Relief Chief Urges Practicality in Israel-Palestine

The United Nations

The top UN aid official arrived in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory on Monday for a week-long visit, the UN humanitarian affairs office, OCHA, has reported.

Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Tom Fletcher is in the region as a fragile ceasefire and hostage agreement between Israel and Hamas continues to hold in Gaza, amid rising violence in the West Bank.

He will engage with authorities, aid partners and those on the frontlines of the humanitarian response.

"Humanitarian needs are huge - we must be practical, innovative and persistent," he wrote in a post on the social media platform X.

Understand obstacles, strengthen coordination

Mr. Fletcher held discussions with Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa and several Palestinian ministers.

He also met Dr. Younis Al-Khatib, President of the Palestine Red Crescent Society, to discuss the challenges that emergency responders are facing.

"Palestine Red Crescent teams have been saving lives under impossible conditions, showing extraordinary courage - too many paying the ultimate price," he wrote in another social media post.

He's also scheduled to meet Israeli and Palestinian officials and visit areas in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and Israel to better understand obstacles facing aid partners, and strengthen humanitarian coordination.

Aid scale-up

The UN and partners are expanding life-saving aid operations as more humanitarian supplies enter Gaza. They are also assessing the needs of Palestinians across the enclave and adapting the response accordingly.

OCHA noted that displaced people continue to move between southern and northern Gaza as they reunite with family and start rebuilding their lives.

Latest figures indicate more than 545,000 people are estimated to have crossed from the south to the north over the past week, while more than 36,000 people have been observed moving in the opposite direction.

Keeping children safe

Furthermore, partners working in the protection sector have distributed identification bracelets to more than 30,000 children under the age of four to help prevent family separation.

"This effort was critical, as partners reportedly received more than 250 young children who had been separated from their caregivers while crossing to the north," OCHA said.

Protection and services

In North Gaza governorate, protection partners said three temporary sites have been established in Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahiya and Jabalya, each of which can host 5,000 people.

The UN's sexual and reproductive health agency UNFPA has also reported the expansion of protection services for women in Jabalya, as well as in Gaza city. 

The World Food Programme ( WFP ) noted that prices have started to fall since the ceasefire took effect and as more humanitarian commodities enter Gaza, although they still remain above pre-conflict levels.

One-third of households reportedly have better access to food, but consumption remains significantly below levels prior to the crisis. "For most households, the primary obstacle is lack of cash," OCHA said.

Meanwhile, partners working on education report that some 280,000 school-aged children in Gaza have registered in the e-learning programme run by the UN agency that assists Palestine refugees, UNRWA .

West Bank update

OCHA also reported on the situation in the West Bank, where an ongoing operation by Israeli forces in Jenin and Tulkarm has expanded to nearby Tubas governorate, resulting in further death, destruction and displacement.

The agency warned that "once again that lethal, war-like tactics are being applied, raising concerns over the use of force that exceeds law enforcement standards."

On Monday, Israeli forces raided El Far'a refugee camp and blocked the entrances. As a result, dozens of families have reportedly fled the camp, fearing a larger Israeli operation.

This came a day after Israeli forces reportedly destroyed 20 residential structures in the Jenin refugee camp where more than 50 families were living.

They also conducted house-to-house searches in the town of Tammun, displacing as many as 15 families and blocking the town's entrance.

OCHA reported that the Palestinian death toll in recent Israeli operations in the West Bank now stands at 39 since 21 January, the day when the operation in Jenin began.

"Meanwhile, tight movement restrictions across the West Bank continue to hamper access to basic services, leaving Palestinians queuing for hours at Israeli checkpoints or forced to take significantly longer detours," the agency said.

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