src="https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js?client=ca-pub-8050569412065003" crossorigin="anonymous">[/script]

Gaza food prices spike and shortages loom after Israel halts aid newsthirst.


Reuters Palestinian children gather to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen, during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, 3 March 2025.Reuters

Palestinian children in Gaza gather to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen

Food prices in Gaza have spiked and aid food parcels could soon run out after Israel blocked the entry of humanitarian aid, the UN’s humanitarian agency said.

OCHA’s partners reported that flour and vegetable prices more than doubled in some cases, with Gazans telling the BBC the same.

If the block continues, “at least 80 community kitchens may soon run out of stock” and remaining food parcels that “will support 500,000 people, will soon run out”, OCHA said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu chose to stop aid at the weekend, accusing Hamas of stealing supplies and refusing a US proposal to extend the Israel-Hamas ceasefire. A Hamas spokesman said the halt was “cheap blackmail”.

Thousands of aid trucks had surged into Gaza each week under the ceasefire that started on 19 January.

After the ceasefire’s first phase expired on Saturday, Netanyahu’s office accused Hamas of stealing aid “to finance its terror machine”.

Hamas has previously denied stealing humanitarian aid in Gaza.

Netanyahu also said Hamas was refusing to accept a six-week ceasefire extension, under different terms from those previously agreed, as proposed by US President Donald Trump’s envoy, Steve Witkoff.

After the halt of aid in response, OCHA said on Tuesday that some community kitchens which remain operational “will need to start to adjust meal content or reduce the number of meals prepared to cope with anticipated shortages”.

Partners would also “be forced to reduce food rations”. While they are distributing previously dispatched food parcels, remaining supplies are expected to run out soon.

As a result, Abu Qais Aryan, from Khan Younis, told BBC Arabic the cost of basic goods doubled over Sunday night. Prices had already doubled or tripled since the war began, he said.

Other residents said the price of a kilo of tomatoes rose overnight from five shekels (£1) to ten, and a kilo of cucumbers from six to 17 shekels.

“We could barely afford to buy a kilo of tomatoes just to satisfy our hunger,” said one man, Issam, adding that people could not buy food “because there is no cash liquidity”.

Getty Images A group of Palestinians sets up a small market amid the ruins of destroyed buildings in Gaza's Jabalia refugee camp, selling fresh vegetables and fruit as daily life continues under difficult conditions following the enforcement of a ceasefire agreement on 10 February 2025.Getty Images

Palestinians sell food in the rubble of destroyed buildings in Jabalia

Issa Meit, a resident of Gaza City, said there was a shortage of goods and very high consumption, and he was “very afraid that prices will increase again”.

“The recent decision is unfair as it wrongs our children. How will our children live in light of these high prices that will increase in an arbitrary way?” he said.

Some blamed merchants for hiking prices, saying they were exploiting the situation.

Merchant Mahmoud Abu Mohsen told BBC Arabic he raised prices because the wholesalers he purchases from did as well.

“For example, I used to buy sugar for five shekels, three shekels, or four shekels, but now I buy sugar for six shekels, meaning I don’t make more than a small profit,” he said. “The news that Netanyahu announced is what caused a stir among the people.”

Getty Images Palestinians shop in the old Zawiya market on the second day of the holy month of Ramadan, in Gaza City, on Sunday, 2 March 2025.Getty Images

Palestinians shop in Gaza City

Doctors Without Borders (MSF)’s spokeswoman Caroline Seguin said in a statement the “news has created uncertainty and fear, causing food prices to spike”.

“Israel is once again blocking an entire population from receiving aid, using it as a bargaining chip,” Seguin said. “This is unacceptable, outrageous, and will have devastating consequences.”

Qatar and Egypt, which helped mediate the ceasefire, condemned Israel’s move.

Qatar’s foreign ministry called the decision “a clear violation of the ceasefire agreement” and “international humanitarian law” in a statement. Egypt’s foreign ministry accused Israel of using starvation as “a weapon against the Palestinian people”, the AFP news agency reported.

David Mencer, Israeli government diplomacy spokesman for the prime minister’s office, said in a video briefing that “Hamas has hoarded for months and months of supplies. They have enough food to fuel an obesity epidemic.”

“The supplies are there but Hamas doesn’t share,” he added.

Many Gazans use aid: a month ago, OCHA said more than a million people – roughly half of the population – had received food assistance since the ceasefire began.

All aid, not just food, is affected by the blockade. Charity Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP) said that inside Gaza, it had some medicine in reserve for its clinics and assistive devices for people with disabilities, in addition to hygiene kits.

“However, we don’t currently have high aid reserves as most items entering were for immediate distribution,” the charity said. “Unfortunately, we don’t have stock that we can use during a long closure of Gaza.”

The ceasefire aimed to end 15 months of conflict, after Hamas killed about 1,200 people and took another 251 hostage in its attack on Israel on 7 October 2023.

Israel responded with an air and ground campaign in Gaza that killed at least 48,405 people, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *