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Gaza aid workers press on, shaken by lethal Israeli strike on convoy

Local humanitarian workers in the Gaza Strip, who lack the protections of international organizations, have been left shaken by the lethal Israeli drone strikes on the World Central Kitchen staff, whom they had befriended. And they say a suspension in operations by aid agencies in Gaza poses more obstacles to their mission.

“The airstrike on the WCK convoy elicited a range of emotions: fear, sadness, and outrage,” says Aisha Salem, a manager at the Economic & Social Development Center of Palestine, a nongovernmental organization that distributes food parcels in southern Gaza. “It underscores the serious risks we face daily as we carry out our mission to alleviate suffering and provide aid to those in dire need.”

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As international aid agencies pull back in Gaza after the drone strike on a World Central Kitchen convoy, a heavier burden falls on local humanitarian workers. Their determination to save lives helps them persevere.

On Friday came signs some relief could be on the way, as Israel said it was opening a border crossing with northern Gaza and allowing the port of Ashdod to receive Gaza-bound aid. Norwegian Refugee Council Secretary-General Jan Egeland welcomed what he called a “watershed moment.”

Yet the dangers to aid workers remain, as do their concerns.

“The urgency of the situation and the pressing needs of vulnerable populations compel us to push through our fear,” says Ms. Salem. “We are determined to make a difference.”

The shock waves of the lethal Israeli military strike on a World Central Kitchen convoy are creating fresh obstacles for humanitarian workers in Gaza who continue to fight famine even as they themselves are at risk.

The local humanitarian workers, who lack the protections of international organizations, have been left shaken by the strikes on the WCK staff, whom they had befriended. They say a suspension in operations by aid agencies in Gaza poses more obstacles to their mission.

“The airstrike on the WCK convoy elicited a range of emotions: fear, sadness, and outrage,” says Aisha Salem, a manager at the Economic & Social Development Center of Palestine, a Palestinian nongovernmental organization that distributes food parcels in southern Gaza. “It underscores the serious risks we face daily as we carry out our mission to alleviate suffering and provide aid to those in dire need.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

As international aid agencies pull back in Gaza after the drone strike on a World Central Kitchen convoy, a heavier burden falls on local humanitarian workers. Their determination to save lives helps them persevere.

On Friday came signs some relief could be on the way.

Following a tense phone call between President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel announced a “temporary opening” of the Erez Crossing with northern Gaza and the use of the port of Ashdod to receive Gaza-bound aid, with the potential to massively increase food and assistance to the besieged strip.

Also Friday, Israel announced that two officers – a colonel and major – had been sacked, and three others including a general had been reprimanded, following a preliminary military investigation into the drone strikes on the convoy.

Courtesy of @chefjoseandres/X/REUTERS

World Central Kitchen workers prepare food for Palestinians in Gaza in this picture released March 21, 2024, and obtained from social media.

Norwegian Refugee Council Secretary-General Jan Egeland, in an interview with BBC World Service Radio, described the temporary border opening as a “watershed moment.”

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