Middle East

Israel rejects over 100 aid requests for Gaza since ceasefire: UN

'Almost 90% of these rejected requests were from over 330 local and international NGOs,' says spokesperson

Merve Aydogan  | 06.11.2025 - Update : 07.11.2025
Israel rejects over 100 aid requests for Gaza since ceasefire: UN (Photo by Ahmed Sayed)

HAMILTON, Canada

The UN said Thursday that Israel rejected 107 requests for the entry of relief materials into the Gaza Strip since an Oct. 10 ceasefire, blocking essential humanitarian supplies.

"Our partners report that since the ceasefire, the Israeli authorities have rejected 107 requests for the entry of relief materials, including blankets, winter clothes and tools and materials to maintain and operate water, sanitation and hygiene services," spokesperson Farhan Haq said during a news conference. "Almost 90% of these rejected requests were from over 330 local and international NGOs, of which more than half of the requests were denied on the grounds that the organizations were not authorized to bring relief items into Gaza."

Emphasizing that the UN and its partners on the ground "can do more when other impediments are lifted," Haq reported that "some relief items rejected for entry into Gaza are ones which Israeli authorities deem to fall outside the scope of humanitarian aid."

"Other items are classified as dual-use, ranging from vehicles and their spare parts to solar panels, some types of mobile latrines, X-ray machines and generators," he added.

Citing the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), Haq noted that "continued detonations of residential buildings have been reported daily in multiple areas where the Israeli military remains deployed, especially in eastern Khan Younis, Eastern Gaza City and Rafah."

Saying that Israeli strikes near the so-called "yellow line" continue, resulting in casualties, Haq stressed that "these military activities put civilians, including aid workers, at risk."

He reminded "the Israeli military of its obligation to take constant care to spare them throughout its operations."

The "yellow line" is the first withdrawal line outlined in the initial phase of the ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, which took effect Oct. 10.

It separates areas still under Israeli military control in the east from those where Palestinians are permitted to move in the west.

On the continued movement of civilians across the enclave, Haq reported that "more than 680,000 movements from southern to northern Gaza have been observed since the onset of the ceasefire, while nearly 113,000 movements from western to eastern Khan Younis have also been reported."

"However, our partners say that many displaced people have reported a desire to remain in their current locations due to widespread destruction, lack of alternatives and continued uncertainty about safety and services in their areas of origin," he said.



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