ֱ

‘Hunger breaks everything’: desperate Gazans scramble for food

‘Hunger breaks everything’: desperate Gazans scramble for food
At the break of dawn, 10-year-old Youssef Al-Najjar races barefoot, clutching a battered pot, to a community kitchen in Gaza City, only to find hundreds of others already queueing. (REUTERS)
Short Url
Updated 28 April 2025

‘Hunger breaks everything’: desperate Gazans scramble for food

‘Hunger breaks everything’: desperate Gazans scramble for food
  • At the break of dawn, 10-year-old Youssef Al-Najjar races barefoot, clutching a battered pot, to a community kitchen in Gaza City, only to find hundreds of others already queueing

GAZA CITY: At the break of dawn, 10-year-old Youssef Al-Najjar races barefoot, clutching a battered pot, to a community kitchen in Gaza City, only to find hundreds of others already queueing.
“People push and shove out of fear of missing their turn. There are little children who fall,” said Youssef, his voice barely rising above a whisper.
Thousands of Gazans, including many children, rush to community kitchens every day in the hope of securing food for their families.
The humanitarian crisis in Gaza has worsened significantly since Israel blocked all aid from entering the territory on March 2, days before resuming its military campaign following the collapse of a ceasefire.
Supplies are dwindling and the UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) on Friday said it had sent out its “last remaining food stocks” to kitchens.
The weight of responsibility fell on Youssef’s shoulders after his father was killed in the war.
He dreams not of toys or games, but of something achingly simple: to sit at a table with his mother and sister, eating peacefully.
For that, each morning, he races to the community kitchen.
“Sometimes, in the chaos, my pot slips from my hands, and the food spills onto the ground,” he told AFP.
“I return home empty-handed... and that pain is worse than hunger.”
AFP footage from a community kitchen in Gaza City shows scores of boys and girls crowded outside the facility, pushing their pots and pans forward in a desperate attempt to secure whatever food they can.
One young man is even seen hitting a boy with a metal pot as he approaches a container of freshly-cooked rice.
“I have been waiting for over five hours to get a plate of rice for the children to eat,” said Mohammed Abu Sanad, a displaced Gazan, at another such facility.
“I have no income, and if we get food from the free kitchen, we eat. If not, we’ll die of hunger.”
The WFP, one of the main providers of food assistance in Gaza, said these kitchens were expected to run out of food “in the coming days.”
For Aida Abu Rayala, 42, the need was greater than ever.
“There is no flour, no bread, no way to feed my children. We stand for hours under the blazing sun and sometimes in the freezing cold,” said Rayala, from central Gaza’s Nuseirat area.
“Some days, after hours of waiting, the food runs out before my turn comes.”
Rayala’s home was destroyed in an air strike, and the family now lives in a tent of thin nylon sheets.
One day, she waited for three hours, her feet blistering from standing.
When she finally reached the counter, there was no food left.
“I went home with empty hands. My children cried... and in that moment, I wished I would die rather than see them hungry again.”
At the heart of Gaza’s food assistance is Faten Al-Madhoun, 52, a volunteer chef who runs a charity kitchen in Beit Lahia, northern Gaza.
She and her 13 volunteers cook by hand, over wood fires, without proper kitchens or modern equipment.
“Some days we prepare 500 meals, but more than 600 people show up,” Madhoun said.
“The need is enormous. And with every day that the borders stay closed, it only grows.”
With flour vanishing from the markets, bakeries shuttered, and even basic vegetables now luxuries, the community kitchens have become the only remaining source of food for tens of thousands.
Alaa Abu Amira shares a similar plight in the southern Khan Yunis area.
“If you arrive late, even by a few minutes, there’s no food,” said Abu Amira, 28, who used to live in the northern town of Beit Lahia.
“People crowd, they push, they fall. I saw a child get injured, and once, a little girl was burned when a pot of hot food spilled on her.”
When he manages to secure a meal, it is often cold, tasteless, repetitive — canned peas and beans, rice half-cooked on makeshift wood fires.
“Our stomachs can barely handle it anymore,” Abu Amira said, “but what choice do we have? Hunger breaks everything.”
Despite the daily ordeal, Rayala vowed to continue with her quest for food.
“Tomorrow, I will try to go earlier, hoping to get a plate of rice. We just want to live with dignity,” she said.


Jordanian authorities dismantle drug trafficking gangs

Jordanian authorities dismantle drug trafficking gangs
Updated 58 min 55 sec ago

Jordanian authorities dismantle drug trafficking gangs

Jordanian authorities dismantle drug trafficking gangs
  • Police in Madaba arrest 14, seize hashish, cocaine, other narcotics
  • Officers in Balqa detain area’s top drug dealer

LONDON: The Jordanian Anti-Narcotics Department has dismantled a criminal gang connected to drug trafficking networks in the Middle East and arrested 14 suspects in the city of Madaba.

The Public Security Directorate conducted raids on various sites where large quantities of drugs were stored for sale and distribution, following weeks of investigation and surveillance.

Over the weekend, police confiscated 160 packages of hashish, 500 grams of cocaine and an unspecified quantity of narcotic pills, a spokesperson said.

