Current:Home > FinanceUN officials says the average Gazan is living on two pieces of bread a day, and people need water -TradeWise
UN officials says the average Gazan is living on two pieces of bread a day, and people need water
Will Sage Astor View
Date:2025-04-08 12:46:50
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The average Gazan is living on two pieces of Arabic bread made from flour the U.N. had stockpiled in the region, yet the main refrain now being heard in the street is “Water, water,” the Gaza director for the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees said Friday.
Thomas White, who said he traveled “the length and breadth of Gaza in the last few weeks,” described the place as a “scene of death and destruction.” No place is safe now, he said, and people fear for their lives, their future and their ability to feed their families.
The Palestinian refugee agency, known as UNRWA, is supporting about 89 bakeries across Gaza, aiming to get bread to 1.7 million people, White told diplomats from the U.N.’s 193 member nations in a video briefing from Gaza.
But, he said, “now people are beyond looking for bread. It’s looking for water.”
U.N. deputy Mideast coordinator Lynn Hastings, who is also the humanitarian coordinator for the Palestinian territories, said only one of three water supply lines from Israel is operational.
“Many people are relying on brackish or saline ground water, if at all,” she said.
In the briefing, U.N. humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths also said intense negotiations are taking place among authorities from Israel, Egypt, the United States and United Nations on allowing fuel to enter Gaza.
Fuel, he said, is essential for the functioning of institutions, hospitals and the distribution of water and electricity. “We must allow these supplies reliably, repetitively and dependently into Gaza.”
Backup generators, which have been essential to keep hospitals, water desalination plants, food production facilities and other essential services operating “are one by one grinding to a halt as fuel supplies run out,” Hastings said.
White pointed to other major problems.
Sewage is not being treated and instead is being pumped into the sea, he said. “But when you speak to municipal workers, the reality is once their fuel runs out, that sewage will flow in the streets.”
In addition, he said, cooking gas that was brought into Gaza from Egypt by the private sector before the war is increasingly in short supply. Aid organizations like UNRWA “are not going to be able to step in and replicate the network of distribution by the private sector for this essential item,” he said.
White said close to 600,000 people are sheltering in 149 UNRWA facilities, most of them schools, but the agency has lost contact with many in the north, where Israel is carrying intense ground and air operations following Hamas’ surprise Oct. 7 attacks.
An average of 4,000 displaced Gazans are living in the schools without the resources to maintain proper sanitation, he said. “The conditions are desperate,” with women and children sleeping in the classrooms” and men sleeping outside in the open, he said.
The U.N. can’t provide them safety, White said, pointing to over 50 UNRWA facilities impacted by the conflict, including five direct hits. “At last count, 38 people have died in our shelters. I fear that with the fighting going on in the north right now, that number is going to grow significantly,” he said.
Griffiths, the humanitarian chief, said 72 UNRWA staff members had been killed since Oct. 7. “I think it’s the highest number of U.N. staff lost in a conflict,” he said.
The Gaza Health Ministry’s total of more than 9,000 people killed in Gaza is four times as many deaths as during the 50-day conflict between Israel and Hamas in Gaza in 2014 when just over 2,200 Palestinians were killed, Griffiths said. He added that the real toll will only emerge once buildings are cleared and rubble is taken away.
Griffiths called for humanitarian pauses to get aid to millions of people. He also urged the immediate release of all hostages and protection of all civilians by both sides as required under international humanitarian law.
Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian U.N. ambassador, criticized Griffiths for talking about humanitarian pauses, something the United States is also urging.
This means “Israel continues killing the Palestinians, but gives us few hours every now and then, in order to get food and other stuff,” Mansour said.
He said a ceasefire is essential to save lives, saying that “almost 50% of all the structures in the Gaza Strip” have been destroyed by Israel and the situation for Palestinians “is beyond comprehension and beyond description.”
“It requires from all of us to do everything that we can to stop it,” he said.
___
Find more of AP’s coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war
veryGood! (878)
Related
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Still in the Mood to Shop? Here Are the Best After Prime Day Deals You Can Still Snag
- Fireballers Mason Miller, Garrett Crochet face MLB trade rumors around first All-Star trip
- Biden says he'd reconsider running if some medical condition emerged
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Trump's 17-year-old granddaughter Kai says it was heartbreaking when he was shot
- Old video and photos recirculate, falsely claiming Trump wasn't injured in shooting
- Scientists are ready to meet and greet a massive asteroid when it whizzes just past Earth
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Oregon authorities recover body of award-winning chef who drowned in river accident
Ranking
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Britney Spears Tells Osbourne Family to “F--k Off” After They Criticize Her Dance Videos
- Georgia transportation officials set plans for additional $1.5 billion in spending
- Donald Trump will accept Republican nomination again days after surviving an assassination attempt
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- How Pat Summitt inspired the trailblazing women's basketball team of the 1984 Olympics
- Blake Lively Shares Cheeky “Family Portrait” With Nod to Ryan Reynolds
- Historic utility AND high fashion. 80-year-old LL Bean staple finds a new audience as a trendy bag
Recommendation
NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
Donald Trump will accept Republican nomination again days after surviving an assassination attempt
Olivia Wilde Shares Rare Photo of Her and Jason Sudeikis’ 7-Year-Old Daughter Daisy
Georgia transportation officials set plans for additional $1.5 billion in spending
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
Prime Day 2024 Last Chance Deal: Get 57% Off Yankee Candles While You Still Can
Jack Black's bandmate, Donald Trump and when jokes go too far
Blake Lively Shares Cheeky “Family Portrait” With Nod to Ryan Reynolds