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27 February 2026
Palestine: UN rights chief highlights suffering, atrocity crimes ‘that remain unpunished’
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25 February 2026
‘I dream of a safe life’: Gaza’s children share the future they want
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19 February 2026
Ramadan in Gaza: Deprivation, high prices and the hardships of displacement
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The Sustainable Development Goals in Palestine
The UN and its partners in Palestine are working towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals: 17 interconnected Goals which address the major development challenges faced by people in Palestine and around the world. These are the goals the UN is working on in Palestine:
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27 February 2026
Palestine: UN rights chief highlights suffering, atrocity crimes ‘that remain unpunished’
stemming from Israel’s disregard for human rights norms and serious violations also committed by Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups.Citing a new report from his office (OHCHR) covering the 12 months to 31 October 2025, High Commissioner Türk said that Israel had “continued attacks on residential buildings and makeshift tents, destroying entire neighbourhoods”.“Mass civilian deaths” resulted from the Israeli attacks, the UN rights chief noted, with more than 25,500 Palestinians killed in the space of one year, and more than 68,800 injured.Killed in search of foodA total of 2,435 Palestinians were killed by the Israeli military near food collection points run by the non-UN Gaza Humanitarian Foundation between late May and early October, Mr. Türk also said, adding that most were young men and boys.In the West Bank, Israeli security forces “continued to launch airstrikes and use unlawful force, killing hundreds of Palestinians,” he added.Since last October’s fragile ceasefire, more than 600 Palestinians have been killed with over 1,600 injured in Gaza, according to local authorities. “Anywhere else, this would be considered a major crisis,” the rights chief said. Independent human rights expert monitoring the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Francesca Albanese, highlighted the “catastrophic” situation facing Gazans today.The Special Rapporteur said that families “survive in flooded tents while people continue to die from gunfire, hunger and preventable diseases”, despite the truce.Ms. Albanese – who does not work for the UN and reports to the Human Rights Council - was speaking in Geneva alongside other independent experts, who condemned repeated attempts to undermine their work for the Council’s “Special Procedures” mandates.Attacks on independent experts ‘beyond the pale’Speaking to journalists in Geneva, the Special Rapporteur on Afghanistan, Richard Bennett, rejected calls for Ms. Albanese to resign along with “personal vendettas” against independent experts, following the publication of an online video misrepresenting her comments about Israel.Ms. Albanese was sanctioned by the United States last July for alleged “gross infringement” on national sovereignty, together with judges and prosecutors of the International Criminal Court (ICC) beginning in February last year.Mr. Bennett said that all States which feature in reports and statements by Special Procedures mandate holders “may strongly disagree and are fully entitled to express those disagreements forcefully.“However, deliberately misrepresenting the statements or views of mandate holders and attacking them personally is beyond the pale. International sanctions are for human rights violators and criminals, not for human rights defenders.”Special Rapporteurs and other independent human rights experts are not UN staff and they are not paid for their work. Human rights is one of the fundamental pillars of all the United Nations’ work, along with peace, security and development.
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25 February 2026
‘I dream of a safe life’: Gaza’s children share the future they want
and restore the “fundamentals of childhood”.Through expressing their hopes for peace in art, poetry and models that they have made from rubble created by the war, thousands of young people across the enclave have taken part in The Gaza We Want initiative. With support from the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the initiative has engaged children aged five to 18 to share their vision for rebuilding the territory that’s been largely destroyed since war erupted between Hamas and Israel in October 2023. The initiative helps “reinforce the importance of meaningful, ongoing child participation in decisions about Gaza’s future,” said Jonathan Crickx, UNICEF’s head of communications in the Palestinian Occupied Territory, briefing journalists in Geneva on Tuesday.Safety firstOver 11,000 children, including children with disabilities, have participated in the initiative which asked them to “imagine dignity” and share their ideas.Children prioritised shelter and safety; real schools with roofs, walls and toilets; followed by hospitals and psychological support; and lastly places where they can play and “reclaim what war stole from them”. Mr. Crickx said that when thousands of children independently draw clean streets, classrooms and parks, “it is no coincidence. It is a direct appeal to the world.” “The children’s deepest wish is simply the ability to sleep through the night, to walk to school without fear… I met too many children whose bodies had healed but whose fear had not.” Mr Crickx said, echoing the call for mental health support alongside physical care.'The clarity of children'Mr Crickx described meeting 15-year-old Hala at a temporary learning centre in the central Gaza city of Deir Al-Balah.Months without school had harmed her education but she dreams of a safe life, a safe home, her own bedroom and a good school, he said. Despite the ceasefire – in place since last October – more than 135 children have reportedly been killed in Gaza. UNICEF says that listening to children must be the foundation of any credible reconstruction. “It is difficult to ignore the clarity of children who have lived through such uncertainty. A recovery that ignores children’s voices will fail them – and fail Gaza.” The UNICEF's communications chief said. “What the Gaza children describe is not abstract. It is the Gaza they want and have the right to grow up in.”Aid continues Relief continues for children in Gaza as fresh bread, hot meals and digital cash assistance are provided to displaced families by the UN humanitarians. The trucking of drinking water has been stepped up after a large water line that connects Gaza with Israel shutdown two weeks ago when two leaks were identified, the UN’s humanitarian coordination office (OCHA) reported on Tuesday. To restore sanitation levels, the UN and partners are moving quickly to rehabilitate pumping stations that were damaged or destroyed during the war. This is critical as sewage overflows can lead to water contamination and spread of waterborne diseases.Although two new clinics for the screening of non-communicable diseases have become operational in North Gaza, there continues to be a critical shortage of medicine and laboratory supplies, particularly for cancer and heart diseases.
