
The United Nations and aid groups warned Israel’s policies could collapse humanitarian efforts in Gaza. A vague and politicised registration process has left millions in aid stuck outside the strip. Without intervention, dozens of international groups face de-registration by December 31, forcing closure within 60 days.
The UN and over 200 aid agencies said INGOs provide most hospitals, primary care centres, shelters, water, sanitation, nutrition, and mine action services. Losing them would have “catastrophic” consequences for millions of Palestinians.
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Aid delays have blocked essential supplies, including food, medicine, hygiene items, and shelter assistance. While some agencies have registered under the March system, arbitrary obstacles continue to prevent aid from reaching people in need.
Israel has yet to respond publicly to the warnings. Meanwhile, Hamas reports fewer aid trucks entering Gaza than agreed under a fragile ceasefire starting October 10, although Israel denies blocking aid.
Read more: UN sounds alarm: Thousands in Gaza at risk as aid delivery stalls
The UN stressed that humanitarian access cannot be conditional or political. They urged Israel to allow lifesaving assistance to reach Palestinians without further delay.