(MENAFN- The Peninsula) Jazeera
Two shipments of much needed aid arrived in Gaza this weekend – the first since Israel started bombing the Palestinian enclave in the wake of a deadly Hamas attack on October 7.
The besieged enclave, home to 2.3 million people, has been in dire need of humanitarian aid after Israel cut off food, fuel and electricity supplies before launching a military offensive.
More than 4,600 Palestinians, most of them civilians, have been killed in the relentless bombardments. Israel says it's targeting Hamas fighters who killed more than 1,400 people in the October 7 attack in southern Israel.
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Here's what we know about the humanitarian aid being sent to Gaza:
Which countries have sent aid to Gaza?
At least eight planes carrying aid from Qatar, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Venezuela and Tunisia have landed at El Arish International Airport in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula.
India has sent medical and disaster relief to El Arish on Sunday.
The European Union is launching an air bridge and has tripled its assistance to the territory.
However, some EU countries – including Germany, Denmark and Sweden – have temporarily suspended their aid to Gaza as a response to the Hamas attacks.
How many trucks have entered Gaza so far?
The first convoy of 20 trucks crossed from Egypt into Gaza on Saturday, and the second convoy arrived the day after.
More than 200 trucks carrying roughly 3,000 tonnes of aid have been positioned near the crossing on the Egyptian side waiting for Israeli approval to drive into Gaza.
Jeremy Hopkins, the UNICEF representative in Egypt, said this is not enough to cover the needs of the people in Gaza and instead there should be“at least 100, 200 trucks going in per day”.
More than a million people have been displaced, and tens of thousands have been wounded and need urgent medical care in addition to the people needing food and other basic necessities.
What aid is being sent to Gaza?
The aid convoys have carried medical supplies from the World Health Organization (WHO), such as dressings, anaesthetics and painkillers.
The trucks have also contained food, including tuna tins, tomato paste and wheat flour.
They also have transported bottled drinking water. The first convoy had enough water for 27,000 people for one day, and the second had enough for 22,000 people for a day.
What other aid does Gaza require?
The UN humanitarian office said the volume of aid entering so far represents just 4 percent of the daily average needed before the hostilities and a fraction of what is now needed as food, water, medicines and fuel stocks run out.
The aid sent to Gaza does not include fuel, which is crucial, according to aid groups.
Doctors from Gaza's only cancer hospital have warned that they are running perilously low on fuel and could be forced to shut down.
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