UN Warns Gaza's Food and Fuel to Deplete in Days

The United Nations

Safe passage is needed urgently throughout Gaza for aid teams to replenish dangerously low stocks of lifesaving supplies throughout Gaza, humanitarians insisted on Thursday, as the UN's top court prepared to hear a new request from South Africa to issue more constraints on Israeli military action in the enclave.

"Food and fuel stocks will run out in a matter of days," the UN World Food Programme (WFP) warned in a social media post on X. "Since 6 May, we have not been able to access and receive aid from the Kerem Shalom crossing. The situation is becoming unsustainable."

The UN agency highlighted the very real threat that any further escalation of hostilities in Gaza could bring aid operations "to a complete standstill" and lead to a humanitarian catastrophe.

The dire assessment comes as the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) reported late Wednesday that 600,000 people - one quarter of Gaza's population - have now been forcibly displaced from Rafah in the last week, amid ongoing Israeli military activity and evacuation orders.

Another 100,000 people have been uprooted from the north to comply with evacuation orders by the Israeli military, while heavy gun battles have reportedly raged.

Evacuation orders at scale

According to the UN aid coordination office, OCHA, "285 square kilometres, or approximately 78 per cent of the Gaza Strip" are now subject to evacuation orders by the Israeli military.

In its latest update, OCHA reported continuing bombardment "from the air, land and sea…across much of the Gaza Strip, resulting in further civilian casualties, displacement, and destruction of houses and other civilian infrastructure".

The UN office confirmed reports of ground incursions and heavy fighting in Jabalia in northern Gaza, as well as in Deir al Balah in central Gaza and eastern Rafah in the south.

"As of 15 May, Rafah Crossing remains closed. Kerem Shalom Crossing is operational, but the prevailing security and logistical conditions are hampering humanitarian aid deliveries at scale," OCHA noted.

Echoing those concerns, the WFP insisted that "multiple entry points" for aid are required "to reverse six months of near starvation conditions and avert a famine, steady flows of food supplies, every day and every week…The threat of famine in Gaza never loomed larger."

South Africa v. Israel

In an effort to halt the military operation in and around the enclave's southern-most city, South Africa filed a new request to the UN's top court which it was due to hear on Thursday.

"Urgent provisional measures are required to ensure the survival of Palestinians in Gaza," the South Africa application said, in its latest claim filed on 10 May.

The International Court of Justice delivers its ruling in the case of South Africa v. Israel in The Hague.
The International Court of Justice delivers its ruling in the case of South Africa v. Israel in The Hague.

"The situation brought about by the Israeli assault on Rafah, and the extreme risk it poses to humanitarian supplies and basic services into Gaza, to the survival of the Palestinian medical system, and to the very survival of Palestinians in Gaza as a group, is not only an escalation of the prevailing situation, but gives rise to new facts that are causing irreparable harm to the rights of the Palestinian people in Gaza."

Rafah the last refuge

Rafah is "the last refuge" for Gazans, the South Africa petition continued, adding that the city is also the "last viable centre" for shelter and basic services including medical care. The Israeli military's seizure of Rafah crossing and the brief closure and ongoing access problems to nearby Kerem Shalom crossing have blocked the main entry points for lifesaving humanitarian aid to Gaza, South Africa also insisted.

"The remaining population and medical facilities are at extreme risk, given the recent evidence of evacuation zones being treated as extermination zones, the mass destruction and mass graves at Gaza's other hospitals and the use by Israel of Artificial Intelligence ('AI') to identify 'kill lists'," ICJ court documents show.

The International Court of Justice previously issued special orders to Israel in late January - known as "provisional measures" - to prevent harm to Gazans, following South Africa's allegation that Israel was in violation of its obligations as a signatory of the Genocide Convention. There was no explicit call for an immediate halt to Israel's full-scale military operation in the Strip.

Israel strongly denied the allegations and is scheduled to respond to the latest South Africa request on Friday.

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