Bread Lines and Salty Drinking Water: Israeli Aid Block Sets Gaza Back Again

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Shipments surged into Gaza after Israel and Hamas reached a cease-fire, even if they weren’t enough. Then Israel blocked the border again to pressure Hamas in truce talks.

Jostling for food handouts at a soup kitchen in Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip, on Monday.

Shipments surged into Gaza after Israel and Hamas reached a cease-fire, even if they weren’t enough. Then Israel blocked the border again to pressure Hamas in truce talks.

Jostling for food handouts at a soup kitchen in Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip, on Monday.Credit…

By Vivian Yee and Bilal Shbair

Photographs and Video by Saher Alghorra

Vivian Yee reported from Cairo, and Bilal Shbair from Deir al-Balah, Gaza, where he interviewed vegetable sellers, police officers and ordinary people searching for food. Saher Alghorra reported from northern and central Gaza.

Outside the Zadna Bakery in central Gaza one recent afternoon, the long lines of people waiting for bread were threatening to dissolve into chaos at any minute.

A security guard shouted at the crowds that pushed toward the bakery door to wait their turn. But no one was listening.

Just a few steps away, scalpers were hawking loaves they had gotten earlier that day for three times the original price. The sunset meal that breaks Muslims’ daylong fast during the holy month of Ramadan was approaching and across Gaza, bread, water, cooking gas and other basics were hard to come by — once again.

Lines had not been this desperate, nor markets this empty, since before the Israel-Hamas cease-fire took hold on Jan. 19. The truce had allowed aid to surge into Gaza for the first time after 15 months of conflict during which residents received only a trickle of supplies.

But no aid has gotten in since March 2. That was the day Israel blocked all goods in a bid to pressure Hamas into accepting an extension of the current cease-fire stage and releasing more hostages sooner, instead of moving to the next phase, which would involve more challenging negotiations to permanently end to the war.

Now, the aid cutoff, exacerbated by panic buying and unscrupulous traders who gouge prices, is driving prices to levels that few can afford. Shortages of fresh vegetables and fruit and rising prices are forcing people to once again fall back on canned food such as beans.


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