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    Home»World»Aid deliveries a ‘drop in the ocean’ amid Gaza’s desperate hunger, UN says, as Israel resumes military pause – Israel-Gaza war live | World news
    World

    Aid deliveries a ‘drop in the ocean’ amid Gaza’s desperate hunger, UN says, as Israel resumes military pause – Israel-Gaza war live | World news

    By Liam PorterJuly 28, 2025No Comments10 Mins Read
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    Aid deliveries a ‘drop in the ocean’ amid Gaza’s desperate hunger, UN says, as Israel resumes military pause – Israel-Gaza war live | World news
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    Yesterday’s aid deliveries only a ‘drop in the ocean’ of what is needed in Gaza, UN warns

    The UN’s aid chief, Tom Fletcher, has been interviewed by the BBC’s Today programme. Here are the main takeaways from what he said:

    • Yesterday’s aid deliveries were a “start” but represented a “drop in the ocean” of what the civilian population of Gaza needs.

    • During the 42-day ceasefire (that came into effect after Donald Trump re-entered the White House in January) 600-700 aid trucks were getting into Gaza each day (Israel says Gaza got 120 trucks yesterday).

    • The next few days “are really make or break” and much more aid needs to be delivered and delivered much more quickly.

    • The UN and its partners can reach everyone in Gaza in the next couple of weeks with life-saving aid if its teams are granted access at border crossings, are given the security permits they need to operate and are not otherwise blocked.

    • They got “quite a bit of food in” yesterday but “lots of that got looted” as it went across the border.

    • The humanitarian pauses implemented by Israel may “last a week or so”, which is clearly insufficient as we are seeing a “21st century atrocity” unfolding in front of our eyes.

    • There needs to be a sustained period of weeks or months to stop starvation and ultimately a ceasefire is needed.

    • Hundreds of thousands of people are “desperately hungry” inside Gaza – so most of the lorries yesterday “were hit by desperate individual civilians, starving”.

    • “The flour was taken off those lorries… so what we do is we work with local communities, community kitchens, so that what we can get through then gets distributed to those who most need it and importantly that the armed groups, including Hamas, don’t get it”.

    • Fletcher wishes the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation – an Israeli-backed delivery group – would distribute aid in a “more principled, humanitarian way”. He said the UN could deliver aid in a way that doesn’t harm civilians and deliver aid at a greater scale.

    “The next few days are make or break.”

    Israel has begun to allow more aid into Gaza, amidst warnings malnutrition has reached ‘alarming levels’.

    Tom Fletcher, the UN’s aid chief, tells #R4Today recent aid deliveries have been a ‘drop in the ocean’.

    — BBC Radio 4 Today (@BBCr4today) July 28, 2025

    Share

    Updated at 10.03 BST

    Key events

    Gaza’s civil defence agency said 16 people have been killed by Israeli forces so far today.

    Agency spokesperson Mahmud Bassal told the Agence France-Presse (AFP) news agency that among the dead were five people killed in an overnight strike on a residential building in the southern Gaza district of al-Mawasi, an area Israel has regularly attacked despite declaring it a “safe zone”.

    A pregnant woman was among those killed, the Palestinian Red Crescent said, adding its teams saved the woman’s foetus by performing a Caesarean section in a field hospital.

    Bassal said five people were killed in another airstrike in Khan Younis in southern Gaza, and six people were killed in two separate strikes in Gaza City and central Gaza.

    Central Gaza’s Al-Awda hospital said, meanwhile, that one person was killed and nine others injured when Israeli forces opened fire on Palestinian people waiting for aid in central Gaza.

    All of Gaza’s 2.4 million residents have been displaced at least once since the start of the war, and the UN says 88% of the territory is now either under evacuation orders or within Israeli military zones.

    Palestinian people gather at the site of an overnight Israeli airstrike on a house in Khan Younis. Photograph: Ramadan Abed/Reuters
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    Gaza health ministry says 14 more people have died of malnutrition, bringing total to 147

    In an update posted to Telegram this morning, Gaza’s health ministry said hospitals in the Strip recorded 14 new deaths in the past 24 hours due to famine and malnutrition.

    This brings the total number of deaths due to malnutrition to 147, including 88 children, since the start of the war in 2023.

    Share

    Updated at 10.51 BST

    Here are some pictures from Gaza taken over the weekend showing chaotic scenes of masses of Palestinian people walking in the heat carrying aid:

    Internally displaced Palestinian people carry bags of flour near a food distribution point in Zikim, in the northern Gaza Strip on 27 July 2025. Photograph: Mohammed Saber/EPA
    After resuming its war in mid-March, Israel blocked all aid from entering Gaza for two and a half months. Photograph: Mohammed Saber/EPA
    The Israeli army declared a ‘tactical pause’ in parts of the Gaza Strip on 27 July 2025 to facilitate the safe passage of humanitarian aid convoys. Photograph: Mohammed Saber/EPA
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    Updated at 10.24 BST

    Israel imposed a total aid blockade for 11 weeks starting in March (ostensibly to put pressure on Hamas to release hostages), and the trickle of food, fuel and medical supplies allowed in since May has not relieved extreme hunger.

    Israel has been widely accused of using food as a political weapon and of flagrantly breaking international law by collectively punishing the civilian population by its aid blockade.

    Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said that Israel is not conducting a campaign of starvation in Gaza, calling the accusation “a bold faced lie”.

