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20 November 2025
Gaza children’s unprecedented mental health crisis
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19 November 2025
Gaza: After Security Council breakthrough, agencies highlight youngsters’ plight
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19 November 2025
Gaza’s Hidden Threats: UNMAS Clears Unexploded Ordnance After Conflict
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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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19 November 2025
Gaza: After Security Council breakthrough, agencies highlight youngsters’ plight
As UN Secretary-General António Guterres hailed Monday’s Security Council resolution paving the way for a consolidated ceasefire via a temporary International Stabilization Force in Gaza, UN aid teams warned that many Palestinian children in the enclave are in no shape to endure another harsh winter.“We're very optimistic that the peace plans will improve the situation,” UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) spokesperson Ricardo Pires said, briefing reporters in Geneva on Tuesday. “But again, the reality for children on the ground continues to be very tragic.”“We’re still in the hypotheticals,” UN aid coordination office (OCHA) spokesperson Jens Laerke said, regarding the Security Council resolution on the US peace plan, stressing that it “needs some meat on the bones”, but recalling the UN chief’s backing for the development.The resolution endorsing the “Comprehensive Plan to End the Gaza Conflict” announced by US President Trump on 29 September received backing from 13 countries on the Security Council. China and Russia abstained from the vote.Catch up on our full coverage of the Security Council resolution here.A Board of PeaceThe resolution welcomes the transitional administration known as the “Board of Peace” - which President Donald Trump will reportedly chair - to establish a temporary international force in Gaza and coordinate reconstruction efforts including the delivery of humanitarian assistance.In a statement issued by his Spokesperson overnight, the UN Secretary-General encouraged respect for the fragile ceasefire by all parties to the conflict, which was sparked by Hamas-led terror attacks in Israel on 7 October 2023.Mr. Guterres acknowledged the “continued diplomatic efforts” of Egypt, Qatar, Türkiye, the United States and regional neighbours regarding the Gaza crisis, before stressing the importance of “moving towards” the second phase of the U.S. Plan, “leading to a political process for the achievement of the two-State solution, in line with previous United Nations resolutions”.Exposed to more hardshipMeanwhile in Gaza, aid agencies stressed on Tuesday that more than two years of destructive war between Hamas fighters and Israel and a chronic lack of all forms of assistance have left the enclave’s people exhausted.In recent days, heavy rains have inundated worn-out tents that are sheltering people displaced multiple times because of the war, said Ricardo Pires, from the UN Children’s Fund, UNICEF.“We are seeing heartbreaking stories of desperate families feeling completely lost and exhausted after their tents got flooded,” he told journalists in Geneva. “When children are sleeping in flooded tents without warm clothing or dry bedding, many lacking the required nutrition, with very low immunity and already traumatized by conflict, winter becomes extremely dangerous.”Mr. Pires noted that the recent bad weather in Gaza has sparked an increase in people seeking medical help – particularly among children weakened by “years of malnutrition, starvation, trauma (and) multiple displacements”.The UNICEF officer also explained that because Israeli forces occupy more than 50 per cent of the enclave, many of the areas where Palestinians have been forced to seek shelter are coastal and the most prone to flooding.Zikim aid boostIn a call for greater aid access, he stressed this was “part of the [peace] deal and we need to see more humanitarian corridors open”.According to OCHA, more than 5,400 metric tonnes of aid were collected between Thursday and Sunday, including shelter, medical and food items. The Zikim border crossing has reopened after staying shut for two months, bringing the number of available crossings to three.Mr. Pires highlighted the importance of Zikim opening and said that recently UNICEF managed to bring in 96 pallets of high energy biscuits destined for the famine-stricken north of Gaza.“We need more, a lot more,” he said. “Hopefully with the new plan, that will become a reality for children and families.”
