Famine mostly averted but is a danger again if Gaza ceasefire collapses,
UN humanitarian chief says
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[February 10, 2025]
By SAMY MAGDY
CAIRO (AP) — Famine has been mostly averted in Gaza as a surge of aid
enters the territory during a fragile ceasefire, the United Nations
humanitarian chief said Sunday. But he warned the threat could return
quickly if the truce collapses.
Tom Fletcher spoke to The Associated Press after a two-day visit to
Gaza, where hundreds of trucks carrying humanitarian aid have arrived
each day since the ceasefire began on Jan. 19.
“The threat of famine, I think, is largely averted,” Fletcher said in
Cairo. “Those starvation levels are down from where they were before the
ceasefire.”
He spoke as concerns grow over whether the ceasefire can be extended and
talks are meant to begin on its more difficult second phase. The
six-week first phase is halfway through.
As part of the agreement, Israel said it would allow 600 aid trucks into
Gaza each day, a major increase after months of aid officials expressing
frustration about delays and insecurity hampering both the entry and
distribution of food, medicines and other badly needed items.
The U.N. humanitarian office has said more than 12,600 aid trucks have
entered Gaza since the ceasefire took effect.
Fletcher urged both Hamas, which quickly reasserted its control of the
territory in the hours after the ceasefire took effect, and Israel to
stick to the deal that has “saved so many lives.”
“The conditions are still terrible, and people are still hungry,” he
said. “If the ceasefire falls, if the ceasefire breaks, then very
quickly those (famine-like) conditions will come back again.”
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The internationally recognized mortality threshold for famine is two or
more deaths a day per 10,000 people.
For months before the current ceasefire, food security monitors, U.N.
officials and others had been warning of possible famine in parts of
devastated Gaza, especially the north, which had been largely isolated
since the earliest weeks of the 16-month war. Hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians have been able to return to the north under the ceasefire.
“We can’t ... sit by and just allow these people to starve to death,"
Cindy McCain, the American head of the U.N. World Food Program, told CBS
in December. The Biden administration repeatedly urged Israel to allow
more aid deliveries and warned that failing to do so could trigger U.S.
restrictions on military support.
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U.N. humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher speaks during an interview in
Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Feb. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)
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Fletcher said more food and medical supplies are crucially needed
for the territory of more than 2 million people, most of them
displaced, and he expressed concerns about disease outbreaks due to
the lack of basic health supplies. He also called for scaling up the
delivery of tents and other shelters to those who have returned to
their home areas, as winter continues.
“We must get tens of thousands of tents very rapidly in, so that
people who are moving back, particularly moving back into the north,
are able to take shelter from those conditions,” he said.
Fletcher entered the Palestinian territory through the Erez crossing
between Israel and northern Gaza, where he said he drove through
“bombed-out, flattened and pulverized” areas.
“You can’t see the difference between a school or a hospital or a
home,” he said of the north.
He said he saw people trying to find where their homes had been and
collecting the bodies of loved ones from the rubble. He saw dogs
looking for corpses in the rubble, too.
“It is a horror movie. It’s a horror show,” he said. “It breaks your
heart again and again and again. You drive for miles and miles and
miles, and this is all you see.”
Fletcher acknowledged that some Palestinians have been angry at the
international community over the war and its response.
“There was despair and anger. And I can understand the anger at the
world that this has happened to them,” he said. “But there was also
a sense of defiance as well. People were saying, ‘We will go back to
our homes. We will go back to the places that we have lived for
generations, and we will rebuild.’”
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