"We seek to help besieged poor Gazans cope with the difficult situation they are currently going through," HCI coordinator commented as he saw off the trucks, which were due to head for the West Bank city of Jericho, before continuing their journey to Gaza. The Hashemite Charity Organisation, HCI's partner in Jordan, assisted in the preparation of the trucks, while the distributions of food aid are coordinated by UNRWA inside Gaza.
The two tracks were part of the few trucks allowed to enter Gaza Strip last week after Israel briefly opened three border crossings with Gaza, allowing some essential food and fuel into the territory for the second time in four weeks. However, the two-day shipment would have minimal impact because border crossings have been closed for so long, depleting reserves of everything from flour to animal feed.
Gaza has been sealed since November 4, as Israel cut food and fuel supplies when its troops raided the area to destroy what the army described as a tunnel built by Gaza fighters which triggered a surge in rocket attacks. The latest closures led to widespread power blackouts, disrupted water supplies and caused severe shortages of cooking gas and flour.However, temporarily lifting the blockade would not allow enough supplies into Gaza. "It is just not enough," Rabih Yazbeck, HCI Regional Director said, estimating that Gazans need at least 15 trucks worth of supplies daily to get by. If this continues, a very grim future waits ahead, and a humanitarian disaster is on the verge of happening.
The UN stopped distributing cash handouts to Gaza's poorest last week, and economists and bank officials warn that tens of thousands of civil servants won't be able to cash their paycheques when they get their salaries next month.
Israel and Egypt have restricted movement through Gaza's border crossings since Hamas seized control in June 2007.
Since then, closures have been eased or tightened, depending on the security situation. But even in quiet times, only limited shipments of food, medicine and commercial goods were allowed in.
The cost of basic food supplies have sharply risen before and after the recent closures; in 2007 the average Gazan family spent 62% of their income on food supplies, compared to only 37% in 2004.
Gaza municipality is unable to operate the city's sewage pumps and reservoirs, there is no safe mean in which Gazan can dispose their waste at, 40 million liters raw or partially treated sewage is being pumped into the Mediterranean Sea everyday.
The situation in Gaza is becoming more intolerable by the day. Numerous cases of diseases and infection caused by malnutrition have been reported, in addition of the long term effect of such a situation on the well being and the mental health of the residents of the strip.
The two trucks dispatched by HCI last week loaded with basic food items to Gaza Strip will help 2,000 vulnerable families to cope with the difficult situation they are currently going through. This may be little but better than nothing and will help besieged needy Gazans survive the deteriorating living conditions -- even if it is just for few days.
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