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18 November 2025
UN Security Council authorizes temporary international force for Gaza
And a temporary international force in the enclave following two years of war. Resolution 2803 (2025) received 13 votes in favour, and none against, with permanent members China and Russia abstaining.The text welcomes the Comprehensive Plan announced by President Trump on 29 September. The first phase of the 20-point plan led to the ceasefire between Hamas and Israel days later.Transitional administration The resolution also welcomes the establishment of a Board of Peace (BoP) “as a transitional administration” in Gaza that will coordinate reconstruction efforts.It authorizes the BoP to establish a temporary International Stabilization Force (ISF) in Gaza “to deploy under unified command acceptable to the BoP”. Countries will contribute personnel to the force “in close consultation and cooperation” with Egypt and Israel. ‘Charting a new course’“Thank you for joining us in charting a new course in the Middle East for Israelis and Palestinians and all the people of the region alike,” US Ambassador Mike Waltz said after the vote.“Today’s resolution represents another significant step towards a stable Gaza that will be able to prosper and an environment that will allow Israel to live in security.”He said the ISF “will stabilize the security environment, support the demilitarization of Gaza, dismantle terrorist infrastructure, decommission weapons and maintain the safety of Palestinian civilians.”Algerian Ambassador Amar Bendjama acknowledged the efforts undertaken by President Trump in advancing peace worldwide – but stressed that genuine peace in the Middle East cannot be achieved “without justice for the Palestinian people who have waited for decades for the establishment of their independent State.”He noted that the text has received the support of Arab and Muslim countries and that “the Palestinian Authority at the highest level has openly welcomed the initiative”.In explaining Russia’s decision to abstain, Ambassador Vasily Nebenzya said the Council was in essence “giving its blessing to a US initiative on the basis of Washington’s promises,” and “giving complete control over the Gaza Strip to the Board of Peace and the ISF, the modalities of which we know nothing about so far.”
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14 November 2025
Gaza: War has made children violent, sad and bereft
Linked to more than two years of war between Hamas and Israel, welfare agencies have reported. Issuing a warning that the children’s sense of stability and security has been eroded as key everyday services have collapsed, humanitarians insist that young Gazans will need “sustained, long-term efforts to recover”.According to child safety partner assessments conducted in September, shared by the UN aid coordination office (OCHA), 93 per cent exhibited aggressive behaviour and 90 per cent were violent towards younger children.Sadness and withdrawal are almost as common (86 per cent), along with disturbed sleep (79 per cent) and widespread refusal to study (69 per cent).Violence every dayWhile a fragile ceasefire holds, the deadly violence and insecurity have not ended entirely, with Israeli military strikes near or east of the so-called “Yellow Line”.This is where the Israeli military remains deployed, amounting to more than 50 per cent of the Gaza Strip, OCHA said.In an update, the UN aid office noted that access to the sea remains prohibited; it also cited reports that Palestinian fishers continue to be detained at sea by Israeli forces.“In areas beyond the ‘Yellow Line’…daily detonations of residential buildings continue to be reported and access to humanitarian assets, public infrastructure and agricultural land remains restricted or altogether barred,” the OCHA update states.One million still homelessOut of Gaza’s 2.1 million population, approximately a million live in 862 displacement sites today.More than half of these sites are in the southernmost area of Khan Younis, 264 are in Deir al Balah, 180 are in Gaza and North Gaza governorates and eight are in Rafah.Many camps are overcrowded, increasing the dangers for girls and children – particularly those with disabilities at risk from violence, neglect and dangerous access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) facilities.The UN Palestine relief agency, UNRWA, said that around 75,000 people are living in around 100 of its designated shelters and surrounding areas.Rising anxietyUN aid partners providing assistance to youngsters report that they suffer from heightened anxiety, behavioural changes and growing concern over the ongoing lack of safe spaces.In the four weeks since an agreed pause in fighting, humanitarian partners have delivered child protection services to more than 132,000 across the Gaza Strip. This includes nearly 1,600 children with disabilities and 45,000 caregivers, OCHA said.Assistance has included individual psychological consultations, group sessions, stress management activities, recreational psychosocial support and referrals for further help.The aim is to reach more than 100,000 children each month to address the needs of nearly one million children in the Gaza Strip.The development came as the Israeli authorities announced the reopening of Zikim crossing following an eight-week closure.The crossing links Israel and northern Gaza and will reopen for humanitarian cargo, OCHA said. In recent weeks, the UN has been repairing the road leading to Zikim inside Gaza in preparation for the reopening and is now carrying out final checks – including for potential explosive hazards – to enable the resumption of cargo collection.
