Israel opens Gaza humanitarian corridor as aid decline begins

Israel said it is ready to open the humanitarian corridors and allow UN convoys to enter Gaza after an increasing international pressure and a hunger crisis.
The IDF said in a statement on Saturday that it would allow the recovery of air humanitarian aid, which first includes seven pallets of flour, sugar and canned foods provided by international organizations.
The news comes as more aid is provided to Gaza amid increasing pressure on Israel’s international pressure on Israel, with the limited supply of two million people in the territory.
Israel denies the so-called “false claim of intentional hunger in the Gaza Strip”.
The IDF said it has begun a series of actions aimed at improving the humanitarian response in the Gaza Strip and is “prepared to implement a humanitarian moratorium in densely populated areas.”
It also noted that it restored power to Gaza’s desalination plant, which it said would “serve about 900,000 residents.”
Reuters reported on Palestinian sources late Saturday as confirmed dripping from the air resumed in northern Gaza.
Starting in early March, Israel cut off all supplies in Gaza and restored new restrictions in May.
It joined the United States in supporting the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) and allowed it to operate in Gaza.
Almost every day it is reported that Palestinians have been killed while seeking aid since the GHF began operations in late May. Witnesses told the BBC that it was shot dead by Israeli forces at most.
The United Nations, aid groups and some Israeli allies blame the country for the food crisis in Gaza and called for unrestricted access and delivery of aid as Hamas’s health ministry said dozens of people died from malnutrition. On Saturday, it brought losses to 125 in recent days, including 85 children.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, head of the World Health Organization (WHO), described the crisis as “man-made mass hunger.”
The IDF said in its statement that it is responsible for the distribution of the population in Gaza “in the United Nations and international aid organizations” and added that they must “make sure aid does not reach Hamas.”