The UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) warned Monday that families in Gaza Strip are facing catastrophic hunger.
“Families in Gaza Strip are facing disastrous hunger, as children there are starving to death,” OCHA said in a statement posted on X platform.
The statement noted to the deadly dangers facing Gaza’s residents, saying “ Those in Gaza, seek food to stay alive, with many of them are being shot, which is unacceptable”.
The office in its statement underscored that delivering humanitarian aid to Gaza without any obstacles is a legal and moral necessity.
OCHA warns that mass displacement order issued by the Israeli military has dealt yet another devastating blow to the already fragile lifelines keeping people alive across the Gaza Strip.
Today’s order covers about 5.6 square kilometres of Deir al Balah, spanning four neighbourhoods.
Initial estimates indicate that between 50,000 and 80,000 people were in the area at the time the order was issued, including some 30,000 people sheltering in 57 displacement sites. At least 1,000 families have fled the area in the recent hours.
UN staff are remaining in Deir al Balah, spread across dozens of premises. Their coordinates have been shared with the relevant parties. These locations – as with all civilian sites – must be protected, regardless of displacement orders.
The newly-designated area includes several humanitarian warehouses, four primary health clinics, four medical points, and critical water infrastructure: the Southern Gaza Desalination Plant, three water wells, one water reservoir, one solid waste dumping site and one wastewater pumping station. Any damage to this infrastructure will have life-threatening consequences.
With this latest order, the area of Gaza under displacement orders or within Israeli-militarized zones has risen to 87.8 per cent, leaving 2.1 million civilians squeezed into a fragmented 12 per cent of the Strip, where essential services have collapsed.
The new order cuts through Deir al Balah all the way to the Mediterranean Sea, further splintering the Strip. It will limit the ability of the UN and our partners to move safely and effectively within Gaza, choking humanitarian access when it is needed most.