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19 February 2026
Ramadan in Gaza: Deprivation, high prices and the hardships of displacement
Palestinian Walid Al-Assi was playing with his young granddaughter this week, promising to take her to the market in Gaza City with the arrival of the holy month of Ramadan as his family had done before the Israel-Hamas war, but now circumstances had changed.Mr. Al-Assi lives with his family in a tent made of cloth and plastic sheeting next to the rubble of their home in the Al-Zarqa neighbourhood in the centre of Gaza City, where they used to live “happily” and eat good food, including special Ramadan sweets like Qatayef.“Everything has changed now,” he told UN News, describing the grim landscape left behind following two years of Israeli attacks.“We have been deprived of all these things. Today, I see goods in stores, and I turn my face away from them because I do not have the money to buy them. I am a man who suffers from high blood pressure and diabetes, and I cannot walk. Those in the tents must be helped.”‘We are living in a tragedy’In another displacement tent, Amal Al-Samri and her husband are trying to create an atmosphere, even if only symbolically, for the month of Ramadan. They have been busy arranging the tent and preparing for the holy month, while a smile never left Ms. Al-Samri’s tired face, and their three children wore clothes that looked new in celebration of the arrival of the month.Before the war, she said, “our life was beautiful.”She said she would visit relatives, go see her family and brothers, shop at the market for the house and create a Ramadan atmosphere, complete with hanging lights and decorations.“Today, there is nothing,” she said.“We are living in a tragedy. There is no electricity or water. We were displaced from our homes from one place to another, and in one place, the sea water flooded us and swept away our tents.” High prices and shortagesDespite the circumstances, challenges, continued suffering, shortages of supplies and the signs of destruction that left deep scars in the sector, the atmosphere of the holy month of Ramadan and its distinctive goods found their way to the historic Zawiya market in Gaza City.Shops and vendors’ stalls put up lanterns of different sizes and signs advertising their goods and welcoming the holy month.Some families were able to buy lanterns for their children despite the high prices.Prices double for Ramadan lanternsBut, many pass through the market without buying anything as they do not have enough to buy in light of the high prices and the scarcity of goods, explained Luay Al-Jamasi, the owner of a shop selling Ramadan decorations.“Many people have been deprived of Ramadan decorations because they do not have electricity,” he said. “The price of Ramadan decorations has risen significantly because no more of them have entered the sector in the past period.”Holding one of the lanterns, he pointed out that “the price of this lantern used to be 30 shekels, but now it has reached 60 shekels. The price has doubled because of the lack of goods entering the country.”‘We’ve been through some difficult times’However, there are those who are determined to celebrate in their own way and show solidarity with those who celebrate the month, including Maher Tarzi, a Christian Palestinian citizen, who was strolling through the Zawiya market.In a sweet voice, he sang one of the songs associated with the month of Ramadan, whose lyrics say: “sweet and happy nights have arrived, nights that are coming and nights that are going, in which the manifestation is always present, and its light shines from the heights.”“People want to be happy,” Mr Tarzi said. “We’ve been through some tough times, and it’s good that we’re still alive.”‘How did we survive all this?’“People look around and wonder, how did we survive all this?” Mr. Tarzi continued. “Then they resume their lives and come to the markets. But, things are not the same now as they were before in terms of purchasing power.”At night, some areas of Gaza City are illuminated by available lanterns and lamps in celebration of the arrival of the holy month of Ramadan, despite the harsh conditions that many Gaza residents are still living in, most of whom are still displaced.The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported that, according to estimates, at least two thirds of the population (1.4 million out of 2.1 million) are living in about 1,000 of the sites to which they have been displaced, in overcrowded places and in tents that offer little privacy and protection.
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18 February 2026
Humanitarian access to Gaza still insufficient for relief and rebuilding: UN development chief
Alexander De Croo, the head of the UN Development Programme (UNDP), told journalists on Tuesday.Mr. De Croo, who chose Gaza for his first overseas visit since being appointed to the top job in November 2025, called for an expansion of access to the occupied territory for UN agencies to strengthen efforts to remove rubble and waste, provide shelter and medical equipment and evacuate patients.On Monday, Mr. De Croo visited Firas Market in downtown Gaza City, where around 370,000 tonnes of waste had piled up during the two-year war as garbage collection and sewage systems collapsed, turning it into a massive, foul-smelling landfill.‘It will take us seven years to remove all the rubble’UNDP bulldozers began removing the waste a week ago, creating a glimmer of hope for Palestinians, with the aim of reopening the market as an economic hub. The UN entity is also involved in ensuring shelter, basic services, and education and health needs are met.Speaking to the media from Jerusalem, following his three-day trip to Gaza and the West Bank, Mr. De Croo, formerly a Minister for Development in the Belgian government, said that the living conditions were the worst he had ever seen and that, so far, only 0.5 per cent of the rubble in Gaza has been removed.“At the current pace, it will take us seven years to remove all the rubble,” he said. “We need to have more capacity to do rubble removal and rubble recycling. 90 per cent of the people of Gaza today live in the middle of that rubble, which is extremely dangerous”.The vast majority of Gazans are still living in rudimentary tents, which the UNDP is beginning to replace with recovery housing units. 4,000 of them are ready, but up to 300,000 are needed for the population. “We understand the security concerns of the Israeli authorities”, explained Mr. De Croo, “but that should not be a reason to refuse access to organisations such as UNDP, other UN organizations and international NGOs.”
