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Food, water, shelter: Gazans navigate dire shortages as war rages

A flood of refugees has inundated the southern Gaza Strip following an Israeli warning to vacate the combat zone around Gaza City. Abla Musabh’s family reached Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir al-Balah after a seven-hour trek southwestward from Gaza City on foot and on empty stomachs, their third displacement in a week.

They, like many, now sleep outside the hospital, believing it will be spared missile strikes and fighting. “It’s cold at night,” she says. “For the past week we have been sleeping on cardboard boxes. There is nothing here.”

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Before the war, Gaza was already overcrowded, and power, water, and food were in chronic short supply. Now, with Gazans under siege and displaced in search of safety, a humanitarian crisis is intensifying.

Food, shelters, medical supplies, and clean water all are in short supply. The international community pledged to get aid into the besieged strip, but at the Egyptian border, hundreds of metric tons of aid remained in trucks, awaiting a safe corridor to enter. As of Monday evening, the crossing remained closed, despite intense U.S. diplomacy led by Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

Mohammed and his family, who evacuated their home in east Khan Yunis moments before a missile strike destroyed it last week, now live in a furniture shop-turned-shelter with four other families, a total of 29 people including 14 children sharing one room.

“Despite the difficult circumstances, I consider myself fortunate to have found any shelter at all,” he says.

As the international community pledged to get humanitarian aid into the besieged Gaza Strip Monday, the enclave’s lone border crossing with Egypt remained closed, Israeli missile strikes continued, and Gazans reported a “dire situation.”

There’s minimal food, overflowing makeshift shelters, no medical supplies, and little access to clean water.

“There’s no bread, no food; my children haven’t eaten today,” says Abla Musabh, 67, whose family reached Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir al-Balah late Sunday after a seven-hour, 10-mile trek southwestward from Gaza City on foot and on empty stomachs. It was their third displacement in a week.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Before the war, Gaza was already overcrowded, and power, water, and food were in chronic short supply. Now, with Gazans under siege and displaced in search of safety, a humanitarian crisis is intensifying.

They, like many, now sleep outside the hospital, believing it will be spared missile strikes and fighting.

“It’s cold at night,” she says. “For the past week we have been sleeping on cardboard boxes. There is nothing here.”

The flood of Palestinian refugees from northern Gaza inundated the southern part of the strip following an Israeli warning to some 1.1 million people to leave the combat zone around Gaza City, the focus of an anticipated Israeli ground offensive against Gaza’s rulers, Hamas.

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