Gazans welcome aid plan but fear it will not end crisis

Gaza reporter, report from Istanbul
ReutersThe inhabitants of Gaza welcomed a temporary human pause reports to allow the surrounded settlement to help, but many of them say that relaxation should be the beginning of a wider and permanent solution to the deepening crisis.
The Israeli army said it would open human corridors to allow food and medicine convoys to enter after hunger and international pressure weeks warnings.
Gaza has a population of more than two million for months, and the boundary closure of the border has stopped daily life, and has faced excessive food, clean water and basic medical material continents.
“Of course I feel a little hope again, but I’m also worried that hunger will continue after the pause is over,” said four 39-year-old mother Rasha Al-Sheikh Khalil in the City of Gaza.
“A help convoy or a few air release package will not be enough. We need a real solution, the end of this nightmare, the end of the war.”
Israel said in a statement on Sunday, Gaza told the “seven package aid package containing sugar and canned food”.
Jordan and the UAE also said that they have plans supported by the UK, and aid agencies to help agencies will do very little to reduce the hunger of Ghazans.
“This is not just the amount of food, it’s about quality,” he said six mother Neveen Saleh.
“We did not eat a single fresh fruit or vegetables in four months. No chicken, meat, eggs. All we have canned foods and flour.”
The Ministry of Health operated by Hamas said that dozens of people died without malnutrition. On Sunday, since the beginning of the conflict, he has died without malnutrition since the age of 133, and the majority has died in recent weeks.
Israel rejected what it calls “the false claim of deliberate hunger” in Gaza.
Medical experts in Gaza say that malnutrition is widespread between children and those with certain diet needs.
One of the most affected groups is Gluten intolerance that cannot consume wheat -based products that make up most of the existing foods.
“My wife and one of my five children have celiac disease, Ram Rami Taha said, living in the center of Gaza.
“Before the war, I would buy them gluten -free products. Now there is nothing. I have to take it to the hospital every few days to buy IV fluids.”
AFP through Getty ImagesThere are reports on Sunday’s aid trucks on the lane. The UN and other charities called for unlimited entry and presentation of aid.
Many gazans say they are worried that international interest will be lost after a few symbolic aid delivery.
“This is not a permanent solution, it is like giving painkillers to a cancer patient without treating them, dedi A shopper Ahmad Taha said in Northern Gaza.
As the larger ceasefire seems to deteriorate, the Gaza people are stuck between hope and despair – grateful for any help, but longing for a permanent peace.
Israel launched a war in Gaza in response to the attack on Hamas on 7 October 2023 against Southern Israel, and about 1,200 people were killed and 251 people were hostage.
According to the Ministry of Health operated by Hamas, more than 59,000 people have been killed in Gaza since then.





