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Nearly 100 aid trucks violently looted in Gaza
Aid losses affect over two million people
© Reuters
On November 16, a convoy of 109 United Nations aid trucks carrying food was violently looted while passing through Israel's Kerem Shalom crossing into Gaza. The drivers were coerced at gunpoint by masked men to unload the trucks. With over two million people depending on humanitarian aid to survive, these attacks raise concerns about the dire consequences on the ground and contribute to the controversial decision of airdrop aid missions.
Access to humanitarian aid has been an ongoing issue throughout Israel's war on Gaza. While world leaders have called for unrestricted aid delivery, Israel has reduced aid as much as possible to further pressure the Gazan population. Occasionally, the international community has been given authorization to airdrop aid into Gaza. Dangerous and undignified, parachutes fill the sky as hoards of starving people rush to guess where they may land. Some have fallen on top of people, leading to deaths and severe injuries. Others have destroyed tents and refugee encampments.
Want to know more about the realities of air-dropping aid into Gaza? Click on the gallery to find out more.
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