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17 February 2026
Guterres deplores Israel’s move to resume land registration in the West Bank
his Spokesman said on Monday. The development follows an Israeli cabinet decision from May 2025 and applies to Area C of the West Bank, which encompasses some 60 per cent of the territory. This will mark the first time since the 1967 occupation that Israel will begin registering land as state property following approval announced by the cabinet on Sunday. Risk of Palestinian dispossession, greater Israeli control Briefing journalists in New York, UN Spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said the decision could lead to the dispossession of Palestinians of their property. It also risks expanding Israeli control over land in the area. “Such measures, including Israel’s continued presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, are not only destabilizing but, as recalled by the International Court of Justice (ICJ), unlawful,” he added. He said the Secretary-General calls on the Israeli Government to immediately reverse the measures while again warning that the current trajectory on the ground is eroding the prospect of a two-State solution between Israelis and Palestinians. Settlement activity illegal Last week, the Israeli cabinet approved measures that would increase Israeli civilian authority in Areas A and B of the West Bank, which together constitute roughly 40 per cent of the territory “The Secretary-General reiterates that all Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the regime associated with them, have no legal validity and are in flagrant violation of international law and relevant United Nations resolutions,” the Spokesman said. The UN chief called on all parties to preserve the only path to a negotiated two-State solution which is “the only path to lasting peace.” Ongoing Gaza aid restrictions Meanwhile in Gaza, humanitarians working in logistics supported the recent transportation of nearly 1,900 pallets full of food, shelter, health, water and sanitation items from crossing points along the perimeter fence with Israel to destinations inside the Strip. Despite this, aid operations continue to face significant impediments, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in its latest update. Shipments from Jordan are restricted to a route that requires multiple offloading and reloading points. Those from Egypt – which come through the Kerem Shalom/Karem Abu Salem crossing – face a high return rate, with less than 60 per cent offloaded between the period from 4 to 10 February. Humanitarian missions blocked Humanitarian movements inside Gaza that require coordination with Israeli authorities also continue to face obstacles. Out of nearly 50 movements coordinated between 6 and 11 February, just over a half were fully facilitated and five were denied outright. While 11 movements were approved, they encountered significant delays and other impediments and two were only partially accomplished as a result. OCHA noted that two more denials were recorded on Monday, and “teams on the ground are engaging with the authorities to clarify the constraints and seek their resolution so that our operations can move forward.”
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12 February 2026
West Bank: UN rights chief warns against deepening Israeli control over Palestinian land
“This is yet another step by the Israeli authorities towards rendering a viable Palestinian State impossible, in violation of the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination,” he said. He warned that if implemented, the decisions “will undoubtedly accelerate the dispossession of Palestinians and their forcible transfer, and lead to the creation of more illegal Israeli settlements.” This in turn “will also further deprive Palestinians of their natural resources and restrict their enjoyment of other human rights.” Acquiring more land On 8 February, the Israeli security cabinet approved a package of measures that would increase Israeli civilian authority in Areas A and B of the West Bank, which together constitute roughly 40 per cent of the territory. Some of these powers fall under the competence of the Palestinian Authority, according to the Oslo Accords – twin peace agreements signed by Israeli and Palestinian leadership in the 1990s. The measures would change the law to allow Israeli authorities and individuals to acquire land in Areas A and B, violating the law of occupation. “This will further cement Israel's control and integration of the occupied West Bank into Israel, consolidating unlawful annexation,” Mr. Türk said. Cultural rights violated The decisions also strip the Palestinian Authority of its planning and building powers in parts of Hebron in the southern part of the West Bank, including the Ibrahimi Mosque – known to Jews as the Cave of the Patriarchs and a holy site for Islam, Judaism and Christianity. Israel would also establish administrative control over another holy site, Rachel’s Tomb in Bethlehem, to accelerate settlement expansion. “This not only violates the land rights of Palestinians, but also their cultural rights in respect of sites of particular significance,” the rights chief said. ‘Decisions must be overturned’ Mr. Türk noted that the new measures come amid a wider context of increasing attacks by Israeli settlers and security forces against Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, forcible transfers, evictions, home demolitions, land grabs, and movement restrictions, among other documented violations. “We are witnessing rapid steps to change permanently the demography of the occupied Palestinian territory, stripping its people of their lands and forcing them to leave,” he said. “This is supported by rhetoric and actions by senior Israeli officials and violates Israel’s obligation as an occupying power to preserve the existing legal order and social fabric. These decisions must be overturned.” He concluded by calling for all settlements to be evacuated and the Israeli occupation to end now.
