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Only effective way to ramp up Gaza aid is by road, UN chief says

Guterres says sending in large quantities of aid requires Israel to remove obstacles and choke points to relief

Published: Sun 24 Mar 2024, 5:38 PM

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  • Reuters

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Antonio Guterres and Sameh Shoukry leave the podium after giving a joint press conference following their meeting at the New Administrative Capital east of Cairo. — AFP

Antonio Guterres and Sameh Shoukry leave the podium after giving a joint press conference following their meeting at the New Administrative Capital east of Cairo. — AFP

The only effective and efficient way to deliver heavy goods to meet Gaza's humanitarian needs is by road and includes an exponential increase in commercial deliveries, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on Sunday.

Speaking after meeting Egypt's president and foreign minister in Cairo, Guterres also warned of the impact the war in Gaza was having around the globe.

"The daily assault on the human dignity of Palestinians is creating a crisis of credibility for the international community," he said.

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Guterres is visiting Egypt and Jordan as part of an annual Ramadan solidarity tour to Muslim countries and travelled on Saturday to Egypt's border with Gaza, where he called the backlog of aid destined for the Palestinian territory a moral outrage.

Lotfi Gheith, the emergency operations centre director for the Egyptian Red Crescent, briefs Antonio Guterres about items rejected by Israeli authorities that were bound for the Gaza Strip. — AFP

Lotfi Gheith, the emergency operations centre director for the Egyptian Red Crescent, briefs Antonio Guterres about items rejected by Israeli authorities that were bound for the Gaza Strip. — AFP

While more than five months of war between Israel and Hamas have shattered Gaza, donations of aid have piled up in Egypt's northern Sinai, with limited amounts sent in through Egypt's Rafah Crossing and the Israeli crossing of Kerem Shalom.

As hopes for a truce in Gaza during the holy month of Ramadan have faded and the risk of famine in the coastal enclave has increased, the United States and other countries have sought to use air drops and ships to deliver aid.

UN aid officials say deliveries can only be scaled up by land, accusing Israel of impeding relief, which Israel denies.

Sending in large quantities of aid requires Israel to remove the remaining obstacles and choke points to relief, Guterres said.

"It requires more crossings and access points," he said. "The only efficient and effective way to move heavy goods is by road. It requires an exponential increase in commercial goods."

Egyptian trucks carrying humanitarian aid bound for the Gaza Strip wait near the Rafah border crossing on the Egyptian side. — AFP

Egyptian trucks carrying humanitarian aid bound for the Gaza Strip wait near the Rafah border crossing on the Egyptian side. — AFP

Guterres said the United Nations was working hard to sustain funding for its agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, which he called the backbone for humanitarian aid inside Gaza.

Several countries, including the United States and Britain, paused their funding to UNRWA after accusations by Israel that a dozen of the agency's 13,000 staff in Gaza took part in the October 7 Hamas attack in Israel.

UNRWA head Philippe Lazzarini said he regretted Washington's decision to continue a ban on US funding for the agency until at least March 2025.

"We very much regret Washington's decision," Lazzarini was quoted as saying by Swiss newspaper Blick on Sunday. "It's a halt for a limited period. Next year, we again have the possibility to apply pressure for a new decision."

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