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Israel’s Daily Combat Pause in Part of Gaza: How Is It Working?

The new practice is supposed to make it easier and safer to distribute desperately needed aid around Gaza. Aid groups are hopeful, but say more is needed.

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Two people sit on a bench overlooking tents and makeshift shelters stretching into the distance, with a setting sun on the horizon.
Displaced Palestinians in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, on Tuesday, after evacuating from Rafah.Credit...Haitham Imad/EPA, via Shutterstock

Israel has said that the partial daily suspension of its military activity in a part of southern Gaza, which began over the weekend, is aimed at making it safer for humanitarian groups to deliver aid in the territory.

Here’s a look at how the pause works and whether aid workers believe it is likely to alleviate civilian suffering that the United Nations says borders on famine.

The military said on Sunday it had paused operations during daylight hours in parts of southern Gaza. The policy applies to a seven-mile-long strip of southeastern Gaza surrounding a major stretch of road.

It does not include coastal areas where Palestinians have fled since Israel began an invasion of the city of Rafah in southern Gaza in early May.

Where Israel Said It Would Pause Fighting During the Day

Israel announced a new policy of avoiding daytime combat along a seven-mile route in eastern Rafah. The pause does not apply to central Gaza, where hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have fled.

Source: Israeli military announcement

By Leanne Abraham

Aid groups say the pause has appeared to take hold, but will not automatically translate into the free flow of aid.

Supplies are held at warehouses in Gaza before distribution within the territory. Jeremy Konyndyk, president of Refugees International, said on Tuesday that it was “almost impossible” to find warehouses in Rafah, a hub of the aid effort and the city closest to the main border crossing, because many had been destroyed or were inaccessible.

A spokesman for Israel’s military, Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, said on Tuesday that 1,400 trucks of aid that had been transferred from Israel into Gaza “remain uncollected” by international organizations. Before the war, the enclave had received around 500 trucks of food and other goods per day, according to the U.N. humanitarian affairs office.

The entry of aid and commercial goods through the two main crossing points into Gaza, Rafah and Kerem Shalom, has fluctuated in recent months, but it has never reached the daily levels that humanitarian officials say are needed to tackle a worsening hunger crisis. The International Rescue Committee, which works in Gaza, said that since the Israeli offensive into Rafah began, “the situation has plumbed new depths.”

Image
Aid passing through the Kerem Shalom border. The entry of aid and commercial goods through the two main crossing points into Gaza has fluctuated in recent months.Credit...Amir Levy/Getty Images

Aid groups welcomed Israel’s announcement but some expressed skepticism, saying that previous measures had turned out to be false dawns. It wasn’t clear how long the daily pauses would remain in effect. Aid officials said that only a total cease-fire can help end the hunger crisis.

Aid groups say that other steps are required beyond the partial pause. These include more routes open to both goods and aid personnel, not least because Palestinian health workers have to be trained in treating people suffering from acute malnutrition.

Israel inspects goods entering Gaza to screen out items that could potentially be used by Hamas; aid groups say these checks are onerous and should be streamlined. In addition, many of Gaza’s roads are impassable, blocked by the rubble of destroyed buildings or pocked with bomb craters.

In the absence of a cease-fire, aid groups say that Israel should improve its system for communicating about the movement of people and goods within Gaza. This would help avoid attacks on aid convoys, which in some cases have occurred even when humanitarian officials say the Israeli authorities were informed in advance of their movements.

Aid groups also say that it is necessary to improve the supply of water, electricity and fuel.

Matthew Mpoke Bigg is a London-based reporter on the Live team at The Times, which covers breaking and developing news. More about Matthew Mpoke Bigg

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