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11 February 2026
UN warns civilians remain at risk as airstrikes continue across Gaza
The UN said on Tuesday, warning that humanitarian needs continue to outpace access and capacity.UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric told journalists at the regular news briefing in New York that the UN aid coordination office, OCHA, had received additional reports of airstrikes, bombing, shelling – including from at sea - and shootings in residential areas.The violence, he said, “puts civilians in danger and adds to the immense hardship they have endured over the past 28 months.”He added that civilians are protected under international humanitarian law wherever they are, “even if they cross military demarcation lines or are near them...civilians must always be protected and during military operations and constant care must be taken to spare them.”Health centre reopensAmid the ongoing hostilities, UN agencies reported limited but important progress in restoring essential services.The UN ‘s Palestine refugee relief agency (UNRWA) said it has reopened the Bureij Health Centre in Deir al Balah after months of closure. The facility is now providing primary healthcare, maternal health services, laboratory testing and dental care.However, thousands of patients remain without access to treatment and recovery, as critical services are still unavailable in Gaza.“Their top priority is to scale up local services, including by rehabilitating damaged facilities and expanding critical care. This requires more medical supplies, including items that are not easily approved for entry by Israeli authorities, such as X-ray machines and laboratory equipment,” Mr. Dujarric said.Shelter, protection needs remain acuteUN shelter partners said that by last week they had provided more than 5,600 families with emergency shelter assistance in just over one week, including nearly 5,000 tarpaulins and more than 12,000 bedding items.Last month alone, similar assistance – including nearly 8,000 tents – reached more than 85,000 families. However, durable solutions are urgently needed, which requires permission from Israeli authorities to bring in machinery and construction materials to repair damaged structures, partner organizations said.
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10 February 2026
West Bank: New Israeli measures further erode prospects for two-State solution
to authorize a series of administrative and enforcement measures in Areas A and B in the occupied West Bank. The measures would make it easier for Jewish settlers to take over Palestinian land, thus expanding Israel’s power in the territory, according to media reports. The UN chief warned that the current trajectory on the ground – including this decision – is eroding the prospect for the two-State solution, according to a statement issued by his Spokesperson. Settlements are illegal He reiterated that all Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and their associated regime and infrastructure, have no legal validity and constitute a flagrant violation of international law, including relevant UN resolutions. “Such actions, including Israel’s continued presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory are not only destabilizing but – as recalled by the International Court of Justice – unlawful,” the statement said. The Secretary-General called on Israel to reverse the measures. He also urged all parties “to preserve the only path to lasting peace, a negotiated two-State solution, in line with relevant Security Council resolutions and international law.” Heading off course UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric was asked about the statement during his regular briefing to journalists in New York. “These decisions are not moving us in the right direction,” he said. “They are driving us further and further away from a two-State solution and from the ability of the Palestinian authority and the Palestinian people to control their own destiny.” Ongoing aid efforts in Gaza Meanwhile, humanitarians in the Gaza Strip continue to respond to the immense needs of the population despite impediments and a challenging operating environment. The UN and partners are serving hundreds of thousands of meals each day, in addition to providing digital cash and monthly rations, Mr. Dujarric said. Colleagues report that Gaza City continues to face a severe shortage of drinking and domestic water despite the recent re-opening of the valve on the Mekorot supply line there that connects Israel to Gaza for fresh water. Water and hygiene support Currently, only 6,000 cubic metres of water are reaching people in Gaza City every day, with significant losses in hard-to-reach areas. “To mitigate this shortfall, we and our partners have increased water production and trucked deliveries from groundwater wells and private sector desalination plants,” he said. Aid partners have distributed over 100,000 water jerry cans across the Gaza Strip since late January, he added. They have also provided over 700,000 bars of soap, over 25,000 hygiene kits, over 400 household latrines, and 250 anti-lice kits Explosive ordnance threat Since Wednesday, humanitarians working in mine action have conducted over 200 assessments of potential explosive hazards in support of the removal of debris. They reached over 10,000 children and adults last week with education warning them of the risks of explosive ordnance which remains a major threat. Thirty-three explosive ordnance incidents have been reported since the ceasefire came into effect last October, resulting in nine deaths and 65 injuries. Restrictions and limitations UN aid coordination office, OCHA, noted that humanitarians continue to be hampered by restrictions, including limitations on the entry of so-called “dual use” items and those listed as non-humanitarian in nature. This includes spare parts and certain shelter materials. Humanitarian operations are also being undermined by Israel’s de-registration of some international non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and restrictions imposed on the UN agency that assists Palestine refugees – UNRWA – and sister agencies.