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11 November 2025
Gazans continue heading home as ‘fragile ceasefire’ holds
Staff remain on the ground providing lifesaving services, and some 100 UNRWA shelters are housing more than 75,000 displaced people, according to a tweet.Following two years of deadly conflict, a “catch-up” campaign to immunise some 44,000 children under the age of three against measles, mumps and other illnesses kicked off on Sunday. They will also be screened for malnutrition.Khawla, a mother-of-three from Beit Lahia in the north, told the UN that she arrived at a vaccination point in the Nussirat area on foot “just to get my children vaccinated and to make sure my daughter stays healthy too.”UN access criticalUN aid coordination office OCHA added that “across Gaza, partners supported by the Occupied Palestinian Territory Humanitarian Fund are helping families replant fields, learn in safety, access protection services and more” and “these efforts are offering a fragile but vital lifeline.”In an opinion piece first published in The Guardian, UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini wrote that the “fragile ceasefire – the first phase of US president Donald Trump’s 20-point plan – offers some respite to an exhausted population.”He warned, however, that “there is still much to worry about” as “access to shelter, food and clean water remains challenging” as winter fast approaches. “The UN, including UNRWA, has the expertise and the resources to address critical humanitarian needs effectively and at scale” but “must be allowed to work freely and independently”, he said.Mr. Lazzarini stressed that “a truly peaceful future requires a genuine investment in a definitive political solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict.” He added that “justice needs to be delivered, and healing seriously addressed by both Palestinian and Israeli societies.”Red tape still blocking aidMeanwhile, efforts to ramp up aid are still being hampered by red tape, ongoing bans on key humanitarian partners, too few border crossings and routes, as well as persistent insecurity, UN Deputy Spokesperson Farhan Haq told journalists in New York.This past weekend, teams reported shelling and navy fire in different parts of the Strip “though at much lower levels than before the ceasefire.” In some areas, teams still have to coordinate every movement in advance with the Israeli authorities. On Sunday, only two out of eight coordination attempts were fully facilitated. Four were impeded on the ground – including one that was delayed for 10 hours.Despite the challenges, the UN and partners “are seizing every opportunity to expand operations.”Damaged hospital rehabilitatedMr. Haq said the Al Kheir Hospital in Khan Younis resumed operations last week after being forced out of service following attacks in February 2024. The World Health Organization (WHO) supported the rehabilitation by restoring water, sanitation, power and structural systems, and providing essential medical equipment and medicines. “WHO also set up a new 20-bed nutrition stabilization centre at the hospital to treat children with acute and severe malnutrition. This brings the total across Gaza to seven such centres, with 70 inpatient beds in all,” said Mr. Haq.Psychosocial support, winter clothing and waterBetween Wednesday and Friday, humanitarian partners reached 1,500 children and 500 caregivers in southern Gaza with mental health and psychosocial support.Nearly 40,000 winter clothing kits and pairs of shoes have been distributed to children under 10.Around 50,000 blankets were delivered between Wednesday and Saturday to hospitals and other sites.Water trucking continues across 2,000 locations in Gaza, restoring access to safe water.Partners have also distributed 15,000 hygiene kits and repaired a key water line in Gaza City’s Az Zaytoun neighbourhood, restoring part of the domestic supply. West Bank ‘lifeline’UNRWA also “remains a lifeline” in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, where an Israeli military operation in the north, launched at the beginning of the year, has resulted in displacement and destruction.At the same time, settler violence has been escalating amid a shrinking humanitarian space.The Director of UNRWA Affairs in the West Bank, Roland Friedrich, said the agency has over 4,600 staff there, making it the second biggest service provider and employer after the Palestinian Authority.They support over 930,000 registered refugees across the territory.Healthcare and educationMore than 48,000 children attend 96 UNRWA schools five days a week while 43 health facilities have carried out more than 700,000 medical consultations so far this year.“We have 270,000 vulnerable Palestinian refugees that benefit from social protection, from cash assistance,” he said in a video posted on social media.“And we do that in a context, in a humanitarian situation, that is the most severe that the West Bank has seen since 1967.”Wide-ranging impactMr. Friedrich said the “unprecedented escalation of violence” in the north has displaced more than 30,000 people from three refugee camps.“UNRWA remains a lifeline,” he said.“We make a distinct contribution, not only to addressing the humanitarian needs of Palestine refugees in the West Bank, and to improving their livelihood and their welfare, but we also make a distinct contribution to stability on the ground and in the region.”
