Maritime aid organization Open Arms
has shifted its mission from rescuing migrants in the Central Med to delivering
aid to the beach in Gaza. The group has retasked its tugboat to the task of
delivering a small barge laden with humanitarian supplies from World Central
Kitchen and the government of the UAE. The vessel's back deck is also laden
with supplies of food and water.
The
location of the planned landing site was not immediately clear; offloading a
vessel of Open Arms' size would require a pier or a lightering operation. A
representative for World Central Kitchen said that the supplies would be
offloaded by crane, but did not provide further details. Oscar Camps, the head
of Open Arms, told BBC that the last mile of the three-day voyage would be
"the most complicated operation."
According to Reuters, World Central Kitchen is
working on building its own jetty out of rubble in Gaza.
Israeli
officials are inspecting all of the cargo at the pier in Larnaca, Cyprus before
it departs, ensuring that there are no concealed security-sensitive items on
board. Israel has sealed Gaza's maritime border to all traffic since 2007 in
order to prevent any possibility of weapons transfers to the terrorist group
Hamas.
A spokesperson for Open Arms told the AFP that the tug will depart the port of Larnaca as soon as it has authorization, which could be as early as Sunday.
Courtesy
World Central Kitchen
The aid deliveries will help
alleviate the approaching risk of famine. According to the UN, a quarter of
the population of Gaza faces the risk of starvation, and the worst conditions
are concentrated in the hard-to-reach northern end of the strip. All Gazans
currently face "crisis" levels of malnutrition or worse, according to
the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, and an estimated 23 people
have died of hunger to date.
The U.S. military will be setting up a temporary
pier from a beachhead in Gaza for aid deliveries in the weeks to come. The EU is also considering a formal "aid
corridor" mechanism running from Larnaca to Gaza, though its landing point
is as-yet unclear. Gaza does not have a deepwater port, and Israeli
bombardment damaged the sole shallow-water fishing port at Gaza
City in the early months of the conflict.