"February registered a 50% reduction of humanitarian aid entering Gaza compared with January," Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, said in a statement on X. "Aid was supposed to increase, not decrease, to address the huge needs of 2 million Palestinians in desperate conditions." The fall was caused by obstacles including regular closures of crossing points, lack of security due to military operations, the collapse of civil order and lack of political will, he said.
Israel's military had drawn up a plan to evacuate civilians from Rafah and get more aid into northern Gaza, the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said yesterday.
That could be a nod to US demands that Israel put forward plans to protect civilians before it sends troops into Rafah, a southern border city that is the only limited refuge from the fighting across Gaza and shelters almost 1.5 million Palestinians.
Guterres said Rafah was "the core of the humanitarian aid operation" and a military operation would make aid delivery almost impossible.
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