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Two-day extension to humanitarian pause in Gaza is not enough, charities say

The Qatari government announced on Monday that Israel and Hamas had agreed to extend the humanitarian pause.

Gwyn Wright
Monday 27 November 2023 16:01 EST
A Red Cross convoy carrying Israeli hostages (Hatem Ali/AP)
A Red Cross convoy carrying Israeli hostages (Hatem Ali/AP) (AP)

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A two-day extension to the humanitarian pause in the Gaza Strip is insufficient to meet the needs of people there, charities have said as they called for an immediate ceasefire.

The Qatari government announced on Monday that Israel and Hamas had agreed to ā€œextend the humanitarian pauseā€ for two more days.

Further releases of Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners in Israelā€™s jails are expected as the deal is structured to allow more exchanges for every day the pause holds.

On Monday night, ActionAid welcomed a longer pause but warned it will not be enough to help women and girls sheltering in camps in southern Gaza.Ā 

It claimed the delivery of 187 trucks of aid in recent days ā€œutterly failsā€ to meet the needs of Palestinians in the territory and amounts to less than half the amount of aid allowed in before the war.

One mother displaced in southern Gaza told the charity: ā€œWe came to the school to find a mattress, blanket, or anything to cover ourselves with.

ā€œWe did not find any of this. We slept on the floor. We sleep without pillows and without blankets. The one blanket we have we put on the children.

ā€œMy sister recently gave birth, about two weeks ago. She could not find a blanket to cover her newborn with.

ā€œCold and rain are upon us, and there is no fresh water. We canā€™t find food to feed the children.

ā€œWe go to the market and are surprised by the prices. They are unimaginable.ā€

Riham Jafari, advocacy and communication co-ordinator for ActionAid Palestine, said: ā€œWe welcome the announcement of a two-day extension to the truce in Gaza to give extra time to deliver much-needed aid ā€¦ but again, only a ceasefire can meet the huge needs of millions of people.

ā€œUntil then, pauses can only provide a short relief from the relentless bombing and a tiny window to get in a fraction of the aid needed.ā€

Plan International, which advocates for childrenā€™s rights and equality for girls, described the extension to the pause as ā€œanother positive stepā€ but called for an end to hostilities.

The charityā€™s UK director of influencing and youth engagement, Kathleen Spencer Chapman, said: ā€œThe announcement of an extended two-day pause to the conflict in Gaza and the release of more hostages is another positive step.

ā€œHowever, only a full and immediate ceasefire will stop children being killed and enable the scale of life-saving aid and supplies ā€“ such as desperately needed clean water, food, fuel and medicines ā€“ needed to be distributed across Gaza.

ā€œA pause only offers children and families a temporary reprieve from the violence.

ā€œWe cannot allow children to return to the daily death and destruction they have been subjected to since October 7.Ā 

ā€œThatā€™s why we continue to call on the UK Government and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to back a full ceasefire now and not just a pause.ā€

Save the Children International wrote: ā€œWe welcome the release of some Israeli children held hostage in Gaza and Palestinian children held in Israeli military detention.

ā€œBut we still need all hostages to be released unconditionally, for children in Israeli-run prisons to be better protected and a lasting ceasefire now.ā€

Its international chief executive Inger Ashing said: ā€œA few daysā€™ pause in fighting wonā€™t keep children safe.

ā€œWe cannot let a whole generation of children bear the brunt of this conflict. We need a lasting ceasefire now.ā€

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