Gas correspondent
Reporting by Jerusalem

The limited amount of food that embarked on Gaza, after the Israeli blockade has partly raised, caused chaotic scenes as the hunger continues to spread.
The food -spread bakeries were flooded by crowds and forced to close Thursday, and the armed robberies attacked a convoy for help overnight – igniting a fire with Hamas security officials, who, witnesses, were then directed by Israeli strike on Dron.
The central gas incident told BBC News by eyewitnesses, local journalists and Hamas officials, emphasizes the worsening situation with Gaza security, where the government collapsed and the lawlessness has spread.
A convoy of 20 trucks, coordinated by the World Food Program (WFP) and wearing flour, was on its way from Kerem Shalom's crossing to WFP warehouse in Deir Al-Balah.
He was accompanied by six Hamas security staff when he was planted by five unidentified artillerymen who fired at the tires of vehicles and tried to capture the load.
The Hamas Security Team is engaging the attackers in a brief shootout, witnesses told BBC News.
Shortly after the clash began, the Israeli drones were directed to the Hamas squad with four rockets, killing six officers and injured others.

Hamas issued a statement condemning the attack as a “horrifying slaughter” and accused Israel of deliberately targeting staff charged with protecting humanitarian aid.
In a statement, IDF said one of his planes identified “several artillerymen, including Hamas terrorists,” near Central Gaza Humanitarian Aid and “Hanging Artilleryrs After Identification.”
IDF said this would make “all efforts possible to ensure that humanitarian aid does not reach the hands of terrorist organizations.”
This week, a small amount of food is allowed to cross the gas: about 130 trucks that carry help have crossed the border in the last three days after an 11-week blockade has been partly lifted by IDF.
The UN says 500 to 600 supplies per day are required in Gaza.
International agencies, including the UN and WFP, have repeatedly warned that increasing uncertainty makes it difficult for the supply of desperately needed food and medical supplies to the population – the greater part of which are displaced.
Israel says the blockade was intended to put pressure on Hamas to release the hostages still in the gas. Israel also accused Hamas of theft of supplies, which the group denied.
WFP said that 15 of his trucks were looted overnight on Thursday and that “hunger, despair and anxiety as to whether more nutritional help is coming to the increasing uncertainty.” The organization urged Israel to help ensure the safe transition of deliveries.
Philip Lazarini, the head of Angone, an agency that supports the Palestinian refugees, writes to X that no one should be “surprised, let alone shocked” that the aid is looted because “Gaza people are hungry, including water and medicines for more than 11 weeks.”
Earlier on Thursday, angry and hungry Palestinians crowded outside the bakeries in Gaza in a desperate attempt to get bread, but the situation quickly descended into chaos, forcing the spread to stop.
He forced most bakeries to stop operations, citing a lack of security.
Many Gaza residents have expressed increasing dissatisfaction with the method of aid distribution and criticized WFP, which guides food supplies.
Some call for the immediate shift from the spread of baked bread to the giving of flour directly at the speed of one bag of a family.
The locals claim that the distribution of flour would allow families to bake at home or tents – which, in their view, would be more fascinated than to wait in overcrowded help centers.

On the spot, the Palestinians told about the deepening humanitarian crisis and the collapse of basic services that people living in the fighting or forced by their homes, as the IDF continues to increase their military operations against Hamas.
From a shift camp in Al Mavasi from South Gaza, Abd al-Fatah Hussein told the BBC News about WhatsApp that the situation is deteriorating due to the number of people in the area.
The father of two said that there was no place in Al Mavasi, where people ordered by Israeli military to leave their homes were told to go for safety.
“There is no electricity, no food, insufficient portable water and no medicine available,” he said.
“Repeated air strikes, especially at night, add to suffering.”
He described the help trucks that enter the ocean of gas needs.
When he announced that some deliveries would finally be allowed in the tape earlier this week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said only a “basic sum” would be able to pass.
Humanitarian organizations have warned that the amount of food entering Gaza in recent days is not close to the necessary for feeding 2.1 million people living there, while the UN said about 500 trucks enter on average every day before the war.
Widespread hunger, humanitarian groups have warned that exceeding gas.
Secretary -General Antonio Guterres said 400 trucks were cleared this week to get into Gaza, but supplies of only 115 were collected. He said nothing had “reached the siege north so far.”
While some flour, baby food and medical supplies have turned it into a gas, and some bakeries in the south have started working again, Guterres said it is “a teaspoon of help when a flood of help is required.”
“Deliveries – 160,000 pallets, enough to fill nearly 9,000 trucks,” he added.
A ridge, a midwife with a charity project of Hope in Deir Al Balah, said the women were coming to her clinic suffering from seizures by seeking medical help without eating breakfast.
Many of them eat only one meal a day and exist on high energy biscuits given by the charity, she said.

“Because of the malnutrition, they always tell us,” My baby can't take enough supplement from my breasts … My baby won't stop crying … They should always be breastfed, but my breasts are empty. ”
Teenage Saba Naed Allenadzhar lives in Khan Eunnis, where IDF ordered a mass evacuation earlier this week before what he said would be an unprecedented military operation there.
She said her family remained in their partially destroyed home.
“An evacuation order has been issued for our area, but we have not been displaced because we have nowhere to go,” she said.
“There are not many citizens in the area … The displaced sleep on the street and there is no food.
“Conditions are deteriorating and are very difficult.”
Speaking of WhatsApp messages – often the only way to talk to people in Gaza that journalists are blocked to enter from IDF – she said “bombing is on a brutal way.”
She and her family are left a little, said Saba, adding, “We have no food, no flour – there are no basic needs of life.”