Iran's attack has shifted focus from aid effort
The Guardian Weekly|April 19, 2024
As Israel becomes 'victim overnight', diplomatic efforts are moving away from plight of Gazans displaced by war
Emma Graham-Harrison
Iran's attack has shifted focus from aid effort

Iran's attack on Israel tested the country's air defences, but repaired - at least temporarily - Tel Aviv's fractured relation-ship with Washington, and pushed the war and the looming famine in Gaza out of the headlines and down the diplomatic agenda.

In Gaza, where almost all the civilian population is displaced and hungry after more than six months of war, this shift in attention has been felt acutely.

"Countries and peoples were sympathetic to us, but now sympathy has shifted to Israel," said Bashir Alyan, a 52-year-old former employee of the Palestinian Authority now living in a tent in Rafah with his five children.

"Israel became the victim overnight." Alyan's family are mostly living off food aid provided by Unrwa, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, and eat only two meals a day. He has lost 20kg in weight in six months.

"The international pressures that were being exerted on Israel to bring in more aid and to stop the aggression against Gaza are now a thing of the past," he said, but added: "Iran's issues are not our issues. It only pursues its own interests."

The US president, Joe Biden, had been ramping up pressure on Israel to let more aid into Gaza, particularly after the killing of seven people working for the food agency World Central Kitchen in March.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 19, 2024-Ausgabe von The Guardian Weekly.

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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 19, 2024-Ausgabe von The Guardian Weekly.

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