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05 February 2026
‘We are dying’: Gaza’s cancer patients plead for a way out
As World Cancer Day is marked, thousands of patients in Gaza face worsening illness, untreated pain and closed crossings – despite the limited opening of the vital route through Rafah this week.“We are dying. Every day, between two and three patients die inside this hospital,” says Munther Abu Foul, a cancer patient lying on his bed in Gaza’s largest hospital. “I can’t get out of bed because of the pain. We want a solution – open the crossings.”His words capture the reality facing thousands of cancer patients across the Strip, where access to specialist care has collapsed and evacuation for treatment abroad remains out of reach for many.Local health organisations warn that around 11,000 patients are currently deprived of specialised or diagnostic cancer treatment inside Gaza. Some 4,000 patients who received medical referrals to hospitals outside the Strip have been waiting for more than two years to travel.UN News visited Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, documenting the dire conditions inside its oncology department. Patients crowd corridors and wards, waiting for consultations or treatments that are no longer available. Essential medicines and equipment are in short supply, while many patients endure chronic pain that leaves them barely able to move.‘Every day, two or three patients die’Mr. Abu Foul flips through his medical transfer papers, issued long ago for treatment outside Gaza. He has not been able to travel for more than two years.“The health situation in the Gaza Strip is dilapidated,” he says. “There is no treatment or medicines, and we are dying. Every day, two to three patients die here inside this hospital. I can’t get out of bed because of the pain.”He appeals directly for help. “We want a solution. Open the crossings properly so that God will release us from this suffering. Everyone will be held accountable.”Nearby, Mohamed Hammou tends to his elderly mother, who is also battling cancer. He says families are forced to watch loved ones deteriorate without care.“This is how we stand in front of a patient who is dying, without treatment or any medical facilities that help them recover,” he says. “This does not please God and it does not satisfy people. We call on Islamic, Arab and international nations to look at the sick with mercy.”A brother in painIn another ward, Raed Abu Warda cares for his brother Hamid, whose cancer has worsened after long delays in treatment. What began as a small, benign illness has become a life-threatening condition.“He has been suffering from cancer for two years,” Raed explains. “He waited all this time for the crossing to open so he could be treated outside. His pain has increased, as you can see.”He gestures towards a wound that has opened beneath his brother’s chin. “The disease has created this wound, and his condition is getting worse every day. I stand watching my brother and mourning his condition because of the pain.”The number of patients seeking care at Gaza’s oncology departments continues to rise, even as hospitals face severe shortages of medicines, equipment and specialised staff. For newly diagnosed patients, the future is increasingly uncertain.Evacuations far short of needsWith the limited reopening of the Rafah crossing, the World Health Organization (WHO) is supporting the evacuation of patients and their companions from Gaza, focusing on ensuring safe transport. Yet the scale of need far outstrips what is currently possible.More than 18,000 patients – including around 4,000 children – are waiting to be evacuated abroad for medical treatment, according to WHO.The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported last week that Gaza’s Ministry of Health had recorded more than 1,200 patient deaths while people were waiting for medical evacuation. Around 4,000 cancer patients remain on critical waiting lists, trapped between closed crossings and a health system pushed beyond its limits.For patients like Munther Abu Foul, time is running out. “We are dying,” he repeats. “All we ask for is a way to live.”
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03 February 2026
Gaza: Limited Rafah crossing reopening sparks hope – but also ‘massive trepidation’
A senior official with the UN agency that assists the Palestinian people, UNRWA, has said. The sole border point with Egypt is a lifeline to the world – including for thousands of severely ill or injured Palestinians who require medical treatment outside the enclave, where last October’s fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas continues to hold. The development comes, however, following reports of violence over the weekend, with the UN voicing concern over the killing of civilians and Israeli airstrikes. ‘Competing dynamics’ “As we have seen so many times throughout this conflict, we’re seeing really competing dynamics here: on the one hand, positive progress when it comes to the re-opening of Rafah, and yet over the past 24 hours, 30 Palestinians were killed in airstrikes during a ceasefire,” Sam Rose, Acting Director of UNRWA Affairs in Gaza, told the BBC on Sunday. “At the same time, international organizations that are equipped and qualified and capable of doing work, which is urgently needed, are continuing to face major, major constraints.” For this reason, Palestinians in Gaza are feeling “massive trepidation – hope that people will be able to get out, but real, real fear for the future,” he said. UNRWA remains on the ground delivering life-saving assistance in where “fear and uncertainty persist,” the agency said, noting that “access is limited, protection concerns persist, and humanitarian needs remain acute amid ongoing operational constraints.” Limited movement Reopening the Rafah crossing was an integral part of the 20-point peace plan put forward by US President Donald Trump last September, with the ceasefire announced days later. For now, Israel will only allow some 50 Palestinians to enter and exit Gaza each day – and only on foot, international news agencies have reported. The crossing will be coordinated with Egypt and supervised by the European Union (EU), according to the UN humanitarian affairs office, OCHA. Returns will only be permitted for residents who left during the war and after obtaining prior authorisation from the Israeli security services, being checked by the EU at the Rafah crossing point and undergoing a second identification and control process in a designated corridor managed by the Israeli army in an area under its control. Support for returnees OCHA welcomed the reopening of the key border crossing, underscoring that “civilians must be allowed to leave and return voluntarily and safely, as international law requires.” Over the weekend, the UN carried out an advance mission to assess road conditions. The UN Development Programme (UNDP) is set to provide bus transportation for returnees from the internal checkpoint to Nassar hospital in Khan Younis, where several UN agencies and NGO partners have set up a reception area to provide them with support. The reception desk is staffed by psychologists and protection specialists, while food, information materials and internet connectivity are available. Medical evacuations Monday also saw the World Health Organization (WHO) supporting medical evacuation efforts. Some patients and their companions were able to exit Gaza directly to Egypt, while others transited through the Israeli-controlled Kerem Shalom border crossing Israeli authorities approved the travel of only five wounded patients from a list of 27 names submitted to both the Egyptian and Israeli sides, according to Palestinian sources. Treatment beyond borders Families lined up in the courtyard of Al-Amal Hospital in the south of the Gaza Strip to bid farewell to sick relatives, and their travel companions, heading to Egypt to complete their treatment.A UN News correspondent was on hand as buses began preparing to depart, carrying with them the hope that the wounded would return fully recovered. A young boy called Youssef Awad, who uses a wheelchair, was optimistic that he would be able to walk and play again. “I hope to travel for treatment and return walking like other children,” he said.