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06 November 2025
Catch-up immunisation campaign ‘a lifeline’ for Gaza’s children
cut off from essential life-saving services due to the devastating conflict.Estimates indicate one in five children under three are either zero-dose or have missed vaccinations because of the war, putting them at risk of vaccine-preventable disease outbreaks.The catch-up campaign aims to inoculate these children against measles, mumps, and rubella, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, hepatitis B, tuberculosis, polio, rotavirus and pneumonia.It will be carried out by the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the UN Palestine refugee agency, UNRWA, the World Health Organization (WHO) and partners, in collaboration with the Gaza Ministry of Health.‘A moral imperative’To help address the devastating impacts of the conflict on children’s health and nutrition, UNICEF and partners will also screen children for malnutrition and ensure that those who have the condition receive treatment and ongoing follow-up. “After two years of relentless violence that claimed the lives of more than 20,000 children in the Gaza Strip, we finally have an opportunity to protect those who survived,” said Jonathan Veitch, UNICEF Special Representative in the State of Palestine.“Vaccinating every child, and supporting their health and nutrition, is not just a humanitarian intervention; it is a moral imperative. It is how we safeguard the future of children born into catastrophe and begin to rebuild hope in the midst of devastation.”Hundreds of workers trainedThe campaign will be implemented in three rounds, beginning 9 to 18 November.More than 450 health workers and support staff have been trained to support vaccination efforts.Additionally, 149 medical doctors have been trained to recognize, report and investigate any health concerns post immunisation – though such cases are extremely rare. ‘Much more is needed’“This immunisation campaign is a lifeline, protecting children’s health and restoring hope for the future,” said Dr. Richard Peeperkorn, WHO Representative in the occupied Palestinian territory. He stressed, however, that “much more is needed, and WHO is working to rebuild Gaza’s fragile health system so every child, every community, can access the care they deserve.”Before the conflict, Gaza maintained 54 immunization facilities. It was also among the world’s leaders in childhood vaccination coverage, with a 98 per cent rate.Today, 31 immunisation facilities are no longer operational, having been damaged or destroyed in indiscriminate attacks, while routine vaccination coverage is now below 70 per cent.The final two phases of the campaign, which aim to provide children with their second and third doses of the vaccines, are planned for December and January. In 2024, the UN and partners launched a mass campaign across the Gaza Strip to vaccinate children against polio.Humanitarian scale-up continuesMeanwhile, humanitarians continue to reach more people every day in Gaza, despite access restrictions, bureaucratic hurdles and other impediments, UN Deputy Spokesperson Farhan Haq said on Wednesday in New York.The UN and partners have supported a scale-up in daily meals being served by 183 community kitchens across the Strip, which topped 1.2 million meals on Monday. This represents an increase of more than 80 per cent compared with September.Humanitarians are also providing families with food parcels and other forms of food assistance. They are also working to improve access to water supplies, with more than 40 partner organizations operating nearly 1,900 water points. Over the past few days, some 4,400 hygiene kits, 2,900 buckets, 3,700 jerrycans along with hundreds of tarpaulins and tents were distributed to people in need. Displaced families also received cash voucher assistance for clothing ahead of the winter.Aid on the moveThe UN and partners also keep moving cargo into Gaza and collecting more supplies from border crossings.“On Monday, we were able to offload over 180 truckloads of critical supplies at the crossings, including more than 1,500 metric tonnes of food,” said Mr. Haq.“And yesterday, our teams collected about 120 truckloads inside Gaza, carrying more than 580 pallets of blankets, tents, winter clothes, hygiene items and more.”Teams also collected over 150,000 litres of fuel and over 90 metric tonnes of animal fodder. Mr. Haq noted that although the humanitarian scale-up in is well underway, much more is needed.“The UN and our partners are actively engaging with relevant authorities and all those with influence to secure the lifting of obstacles and restrictions so that we can truly leave no one behind,” he said.