    Share

    Updated at 10.21 BST

    Yesterday’s aid deliveries only a ‘drop in the ocean’ of what is needed in Gaza, UN warns

    The UN’s aid chief, Tom Fletcher, has been interviewed by the BBC’s Today programme. Here are the main takeaways from what he said:

    • Yesterday’s aid deliveries were a “start” but represented a “drop in the ocean” of what the civilian population of Gaza needs.

    • During the 42-day ceasefire (that came into effect after Donald Trump re-entered the White House in January) 600-700 aid trucks were getting into Gaza each day (Israel says Gaza got 120 trucks yesterday).

    • The next few days “are really make or break” and much more aid needs to be delivered and delivered much more quickly.

    • The UN and its partners can reach everyone in Gaza in the next couple of weeks with life-saving aid if its teams are granted access at border crossings, are given the security permits they need to operate and are not otherwise blocked.

    • They got “quite a bit of food in” yesterday but “lots of that got looted” as it went across the border.

    • The humanitarian pauses implemented by Israel may “last a week or so”, which is clearly insufficient as we are seeing a “21st century atrocity” unfolding in front of our eyes.

    • There needs to be a sustained period of weeks or months to stop starvation and ultimately a ceasefire is needed.

    • Hundreds of thousands of people are “desperately hungry” inside Gaza – so most of the lorries yesterday “were hit by desperate individual civilians, starving”.

    • “The flour was taken off those lorries… so what we do is we work with local communities, community kitchens, so that what we can get through then gets distributed to those who most need it and importantly that the armed groups, including Hamas, don’t get it”.

    • Fletcher wishes the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation – an Israeli-backed delivery group – would distribute aid in a “more principled, humanitarian way”. He said the UN could deliver aid in a way that doesn’t harm civilians and deliver aid at a greater scale.

    “The next few days are make or break.”

    Israel has begun to allow more aid into Gaza, amidst warnings malnutrition has reached ‘alarming levels’.

    Tom Fletcher, the UN’s aid chief, tells #R4Today recent aid deliveries have been a ‘drop in the ocean’.

    — BBC Radio 4 Today (@BBCr4today) July 28, 2025

    Share

    Updated at 10.03 BST

    Israel says Gaza got 120 trucks of aid on first day of ‘military pause’

    Israel said on Monday that more than 120 truckloads of food aid were distributed by the UN and aid agencies in Gaza yesterday.

    “Over 120 trucks were collected and distributed yesterday by the UN and international organisations,” said Cogat, the Israeli authority responsible for coordinating humanitarian aid in the Gaza Strip.

    “An additional 180 trucks entered Gaza and are now awaiting collection and distribution, along with hundreds of others still queued for UN pickup,” Cogat added in a post on X.

    Share

    Updated at 09.26 BST

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned malnutrition in Gaza has reached “alarming levels” across the territory, with rates on a “dangerous trajectory” after aid air drops resumed over the weekend.

    Of 74 malnutrition-related deaths in 2025, 63 occurred in July – including 24 children under five, the WHO said, adding that nearly one in five children under five in Gaza City is now “acutely malnourished”.

    “The crisis remains entirely preventable. Deliberate blocking and delay of large-scale food, health, and humanitarian aid has cost many lives,” the WHO said in a press release.

    Echoing the WHO’s concerns, the World Food Programme (WFP) said 90,000 women and children were in urgent need of treatment for malnutrition and that one in three people were going without food for days.

    A Palestinian child suffering from malnutrition due to starvation is seen at al-Rantisi hospital in northern Gaza City. Photograph: Xinhua/Shutterstock
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    Israel’s new 10-hour military pause in parts of Gaza begins but UN warns measures are not enough to ‘stave off famine’

    We are continuing our live coverage of Israel’s war on Gaza. Stick with us throughout the day as we provide the latest updates.

    Responding to a global outcry provoked by reports and images of widespread starvation and malnutrition in Gaza, the Israeli military said yesterday that it had began a “tactical pause” in the densely populated areas of Gaza City, Deir al-Balah and Muwasi to “increase the scale of humanitarian aid” into the strip.

    It said the pause would be repeated every day from 10am to 8pm local time until further notice. Today is due to bring the second of these pauses.

    Soon after the first humanitarian pause began yesterday, Israel carried out an airstrike on a building in Gaza City, killing a woman and her four children.

    Humanitarian aid is airdropped to Palestinian people over the northern Gaza Strip. Photograph: Abdel Kareem Hana)/AP

    Israel allowed a limited amount of airdrops into Gaza to resume over the weekend but charities have warned the amount is totally inadequate for the population’s needs. Israel, Jordan and the UAE all parachuted aid into the territory that has been devasted by relentless Israeli bombardments.

    Israel has said humanitarian corridors would be established to facilitate the entry of UN aid trucks into Gaza, though the number of trucks that will be allowed in was not specified.

    UN aid chief Tom Fletcher welcomed Israel’s pledge to start daily humanitarian pauses, but said much more has to be done to alleviate the health crisis engulfing the territory.

    In a statement published yesterday, he said:

    We welcome Israel’s decision to support a one-week scale-up of aid, including lifting customs barriers on food, medicine and fuel from Egypt and the reported designation of secure routes for UN humanitarian convoys.

    Some movement restrictions appear to have been eased today, with initial reports indicating that over 100 truckloads were collected.

    This is progress, but vast amounts of aid are needed to stave off famine and a catastrophic health crisis.

    Share

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    Liam Porter
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    Liam Porter is a seasoned news writer at Core Bulletin, specializing in breaking news, technology, and business insights. With a background in investigative journalism, Liam brings clarity and depth to every piece he writes.

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