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Eleven-minute race for food How Gaza aid points became 'death traps'
The Guardian
|July 23, 2025
Raed Jamal sends the message shortly after he returns, empty-handed, from an aid distribution point to his tent in the al-Mawasi displacement camp in south-west Gaza.
"The tanks came and started firing. Three boys near me were martyred," says the 36-year-old, who has four children. "I didn't even get anything, just two empty boxes."
Jamal's journey involved a long walk to and from a former residential neighbourhood bulldozed by Israeli forces and turned into one of four militarised aid distribution centres run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which is based in Delaware in the US.
The GHF sites - Tal al-Sultan, the Saudi neighbourhood in Rafah, Khan Younis and Wadi Gaza - are located in evacuation zones, which means civilians seeking food have to enter areas they have been ordered to leave. According to GHF's Facebook page, the sites remain open for as little as eight minutes at a time, and in June the average for the Saudi site was 11 minutes. These factors have led to accusations from NGOs that the system is dangerous by design. The Unrwa chief, Philippe Lazzarini, has said "the so-called mechanism is a death trap costing more lives than it saves".
The system favours the strongest, so it is mostly men who travel along the designated routes. Then they wait - often for hours - for a centre to open. Finally, there is a dash into the centre of the zones and a scramble to grab a box.
At every stage, those seeking aid pass Israeli tanks and troops, as quadcopters fly above. In a clip shared by Jamal, he ducks as bullets pass overhead. "We have purged our hearts of fear," Jamal says of his near-daily walks to the site. "I need to bring food for my children so they don't die of hunger."
GHF, a startup organisation with no experience of distributing food in complex conflict zones, employs US mercenaries at the sites, which opened in May. They replaced 400 non-militarised aid points run under a UN system that Israel claimed had to be shut down because Hamas was diverting aid from it. No evidence for this has been provided.
Dit verhaal komt uit de July 23, 2025-editie van The Guardian.
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