‘Expedite the process’ Another injured child, Ahmed Iyad Abu al-Khair, sat in a wheelchair beside his father, Iyad, awaiting his turn in the medical evacuation convoy heading to the Rafah crossing. Ahmed’s head was covered with a white bandage, and he appeared unable to move while his father tried to comfort him. “We hope that decision-makers and the World Health Organization will expedite the process and help us get my son Ahmed to travel to complete his treatment, as every hour he spends here affects his health.” Thousands still waiting In a protest reflecting the extent of their despair, dozens of injured Palestinians staged a demonstration near the hospital, sitting in their wheelchairs and demanding an increase in the number of people allowed to travel daily which “should be in the hundreds” instead of 50. “We have been waiting for the crossing to open since the beginning of the war, and like many others, we have not been lucky,” said Farid al-Qassas, an injured man. “In this building alone, there are about 100 patients in need of medical referrals, and the number of wounded waiting to travel reaches about 13,000 patients and injured people. We hope that everyone will hear us and save what remains of these patients.”The last medical evacuation through the Rafah crossing was in May 2024. Overall, more than 18,500 patients in Gaza, including 4,000 children, are still waiting to access treatment abroad. “The most effective option would be to resume referrals to the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and rehabilitate damaged health facilities in Gaza,” OCHA said. Until then, UN Member States are urged “to accept more patients so that everyone receives the treatment that they need.” Aid delivery update The agency also stressed that “ultimately, essential humanitarian supplies must enter in sufficient quantities and with fewer restrictions through Rafah and other crossings.” Between 23-29 January, at least 13,800 pallets of humanitarian aid managed by the UN and its partners were unloaded at crossing points. Nearly 60 per cent of these shipments contained food, but also shelter items, school supplies, health items, fuel and nutritional kits. Since the announcement of the ceasefire on 10 October, at least 272,000 pallets of humanitarian goods were unloaded, and 270,000 pallets were collected at the various crossing points.
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Press Release
19 February 2026
Ethnic cleansing concerns in Gaza and West Bank amid intensified violence and forcible transfers by Israel – UN report
During the reporting period, from 1 November 2024 to 31 October 2025 “intensified attacks, the methodical destruction of entire neighbourhoods and the denial of humanitarian assistance appeared to aim at a permanent demographic shift in Gaza”, says the report. “This, together with forcible transfers, which appear to aim at a permanent displacement, raise concerns over ethnic cleansing in Gaza and the West Bank.” In the Gaza strip, the report details the continued killing and maiming of unprecedented numbers of civilians over the course of the reporting period by Israeli forces, the spread of famine, and the destruction of the remaining civilian infrastructure — imposing on Palestinians conditions of life increasingly incompatible with their continued existence in Gaza as a group.The report also says the patterns of deadly attacks witnessed in Gaza raised grave concerns that Israeli forces intentionally targeted civilians and civilian objects, and launched attacks knowing civilian harm would be excessive in relation to the anticipated military advantage. Such acts would constitute war crimes, the report underlined.It details the deaths of at least 463 Palestinians, including 157 children, from starvation in the Gaza strip. The situation of famine and malnutrition, the report notes, was a direct result of actions taken by the Israeli Government, such as the blocking of entry and distribution of humanitarian aid into Gaza. Any use of starvation of the civilian population as a method of war constitutes a war crime, it states, adding that such conduct may also constitute crimes against humanity if committed as part of a systematic or widespread attack against a civilian population, and, if carried out with intent to destroy a national, ethnical, racial or religious group in whole or in part, may also constitute genocide.In the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, the report details the systematic unlawful use of force by Israeli security forces, the widespread arbitrary detention and torture and other ill-treatment of Palestinians in detention, and the extensive unlawful demolition of Palestinian homes. This is “used to systematically discriminate, oppress, control and dominate the Palestinian people”, the report says. The report also points to concerning incidents of unnecessary or disproportionate use of force by the Palestinian Authority.During the reporting period, Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups continued to hold Israeli and foreign hostages seized on 7 October 2023 — along with the bodies of those who died or were killed in captivity — as bargaining tools, says the report. It refers to public testimonies from released hostages describing sexual and gender-based violence, torture, beatings, prolonged underground confinement, and deprivation of food, water and sanitation. The report also documents the death of 79 Palestinians in Israeli detention during the reporting period and highlights that Palestinians detained from Gaza remained particularly vulnerable to torture and other ill-treatment. The report details a “pervasive climate of impunity” for gross human rights violations and serious violations of international humanitarian law by the Israeli authorities in the occupied Palestinian territory, and highlights that no meaningful steps have been taken by Israel’s justice system in relation to accountability for such violations. Among other recommendations, the report urges all States “to cease the sale, transfer and diversion of arms, munitions and other military equipment to Israel facilitating violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law in the occupied Palestinian territory”.“While efforts were underway, by the end of the reporting period, to advance the United States-led ‘Comprehensive Plan to End the Gaza Conflict’ that went into effect on 9 October 2025, the absence of any steps to ensure accountability for violations of international law since 7 October 2023 represented a critical gap,” the report states.“Justice for victims must lay the foundation for the reconstruction of Gaza,” the report says, calling on States to ensure Palestinians’ immediate participation in governance structures to determine and shape the reconstruction of Gaza.“Impunity is not abstract – it kills. Accountability is indispensable. It is the prerequisite for a just and durable peace in Palestine and Israel,” said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk.