In a separate incident, a special unit arrested the leading narcotics supplier in Balqa governorate and confiscated 29 packages of hashish and four firearms, the Petra news agency reported.

In the Central Badia region, another dealer was arrested while transporting and attempting to sell drugs. Authorities seized 50 packages of hashish during the operation.

Jordan is known as a transit point for drug smuggling and distribution in the Middle East, with criminals using drones alongside conventional methods to smuggle narcotics into the country from neighboring Syria and Iraq and move drugs into Arab Gulf states.

Jordan and Syria agreed in January to form a joint security committee to secure their border, combat arms and drug smuggling and work to prevent the resurgence of the terror group Daesh.


Vessel ablaze in Gulf of Aden off Yemen after being struck by a projectile, UK military says

Vessel ablaze in Gulf of Aden off Yemen after being struck by a projectile, UK military says
Updated 53 min 23 sec ago

Vessel ablaze in Gulf of Aden off Yemen after being struck by a projectile, UK military says

Vessel ablaze in Gulf of Aden off Yemen after being struck by a projectile, UK military says
  • Local Yemeni media reported a possible ballistic missile launch from territory controlled by the Iranian-backed Houthis

DUBAI: A missile attack by Yemen’s Houthis set a ship ablaze in the Gulf of Aden on Monday, officials said. There were no immediate reports of injuries.

The attack hit the Netherlands-flagged cargo ship Minervagracht, which had been targeted in a failed assault last week as well by the Iranian-backed Houthis, according to the French military’s Maritime Information, Cooperation and Awareness Center.

“At this time, the vessel is reported to be on fire,” the center said. A “warship is heading to the scene.”

Local Yemeni media reported a possible ballistic missile launch from territory controlled by the Houthis. The British military’s United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations center reported the attack, as did the private security firm Ambrey, which similarly identified the ship as the Minervagracht.

The Houthis did not immediately claim the possible attack. However, it can take hours or even days before the rebels claim their assaults.

The ship’s owner, the Amsterdam-based firm Spliethoff, did not respond to questions from The Associated Press. It wasn’t clear why the Houthis twice targeted the Minervagracht.

The Houthis have been launching missile and drone attacks on Israel and on ships in the Red Sea in response to the war in Gaza, saying they were acting in solidarity with the Palestinians.

The US Navy-overseen Joint Maritime Information Center earlier said that the shipper had “no Israeli affiliations.”

The Houthi attack widens the area of the rebels’ recent assaults, as the last recorded attack on a commercial vessel in the Gulf of Aden before the Minervagracht came in August 2024.

Their attacks over the past two years have upended shipping in the Red Sea, through which about $1 trillion of goods passed each year before the war.

The Houthis stopped their attacks during a brief ceasefire in the war. They later became the target of an intense weekslong campaign of airstrikes ordered by US President Donald Trump before he declared a ceasefire had been reached with the rebels. The Houthis sank two vessels in July, killing at least four on board, with others believed to be held by the rebels.

The attack on Monday comes as Israel intensifies the war in Gaza, targeting Gaza City in a new ground offensive. Meanwhile, tensions remain high as United Nations sanctions have been reimposed on Iran over Tehran’s battered nuclear program. Israel launched a 12-day war against the Islamic Republic in June in which the Americans bombed three Iranian atomic sites.


Cargo ship hit by projectile off Yemen’s coast, security firms report

Cargo ship hit by projectile off Yemen’s coast, security firms report
Updated 29 September 2025

Cargo ship hit by projectile off Yemen’s coast, security firms report

Cargo ship hit by projectile off Yemen’s coast, security firms report

CAIRO: A Netherlands-flagged general cargo ship was struck by an unknown projectile on Monday about 120 nautical miles southeast of Yemen’s port city of Aden, according to maritime security firms.

The United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) agency said military authorities reported the incident, without giving details on the source of the attack.

Private maritime security company Ambrey confirmed the vessel had come under attack in the same area.


New Zealand government criticized for failing to recognize Palestine

New Zealand government criticized for failing to recognize Palestine
Updated 29 September 2025

New Zealand government criticized for failing to recognize Palestine

New Zealand government criticized for failing to recognize Palestine
  • Move was expected at UN General Assembly after PM said issue was matter of ‘when, not if’
  • Ex-PM Helen Clark: New Zealand ‘very much on the wrong side of history’

LONDON: New Zealand’s failure to recognize Palestinian statehood has been met with criticism across the country from politicians and activists.

The government was expected to recognize Palestine in line with the likes of the UK, Canada and Australia at the UN General Assembly in New York. However, Foreign Minister Winston Peters did not take that step in his address on Saturday.

“With a war raging, Hamas remaining the de facto government of Gaza and no clarity on next steps, too many questions remain about the future state of Palestine for it to be prudent for New Zealand to announce recognition at this time,” he said.

It came as a surprise to many after Prime Minister Christopher Luxon’s previous assertion that recognition by New Zealand was a matter of “when, not if.”

Former Prime Minister Helen Clark criticized the decision not to recognize Palestine, saying it places New Zealand “very much on the wrong side of history.”

