UN relief chief calls on Israel to open Kerem Shalom crossing to reach Gaza
"Kerem Shalom, please Israel, give us that for our crossing point," Martin Griffiths, the UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator, told reporters in Geneva on Wednesday.
- Middle East
- Anadolu Agency
- Published Date: 09:17 | 15 November 2023
- Modified Date: 09:22 | 15 November 2023
The UN relief chief on Wednesday appealed to Tel Aviv to allow humanitarian aid into Gaza through the Kerem Shalom crossing in Israel.
"Kerem Shalom, please Israel, give us that for our crossing point," Martin Griffiths, the UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator, told reporters in Geneva.
Kerem Shalom crossing was used to carry more than 60% of truckloads heading to Gaza before this conflict, he added.
Griffiths also urged the warring parties to abide by a 10-point plan that he unveiled "to rein in the carnage" in Gaza.
"Next allow the UN and other humanitarian organizations access to fuel," he stressed.
Other points include facilitating aid agencies' efforts to bring in a continuous flow of aid convoys, and enabling humanitarian organizations to deliver aid throughout Gaza "without impediment or interference."
He also highlighted the need to expand the number of safe shelters for displaced people in schools and other public facilities across Gaza.
Improving a humanitarian notification mechanism that would help spare civilians and civilian infrastructure from hostilities is needed, the chief stressed.
He emphasized the need to set up relief distribution hubs for civilians, and to allow civilians to move to safer areas, and voluntarily return to their residences.
Upon a question about his earlier meeting with Iranian Foreign Minister Amir Abdolahian, Griffiths, without giving any further detail, said they discussed the situation in detail and expressed his concern about the expansion of the war.
"The expansion of the war into the north and if there is to be a war in the north with Hezbollah and Israel. Then I fear the worst. I feel the worst.
"And we know that we can easily imagine the worst because it will be a war that makes even Gaza with its awful horrors of daily struggle look like just the beginning. It'll be a regional war which will affect so many parts," he added, stressing that Abdolahian agreed with him that "such expansion would not be a good thing."
- Israel urges evacuation of residents from some neighborhoods in Khan Yunis, southern Gaza Strip
- Türkiye's health minister comforts injured Gazans in Cairo
- Hospitals should not be battlegrounds: UN
- FBI director warns of heightened terrorism threat in U.S. amid Middle East conflict
- ASEAN defense ministers urge cease-fire in Gaza, end to conflicts in Myanmar