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Press Release
18 February 2026
Killing of a child by Palestinian security forces may amount to unlawful killing
Bani Odeh and his wife and children were reportedly driving at the Tammun-Tubas junction when undercover PSF members opened fire on the car, immediately killing 15-year-old Ali, and shooting 5-year-old Ronza in the head, who remains in critical condition. An eyewitness told the UN Human Rights Office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OHCHR OPT) that there was no warning before the shots were fired. The third child, 17-year-old Yazen, was also injured with shrapnel. Beni Odeh himself was reportedly shot in the leg before he was detained and taken away by PSF. Beni Odeh is also wanted by Israeli security forces which had arrested his wife multiple times in an apparent effort to force him to surrender, according to OHCHR OPT monitoring. The incident recalls PSF’s security operation in the northern West Bank between December 2024 and January 2025 which preceded the Israeli security forces’ clearing of the Jenin, Tulkarem and Nur Shams refugee camps in the area. At the time, PSF killed nine Palestinians including four boys, with four others were killed by either PSF or armed Palestinians. Despite PSF’s repeated statements at the time vowing to initiate investigations into killings and to hold perpetrators to account, there has been no available outcome of these reported investigations to date. Following the incident of 15 February, PSF again issued a statement declaring that an investigation is initiated. PSF are bound by international human rights law which strictly limits the use of potentially lethal force in law enforcement to situations where it is necessary to protect life or prevent injury from an imminent threat. Palestinian authorities have an obligation to conduct prompt, thorough and transparent investigations into any use of lethal force by PSF, and, in the case of violations, hold perpetrators accountable.
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Press Release
06 February 2026
Patterns of ill-treatment and coercion reported among Palestinians returning to Gaza
Palestinian returnees reported to the UN Human Rights Office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory being escorted after crossing by armed Palestinians allegedly backed by the Israeli military, to an Israeli military checkpoint. Consistent accounts indicate that some of these armed Palestinians handcuffed and blindfolded returnees, conducted searches, threatened and intimidated, and stole personal belongings and money.Upon arrival at the Israeli checkpoint, returnees described a pattern of violence, degrading interrogations, and invasive body searches, in some cases while blindfolded and handcuffed. They also reported that soldiers denied them access to medical care when needed, and access to bathrooms, resulting in extreme humiliation, including being forced to urinate in public.Several returnees said they were asked whether they would accept money to return to Egypt with their families and never return. Some said that they were offered money to become informants for the Israeli military.Taken together, these accounts point to a pattern of conduct that violates Palestinians’ rights to personal security, dignity, and freedom from torture, ill-treatment, and other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment.The reported pattern of conduct towards returnees raises serious concerns of coercion, discouraging Palestinians from exercising their right to return to areas they were forced to leave, further contributing to the ethnic cleansing of Gaza.“The international community has a responsibility to ensure that all measures affecting Gaza strictly comply with international law and fully respect Palestinians’ human rights,” said Ajith Sunghay, head of the UN Human Rights Office in the OPT. “After two years of utter devastation, being able to return to their families and what remains of their homes in safety and dignity is the bare minimum.”
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Press Release
29 January 2026
OHCHR: Settler violence drives forced displacement in the West Bank
Such settler-driven displacement, particularly in Bedouin and herding communities, usually follows the same pattern: an illegal outpost is erected near or inside a herding community, settlers restrict Palestinians’ access to water and grazing space, settlers repeatedly attack communities, destroy property, infrastructure and livestock, and injure or kill residents.Such attacks have become almost a daily occurrence. Last night, around 300 Israeli settlers attacked Halawa and Al Fakheit villages in Msafer Yatta, Hebron, and injured several Palestinians, torched homes and property, stole livestock, and blocked ambulances that arrived to evacuate the injured.Between 23 and 25 January, at least 10 serious Israeli settler attacks were recorded in Jerusalem, the central and northern West Bank, the Jordan Valley, and the South Hebron Hills. The attacks resulted in extensive property damage, arson attacks, injuries, and forcible displacement of Palestinian families, primarily affecting Bedouin and herding households.One attack displaced four Bedouin families in Al Hadidiya area in the northern Jordan Valley on 23 January. A displaced resident told UN Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OHCHR OPT) that the attack was the last straw since the creation of an Israeli outpost in the area in November 2025. Since then, settlers intensified attacks and restricted grazing areas, while Israeli security forces repeatedly raided homes and detained shepherds. Once home to 17 Bedouin families, only 12 families remain in Al Hadidiya following the establishment of the outpost.Since 7 October 2023, six entire communities comprising 112 families have been forcibly displaced in the northern Jordan Valley under similar conditions, as recorded by OHCHR OPT. In the same period, 4,037 Palestinians have been displaced due to settler violence across the West Bank. This includes the recent displacement of the largest and last standing Bedouin community in the central Jordan Valley, Ras `Ein Al `Auja, after two years of settler violence and harassment. While most displacements are concentrated in Area C and the Jordan Valley, the pace of forcible displacement and settlement expansion in Area B is worryingly increasing, with four outposts built in Area B in 2025.In the meantime, avenues of protection and accountability are increasingly inaccessible to Palestinians, as Israeli security forces fail to protect them, frequently act alongside settlers, and detain or expel international activists providing protective presence.On 24 January, settlers attacked a 62-year-old woman and her 35-year-old son who confronted settlers for trespassing on their land and vandalizing trees on the outskirts of Birzeit village in Ramallah. When Israeli security forces arrived, they detained the son and two more men from the family and ill-treated all three. As of 28 January, the 35-year-old man remains detained. The two other family members were reportedly released, both with multiple fractures suffered while they were detained.Also on 24 January, Israeli security forces raided the Khallet As Sidra Bedouin community near Mikhmas, Jerusalem — a community that came under repeated settler attacks in recent months. Israeli security forces then delivered orders declaring the area a closed military zone for a year applicable to anyone who is not a resident, and forcibly expelled Israeli and international protective presence activists. On 25 January, Israeli settlers assaulted and injured Palestinian herders in Rajoum A’li area in the South Hebron Hills and ran over a 13-year-old Palestinian boy with a tractor, fracturing his leg. Israeli security forces were present during the attack but fired tear gas and stun grenades towards the Palestinian residents.“The law is clear here: Israel must end its unlawful presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, halt settlement expansion, and evacuate all settlers. Forcible transfer of Palestinians within the occupied West Bank is a war crime and may amount to a crime against humanity. Israeli security forces’ unnecessary use of force against Palestinians violates their right to life, safety, and dignity,” said Ajith Sunghay, Head of OHCHR OPT. “And accountability must be ensured for past and ongoing violations of Palestinians’ rights under international law.”