She told broadcaster RNZ: “As more and more countries move to see that the recognition of Palestine is part of a process of moving towards a solution, New Zealand is lagging behind for reasons which make very little sense at all.”

Elsewhere, members of Protestant and Roman Catholic clergies chained themselves to the immigration minister’s office in protest.

Earlier this month, thousands took to the streets of Auckland to demand that the coalition government recognize Palestinian statehood.

The Justice for Palestine human rights group said the inaction shows that New Zealand is “a country confused about its position in the world.”

The Green Party called the government’s position “a stain.”

Labour foreign affairs spokesperson Peeni Henare said: “Recognition of Palestine and sanctions on Israel send a clear message to Israel and the world: New Zealand will not stand by while Israel disregards human life and dignity, and international law.”

He added: “Luxon had a chance to stand up for what is right, but he failed.”

Palestine has now been recognized by 157 of the 193 UN member states.


Gaza Humanitarian Foundation established to ‘weaponize food distribution’: Ex-contractor

Gaza Humanitarian Foundation established to ‘weaponize food distribution’: Ex-contractor
Updated 29 September 2025

Gaza Humanitarian Foundation established to ‘weaponize food distribution’: Ex-contractor

Gaza Humanitarian Foundation established to ‘weaponize food distribution’: Ex-contractor
  • Anthony Aguilar: ‘It was created so the Israeli government can implement genocide under the banner of the US’
  • ‘What’s happening in Gaza isn’t war. It’s annihilation,’ he tells ADC convention attended by Arab News

DEARBORN: A former contractor for the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation on Sunday said it was established by Israel to “weaponize food distribution” to force Palestinians to leave the enclave.

Anthony Aguilar, a decorated former US Army Green Beret, quit the GHF after seeing how the system was being used to kill Palestinians, not feed them.

He told the annual convention of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee in Dearborn, Michigan, that Israel uses a notorious Islamophobic American biker gang, the Infidels Motorcycle Club, consisting of former military veterans as security to achieve its goals.

Aguilar was a panelist alongside Hani Almadhoun, senior director of philanthropy for the UN Relief and Works Agency, who detailed how Israeli soldiers targeted and murdered more than 200 members of his family in Gaza. Mara Kronenfeld, UNRWA executive director, was the moderator.

The GHF operates like the mafia, Aguilar said, “but the mafia at least has principles. They don't kill children.”

He added: “The security apparatus in Gaza is under the authority and leadership of the national president of the Infidels Motorcycle Club.

“These are individuals that brandish Crusader tattoos on their bodies, 1095 on their bodies for the First Crusade … They see their presence there as a modern-day crusade. They call it a pilgrimage.”

The GHF “wasn’t created to provide humanitarian aid,” Aguilar said. “It was created so that the Israeli government can control it to implement genocide under the banner of the US.”

The Infidels Motorcycle Club, he added, “are individuals who’ve been fully armed with automatic weapons and machine guns and tear gas and stun grenades, who go into Gaza to supposedly deliver food, but who have a charter … based on fighting jihad and eliminating all Muslims from the earth. That’s their charter. That’s why they exist as an organization.”

Aguilar said what he saw during the three months he was a contractor for the GHF was “simply indescribable” and “left me speechless.”

He added: “In and around and outside these (distribution) sites, thousands of Palestinians have been killed by the IDF (Israel Defense Forces). And those that aren’t picked up, or those that aren’t taken to hospital, or those that don’t survive, whose bodies are left outside of these sites, are buried by bulldozers that come in afterward.

“The US has a direct hand in that. That’s the ugly truth that the GHF and the Israeli government will try to hide because it is so abhorrent.”

Aguilar said: “What’s happening in Gaza isn’t war. It’s annihilation, it’s oppression and it’s tyranny.” The “genocide,” he added, “is being conducted through the weaponization of food, denying human beings water, forced displacement, intentional targeting and indiscriminate killing. Palestinians aren’t dying, they’re being killed. It’s by design. Israel is intent on doing this.”

Almadhoun said he tries to overcome his grief by overseeing the Gaza Soup Kitchen, which brings food to homeless civilians.

He said he saw young children approach GHF sites seeking food only to be shot and killed by Israeli soldiers.

Kronenfeld said UNRWA was running 400 sites in Gaza that, in addition to distributing food to the needy, also provided medical and educational support to civilians. Those sites were closed and replaced by five GHF sites.

“UNRWA has the equivalent of 6,000 trucks of aid, enough to feed a million people right now, just feet beyond the border. That’s not been allowed in,” she said, adding that the agency has become the primary source of medical care since Israel destroyed Gaza’s hospitals. More than 2,200 people have been killed at the five GHF sites, she said.

The final day of the ADC convention, attended by Arab News, also featured panels on how independent voices are reporting news on Gaza that is being blocked by Israel, and the challenges of humanizing Palestinians.

Mosab Abu Toha, a Palestinian writer, poet, scholar and librarian from Gaza, also discussed his new book of poetry “Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear,” which won the Palestine Book Award and the American Book Award. It is a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Walcott Prize for Poetry.