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Gaza’s vital community kitchens may soon shut, halt free meals

Gaza’s vital community kitchens may soon shut, halt free meals
A Palestinian youth queues to receive a food portion from a charity kitchen in the Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on Tuesday. (AFP)
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Updated 29 April 2025

Gaza’s vital community kitchens may soon shut, halt free meals

Gaza’s vital community kitchens may soon shut, halt free meals
  • Malnutrition cases rising, hitting children, pregnant women as critical lifeline faces threat

CAIRO/GAZA/GENEVA: It took five hours of queuing at a community kitchen in Gaza’s Nuseirat district for displaced grandmother Um Mohammad Al-Talalqa to get one meal to feed her hungry children and grandchildren.

But finding food may be about to get even tougher: Gaza’s community kitchens — lifelines for hundreds of thousands of Palestinians after 18 months of war — may soon have no more meals to provide.

Multiple aid groups said that dozens of local community kitchens risk closing down, potentially within days, unless aid is allowed into Gaza, removing the last consistent source of meals for most of the 2.3 million population.

“We are suffering from famine, real famine,” said Talalqa, whose house in the Gaza town of Mughraqa was destroyed by Israel. “I have not eaten anything since this morning.”

At the Al-Salam Oriental Food community kitchen in Gaza City, Salah Abu Haseera offers what he fears could be one of the last meals for the 20,000 people he and his colleagues serve daily.

“We face huge challenges in keeping going. We may go out of operation within a week, or maybe less,” Abu Haseera told Reuters by phone from Gaza.

Since March 2, Israel has completely cut off all supplies to the 2.3 million residents of the Gaza Strip, and food stockpiled during a ceasefire at the start of the year has all but run out. It is the longest such closure the Gaza Strip has ever faced.

“The community kitchens, which the population in Gaza are relying more on, because there are no other ways to get food, are at a very big risk to shut down,” Juliette Touma, spokesperson for the UN Palestinian refugee agency, UNRWA, said.

About 10,000 cases of acute malnutrition among children have been identified across Gaza, including 1,600 cases of severe acute malnutrition, since the start of 2025, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a report.

The Gaza Health Ministry said at least 60,000 children were now showing symptoms of malnutrition.

“We are seeing pediatric cases with moderate or severe acute malnutrition, and we are seeing also pregnant, lactating women that have difficulties breastfeeding; they themselves are malnourished or have a very insufficient calorie intake,” Julie Faucon, Medical Coordinator at Doctors Without Borders, said. 

The Hamas-run Gaza government media office said famine is no longer a looming threat and is becoming a reality.

Fifty-two people have died due to hunger and malnutrition, including 50 children, it added.

Abu Haseera said food is being sold at “fictional prices.” Prices have risen 1,400 percent compared to during the ceasefire, the World Food Programme said, adding that its stocks were now depleted.

Israel has previously denied that Gaza is facing a hunger crisis and says there is still enough aid to sustain the enclave’s population, but it has not made clear when and how aid will be resumed. 


UN renews peacekeeping mission in disputed Abyei region

Updated 4 sec ago

UN renews peacekeeping mission in disputed Abyei region

UN renews peacekeeping mission in disputed Abyei region
UNITED NATIONS/UNITED STATES: The UN Security Council on Friday renewed a peacekeeping mission in Abyei, a disputed oil-rich region between Sudan and South Sudan, but warned that future extensions depended on progress in ending the conflict.
The extension resolution for the peacekeeping force called UNISFA was prepared by the United States and prolongs the peacekeeping mission until November 2026.
The vote was 12-0, with Russia, China and Pakistan abstaining.
Clashes are frequent in Abyei. The UNISFA force is composed of 4,000 police and soldiers whose mission is to protect civilians.
The region’s status has remained unresolved since South Sudan gained independence and became a nation in 2011.
Sudan is in the grips of a vicious civil war.
Abyei is supposed to be a demilitarized zone but UN officials have voiced concern about the presence of South Sudanese forces, as well as Sudanese paramilitaries from the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), who have been engaged in a power struggle in Sudan since 2023.
Friday’s resolution says that the Security Council has the “intent” to consider further renewal of the mission based on “demonstrable progress” by Sudan and South Sudan, notably by creating a joint police force for Abyei and completely demilitarizing the region as the two sides agreed in 2011.
The resolution calls on Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to present a report by August 2026 on whatever progress the two countries make and assess what would happen if the peacekeeping force is reduced.
“These benchmarks will help describe the mission’s impact and provide a critical tool to hold host governments accountable for measurable progress,” said US representative Dorothy Shea.