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Press Release
28 January 2026
Sawasya III JP Steering Committee Meeting Endorses 2026 AWP
The meeting was co-chaired by Dr. Ramiz Alakbarov, Deputy Special Coordinator, Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, Officer-in Charge for the Office of the United Nations Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process (UNSCO), and H.E. Judge Mohammed Abdel Ghani Awiwi, Chief Justice and Head of the High Judicial Council, and attended by senior Palestinian officials, development partners, and United Nations representatives.Distinguished participants included H.E. Counselor Sharhabil Al-Zaeem, Minister of Justice, H.E. Mr. Akram Al-Khatib, Attorney General; and H.E. Ms. Samah Abu Own Hamad, Minister of Social Development, and on behalf of H.E. Dr. Mahmoud Al-Habbash, Supreme Judge, , Dr. Maher Khdeir, Chief Justice of the Supreme Sharia Court.The Steering Committee reviewed progress across the justice sector and discussed priorities for 2026 against a backdrop of prolonged crisis, institutional pressure, and significant access constraints—particularly in Gaza and vulnerable areas of the West Bank. Members reaffirmed the critical role of Sawasya III in sustaining justice services, strengthening institutional resilience, and advancing equal access to justice, human rights, and gender equality.In his opening remarks, Dr. Ramiz Alakbarov highlighted the growing strain on the rule of law in Palestine, noting that access to justice is more essential than ever, especially for women and children. He underscored the importance of maintaining functioning justice institutions and essential services, including courts, legal aid, and protection mechanisms, even under extreme conditions.H.E. Judge Mohammed Abdel Ghani Oweiwi reaffirmed the High Judicial Council’s commitment to ensuring justice remains accessible and responsive, emphasizing continued efforts to strengthen people-centred judicial services and expand innovative digital solutions, particularly to support women and children and to prepare for recovery in Gaza “ The 2026 Annual Plan translates our strategic vision into action by strengthening the justice system in line with international human rights standards, advancing institutional and professional judicial development, expanding alternative dispute resolution, and supporting digital transformation to improve efficiency and access to justice, while safeguarding fair trial guarantees. Gaza remains a priority, as the unity of the Palestinian judicial system depends on the continuity and effective functioning of justice institutions there.”The Steering Committee was briefed on key programme updates, including the official closure of Sawasya II, the approval of its final reports, and the strengthening of Sawasya III’s funding base with continued support from the Government of Canada, the European Union, Sweden, the Netherlands, and Spain underpinning the programme’s impact.Representing key donors, AECID Head of Cooperation Mr. Ventura Rodriguez underscored the importance of strengthening legal aid systems and ensuring equal access to justice for all Palestinians, highlighting the programme’s strong partnerships with civil society and national institutions. He reaffirmed partners’ commitment to building institutional resilience, easing pressure on frontline justice actors, and ensuring recovery efforts deliver lasting impact. Looking ahead to 2026, partners remain committed to protecting women, advancing child-sensitive justice approaches, and promoting inclusive, accountable, and sustainable access to justice for all. The endorsed 2026 Annual Work Plan builds on Sawasya’s adaptive engagement across four strategic outcomes, including improving access to integrated legal, psychosocial, protection, and e-justice services, particularly for women, children, and other at-risk groups; Strengthening justice institutions through legal and policy reform, professionalisation, digitisation, and people-centred judicial systems; Shifting societal and institutional behaviours to promote human rights, gender equality, and child-sensitive justice; Advancing women’s access to gender-responsive and inclusive justice, including through One Stop Centres, family prosecution, and strengthened referral systems.Looking ahead, Sawasya III will intensify its focus on Gaza recovery priorities, including law and policy development, alternative dispute resolution, transitional justice, and institutional capacity assessments, while continuing to support justice sector reform, digital transformation, and service delivery across the West Bank.By endorsing the 2026 Annual Work Plan, the Steering Committee reaffirmed its collective commitment to a justice system that protects rights, restores trust, and ensures that justice is accessible, inclusive, and responsive to the needs of all Palestinians.
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