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A gas correspondent
Reporting from Jerusalem
The limited amount of food that entered the gas after the Israeli blockade was partially raised, caused chaotic scenes when the hunger continues to spread.
The stoves distributing the food were overflowing with crowds and forced to close Thursday, and armed marauders attacked the help of the night – causing the shooting with Hamas security officials, which, according to witnesses, were aimed at an Israeli blow to the drone.
The incident in Central Gaza, which told about the BBC News by eyewitnesses, local journalists and officials Hamas, emphasizes the deterioration of the security situation in Gaza, where the management collapsed and spread iniquity.
Coffee from 20 trucks agreed by the World Food Program (WFP) and transferring flour was on the way from crossing Kerma Shalom to WFP in Deir al-Bala.
He was accompanied by six Hamas security officers when he was ambushed by five unspecified militants who shot vehicles on tires and tried to seize the cargo.
The Hamas Security team attracted the attackers in a short shootout, BBC News witnesses reported.
Shortly after the start of the collision, Israeli drones aimed at the Hamas unit with four missiles, killed six officers and injuring others.
Hamas made a statement condemning the attack as a “horrific massacre” and accused Israel of deliberately orienting the staff, which was tasked with protecting humanitarian aid.
BBC News addressed the comments of the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF).
This week’s gas is allowed to go into gas: about 130 trucks providing assistance crossed the border over the last three days after the 11-week blockade was partially raised by IDF.
The UN states that 500 to 600 trucks a day are needed.
International agencies, including the UN and WFP, have repeatedly warned that growing uncertainty hinders the provision of the population necessary for nutrition and medical facilities – most of which are moved.
Israel says the blockade was supposed to put pressure on Hamas to release the hostages left in the gas. Israel also accused Hamas of theft of supplies that the group refused.
The WFP noted that 15 of their auxiliary trucks were plundered over the night on Thursday, and “hunger, despair and anxiety about whether more foods are coming in, promoting uncertainty.” The organization called on Israel to help ensure a safe passage passage.
Philip Latarini, head of Antwa, an agency supported by Palestinian refugees, wrote on X that no one should be “surprised, not shocked” that the assistance was looted because “Gaza’s people were starving (and) deprived the basics, including water and medicines for more than 11 weeks.”
Earlier on Thursday, angry and hungry Palestinians were crowded outside the bakery in gas in a desperate attempt to get bread, but the situation quickly went down to the chaos, causing the distribution to stop.
This made the majority of bakeries suspend surgery by citing lack of security.
Many gas residents voiced a growing disappointment about the method of distribution and criticized WFP, which controls food supplies.
Some urged immediately to move from the spread of baked bread to distributing flour directly at the speed of one bag to the family.
Locals claim that the distribution of flour will allow families to bake at home or in tents – which is said to be safer than to expect in overflowing help centers.
Palestinians on the ground talked about deepening the humanitarian crisis and the collapse of the main services facing people who live among the fighting or forced from their homes, as IDF continues to increase its hostilities against Hamas.
From the Movement Camp in South Gaza Al-Mavasi, Abd al-Fat Hussein told BBC News about WhatsApp that the situation is deteriorating due to the number of people in the area.
The two father said that al-Mavas had no “no place” where the Israeli military who ordered to leave their homes would be ordered to go for safety.
“No electricity, no nutrition, insufficient portable water and there are no available medicines,” he said.
“Repeated air strikes, especially at night, add suffering.”
He described the trucks of assistance coming as a “fall in the ocean of gas needs”.
When he announced that some supplies would be allowed earlier this week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that only the “major amount” would be able to cross.
Humanitarian organizations have warned that the amount of food included in the gas in recent days is not close to what is necessary for feeding 2.1 million people living there, while the UN stated that about 500 trucks entered the territory on average every day before the war.
Widespread hunger, warned humanitarian groups, emerges over gas.
UN Secretary -General Antonio Guteres said that 400 trucks had been cleared this week, but supplies were only 115. He said that nothing “had reached the besieged north”.
While some flour, baby food and medical materials were included in the gas, and some bakeries in the south began to operate again, Gutters said it was a “teaspoon of assistance when the floods are required”.
“Deliveries are 160,000 pallets, it is enough to fill nearly 9,000 trucks,” he added.
Reed, an midwife with a charity project “Hope in Deir al-Bala”, said that women came to her clinic who suffer from fainting, seeking medical care without eating breakfast.
Many of them eat only one meal a day and exists on high -energy cookies provided by a charity, she said.
“From the —wit malnutrition, they always tell us:” My baby cannot take enough supplements from my chest … My baby will not stop crying … They always need to be breastfeeding, but my chest is empty. ”
Teenage Saba Naed Alnijar lives in Han UNIS, where IDF has ordered a mass evacuation earlier this week ahead that he will, he said, would be an unprecedented military operation.
She said her family remained in a partially destroyed house.
“An evacuation order was issued for our area, but we were not displaced because we have nowhere else to go,” she said.
“There are not many in the area … Moved sleeping on the street, and there is no food.
“The conditions deteriorate and very difficult.”
Speaking over WhatsApp reports is often the only way to talk to people to gas that journalists block IDF’s entrance – she said that “the bombing is ongoing.”
She and her family have little left, Saba said, adding: “We have no food or flour – no basic necessary life necessary.”