Humanitarian workers in Gaza deliver life-saving aid against the odds

25 July 2024

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Humanitarian workers are still delivering life-saving aid in Gaza, despite perilous danger and critical supply shortages.

Humanitarian workers in Gaza are continuing to deliver life-saving aid to people in need, despite facing enormous challenges as conditions further deteriorate. Staff at ActionAid’s partner organisations have described how, against the odds and in the face of constant danger, they are still providing desperately needed support amidst severe shortages of food, fuel and key supplies.

Despite the immense challenges, ActionAid’s partners have been able to provide food to thousands of people in recent weeks. The MAAN Development Centre distributed 1,150 hot meals in Deir-al-Balah, the Al Aqsa Sport Club provided vegetable baskets to 1057 families in Al Nusairat and youth volunteers at the Palestinian Development Women Studies Association (PDWSA) distributed 900 vegetable baskets to families in Khan Younis. Meanwhile staff at hospitals run by Al-Awda, ActionAid’s partner in Gaza, are continuing to save lives and deliver babies despite critical shortages of medicine and fuel.

Riham Jafari, Advocacy and Communications Coordinator at ActionAid Palestine said:
“Our staff and partners in Gaza are going to extraordinary lengths to deliver vital aid despite being forced to work in near-impossible conditions and fearing for their own safety. Again and again over the last nine months, they have been forced to adapt their response as circumstances rapidly change, proving themselves to be remarkably flexible and creative when it comes to serving their communities.”

The Wefaq Association for Women and Childcare (WEFAQ) was able to distribute 350 health packages to people in need, as well as maternity bags for women who were about to give birth, containing hygiene kits and clothes for both the mother and newborn. This is despite the fact that obtaining essential items inside Gaza is difficult, as little is available on the market and prices are hugely inflated. Buthaina Subeh, director of WEFAQ, said: “[We got these items] through some vendors who had stored some materials, through our personal relationships. The prices are high, but only expensive items are available.”

WEFAQ had to pause its services in early May when the Israeli military launched its ground invasion of Rafah, forcing staff to flee. Colleagues could not communicate with each other for almost two full weeks, before they eventually managed to re-establish their services in Deir-al-Balah. But nowhere is safe in Gaza, and the team continues to live with the constant threat of attack.

“There is bombing everywhere and we are working under [the threat of] death, under fire,” Buthaina continues. “Now after [the Israeli Army has made] threats to storm the city of Deir al-Balah, we do not know what to do...There is nowhere to go because [the Israeli Army] are still bombing Gaza and continuing to invade Rafah...[what will happen if] Deir al-Balah is invaded? What can we do?’

The amount of aid getting into Gaza remains alarmingly low: only 710 trucks have been allowed to enter so far this month, according to UN data, when Gaza needed at least 500 trucks of aid per day to meet people’s basic needs even before October 7. Twenty trucks carrying ActionAid supplies, including period products and hygiene kits, have been stuck in Egypt for at least two months due to the backlog created by restrictions on entry points into Gaza, with efforts to coordinate entry still ongoing. These are among 1,500 UN or NGO Gaza-bound trucks currently waiting in Egypt, according to a recent snapshot assessment published by ActionAid and other organisations.

Amjad Al Shawa, the director of the Palestinian NGOs Network (PNGO), an umbrella organisation of 30 Palestinian NGOs and a partner of ActionAid, said: “There is a shortage of all humanitarian items. We are overwhelmed [with] these needs and [these] urgent requirements...People [are] starving due to the shortage of aid...100% of the population depend on humanitarian aid...It's the worst situation that we [witnessed] during the nine months of the Israel war in Gaza.”

Sahar, head of ActionAid’s partner organisation PDWSA, said the lack of fuel was making providing aid more difficult. She said: “Transportation is one of our major obstacles. These days, one litre of diesel costs 90 shekels [£19.15] and gasoline is not even available. Transportation between camps and displacement centres in a safe and secure manner for both crews and aid provisions is a difficult and dangerous task.”

PDWSA is continuing to offer vital psychosocial protection and support services for women faced with violence in Gaza, though it cannot currently support survivors of gender-based violence in court due to the collapse of the legal system. Sahar said: “There are no legal departments to handle [gender-based violence] cases and provide protection. Authorities that usually handle these issues are now non-existent in Gaza. For women facing extreme violence, who may be living in life-threatening situations, there are no women’s shelters which can provide protection...Women have almost no privacy...We do not have safe spaces to talk as women in [displacement] camps.”

Riham continued: "The bravery and resilience of our partners in the face of utterly unimaginable conditions is just astonishing but no one should have to work like this. More aid must be allowed into Gaza and there must be a permanent ceasefire, now.”

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Photos and videos are available – please contact the press office on uk.media@actionaid.org or on 07753 973 486.

Riham Jafari is available as a spokesperson. Contact the press office to arrange.