https://www.timesofisrael.com/gaza-clans-deny-hamas-is-stealing-a...

  1. 3,752 Posts.
    lightbulb Created with Sketch. 314

    https://www.timesofisrael.com/gaza-clans-deny-hamas-is-stealing-aid-after-israel-partially-halts-deliveries/

    https://hotcopper.com.au/data/attachments/7093/7093436-ffc2d8c68410e061acc279d1320635cc.jpg

    Clan leaders in Gaza denied on Thursday that armed men who were seen riding atop trucks of humanitarian aid in the Strip were Hamas operatives, saying instead that they were protecting the aid from being stolen, after Israel scaled back aid deliveries to the territory over the assertion that Hamas operatives had returned to stealing the supplies.

    Earlier on Thursday, after images were circulated of masked men on aid trucks, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had declared in a joint statement with Defense Minister Israel Katz that there was evidence of Hamas once again taking control of aid entering the enclave’s north.

    They said that the Israel Defense Forces had been instructed to present a plan to prevent this from happening within the next 48 hours.

    Following the joint statement and a separate Channel 12 report claiming that all aid deliveries had been halted due to concerns that Hamas was stealing aid, Israeli government spokesperson David Mencer told reporters that aid was continuing to enter the Strip from the south. While he declined to specify whether deliveries to the north had been stopped, two officials confirmed to Reuters that they had been.

    At the same time, the Higher Commission for Tribal Affairs, which represents influential clans in Gaza, denied that the masked men in the images were Hamas operatives, and said the trucks had been protected as part of an aid security process, managed “solely through tribal efforts.”

    The commission said that no Palestinian faction, a reference to Hamas, had been involved in the process. The Palestinian terror group, which has ruled Gaza for almost two decades but now controls only part of the territory, also denied any involvement.
    ...
    A UN spokesperson confirmed to The Times of Israel that Israeli authorities had blocked its teams from accessing the Zikim Crossing, where they had been seeking to pick up assistance.

    The UN has acknowledged that its convoys have been plagued by looting, but has blamed armed gangs rather than Hamas and has insisted that the solution is for Israel to allow much more aid into Gaza so that demand decreases.

    An average of just 56 trucks have been entering Gaza per day since Israel partially lifted its blockade after 78 days on May 19. The UN says several hundred are needed daily to address the dire need in the Strip.
    ...
 
arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch. arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch.