
The leaders of six UN agencies liked the world leaders to act urgently to ensure that food and deliveries reach the Palestinians in Gaza, where Israel has stopped supplies for more than a month.
A joint statement is said that the Palestinians were “trapped, bombarded and starved again” with supplies, “accumulated” at the intersection points.
Israel blocked the entry of deliveries, including the humanitarian aid from March 2, after the expiration of the first stage of ceasefire expires, the demanding Hamas agreed to expand that part of the truce. Hamas refused, accusing Israel of renewing his commitments.
Israel said Gaza had enough food “for a long period of time”, but agencies said this was not the case.
“The last termination of fire allowed us to achieve in 60 days what bombs, obstacles and robberies prevented us from making 470 days of war: life -saving consumables, reaching almost every part of gas,” the statement said.
“While this was offering a short break, the allegations that there is enough food now to feed all the Palestinians in Gaza are far from the reality of the earth and the goods are extremely low.”
The statement was signed by the Heads of the UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCA); UN Children's Agency (UNICEF); UN Service for Project Services (UNOPS); World Food Program (WFP); and the World Health Organization (WHO).
Because of the blockade, All non-bidding bakeries have closedThe markets are empty from most fresh vegetables, and hospitals are painkillers and antibiotics.
The statement states that “the partially functional gas system of gas is buried (s) … The main medical and trauma are quickly exhausted.”
“With the Israeli Gaza blockade of Gaza now in our second month, we turn to the world leaders to act – firm, urgently and decisively – to ensure that the basic principles of international humanitarian law are maintained.
“Protection of civilians. Facilitates help. Release the hostages.
According to international humanitarian law, Israel is required to ensure that the basic needs of the civil population below it are met. The rapid and unobstructed transition of humanitarian aid should also be allowed and facilitated.
The two -month -old pause in the fight is a leap of humanitarian aid released in Gaza, as well as the release of Hamas from 33 hostages – eight of them dead – in exchange for about 1900 Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.
Israel renewed its air bombing and landed an offensive in Gaza on March 18th.

On Tuesday, the Hamas Health Ministry in Gaza said at least 58 people had been killed in the territory in the previous 24 hours.
Israeli strikes overnight killed 19 people, including five children, whose home in the central city of Deir Al Balah was struck, according to the Hamas Civil Protection Agency.
Another 11 people were reported to have been killed at two separate strikes in the northern city of Bate Lahia and the area northwest of Gaza.
Meanwhile, the Palestinian Journalist (PJS) union said that a second Palestinian journalist had died from the wounds after an Israeli blow on Monday.
Ahmed Mansour suffered severe burns when the media tent in the southern town of Han Einnis was hit, also killed, as his Palestine colleague today Helmi Al-Fakaui.
The Israeli military said the strike was aimed at a third journalist Hassan Eslah, whom he accused of being a “Hamas terrorist”. PJS said Eslaih was in critical condition after the attack, along with several other journalists.
The war was triggered by Hamas's unprecedented attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken back to Gaza as hostages.
More than 50,810 Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli offensive since then, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.