys.
- However, Israeli airstrikes continued even during these hours, killing at least 38 Palestinians, including 23 people reportedly waiting for aid.
- Gaza’s health ministry said a woman and her four children were killed in one such strike on an apartment in Gaza City.
- In Nuseirat, 13 people, including four children, were killed near a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) distribution point, according to Awda Hospital.
- GHF denied any incident at its facility. The Israeli military said it was reviewing the reports.
- The World Food Programme estimates one-third of Gaza’s population goes days without eating, with half a million people on the brink of famine.
- Aid access was cut off entirely for nearly 2.5 months after a deadly incident in March. Since May, only 69 trucks per day have entered Gaza, far below the 500–600 daily that UN agencies say are necessary.
- Israel has endorsed the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) as a new aid channel bypassing the UN, but rights groups say over 1,000 people have died seeking food, and distribution remains chaotic and dangerous.
- Gaza’s health ministry called for an urgent “flood” of aid, warning that hospitals and clinics are out of essential medicines and equipment.
- Dr Muneer al-Boursh said, “Every delay is measured by another funeral.”
- UNICEF called the tactical pause an “opportunity to save lives,” though the Norwegian Refugee Council said it was “far from enough to meet the overwhelming needs.”
- Peace talks have stalled, with both Israel and the US recalling negotiators from Qatar.
- Hamas official Mahmoud Merdawi dismissed the pause as a PR move, “Israel is trying to change its image… but it will not escape punishment.”
- Israel insists it will not stop until Hamas surrenders, disarms, and goes into exile, terms Hamas has rejected.
- More than 59,700 Palestinians have been killed since October, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry; over half are reportedly women and children.
- The Israeli military reports 898 soldiers killed since the start of ground operations.
- The conflict began after Hamas’ October 7 attack, which killed 1,200 Israelis and resulted in 251 hostages taken, 50 remain in captivity, and many are believed dead.
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