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05 November 2025
Gaza: Aid teams race to push back hunger; one million food parcels delivered
UN humanitarians said, as they issued fresh calls for wider access and continued financial support.Last month, hundreds of thousands of people returned to northern Gaza – where famine was declared at the end of August – but their access to food is “severely limited”, said Abeer Etefa, Senior Spokesperson at the World Food Programme (WFP). And while many returnees have found their homes in ruins, the displaced who remain in the south are “often living in tents and without access to food and services”, she warned.Speaking from Cairo, Ms. Etefa said that three and a half weeks into the fragile ceasefire, WFP has distributed food parcels to around a million people across the Strip against a target of 1.6 million, as “part of the broad operation to push back hunger in Gaza”.“Supplies are still limited, so each family is receiving a reduced food ration, which is one parcel, and that's enough food for 10 days,” she explained.To continue to expand operations to the level required, "we really need more access, more border crossings to be opened and… more access to key roads inside Gaza”, the WFP spokesperson insisted.Aid crossings still closedUN aid coordination office OCHA said on Monday that no food aid convoy has reached the north via any direct crossings since 12 September.“We still have only two border crossing points that are operational,” Ms. Etefa emphasized, referring to Kerem Shalom in the south of the enclave and Kissufim in central Gaza. “This severely limits the quantity of aid that WFP and other agencies are able to bring in to stabilize the markets and to address people's needs,” she said, highlighting the fact that the continued closure of the northern crossings into the Gaza Strip means that aid convoys are obliged to “follow a slow, difficult route from the south.”The UN food relief agency spokesperson also said that some 700,000 people receive fresh bread on a daily basis through 17 WFP-supported bakeries, nine in south and central Gaza and eight in the north, with a goal to ramp up to 25.Speaking from Gaza, WFP Communications Officer Nour Hammad said that while she was witnessing “apocalyptic scenes” across the enclave she also saw on people’s faces “the joy that the guns have fallen silent after all this time and the fear of whether or not the silence will last”.She said that Gazans likened the destruction brought on by over two years of war to “the aftermath of an earthquake”.'This help matters'“In every distribution point I have been to across the Gaza Strip over the past couple of days, people tell me one thing: this assistance matters,” she said. After months of “surviving on bits and pieces, rationing food, stretching one meal over days”, people are finally accessing “fresh bread, food parcels, cash transfers, nutrition and support”.“This is where the journey to recovery starts,” she stressed.While 200,000 of the most vulnerable are now receiving digital cash payments in order to “complement the food baskets with fresh foods” from local markets, prices there remain prohibitive.“Food is slowly coming back to the shelves, but prices are still beyond the reach of families, considering… that they have depleted their resources to survive two years of war,” Ms. Hammad said. “Today, for example, I buy one apple at the cost of a kilo before the war,” she explained.The fragility of the ceasefire and of aid flows is at the centre of people’s preoccupations, Ms. Hammad said, as she told the story of a displaced mother whom she met in Gaza City. Even though the woman is receiving assistance she has warned her children against eating the rations right away as “she cannot trust that tomorrow we'll bring food too,” the WFP communicator said.“Families invite us into their tents…worn out by winter cold and summer heat, and they want to show us their reality. And their reality is that people need food. People need shelter, people need warm clothing because winter is around the corner and they need continued support,” she concluded.
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04 November 2025
Gaza: Food access improves in the south but food convoys fail to reach north directly
One in two households surveyed reported better access because of increasing commercial and aid deliveries.OCHA warned however that no food aid convoy has reached the north via any direct crossings since 12 September.Despite ongoing dire conditions in northern Gaza, the UN agency said that around 90 per cent of the estimated 29,000 people who moved inside the Strip at the weekend were travelling from the south to the north.Trucks and suppliesThe UN and partners on Saturday collected nearly 200 truckloads of essential supplies from Israeli crossings along the perimeter fence that encircles Gaza.Among the supplies were nearly 1,900 metric tonnes of different food items, wheat flour and over 100 pallets of food boxes.The supplies also included over 1,000 pallets of mattresses, blankets, tents, tarpaulins and winter clothes; 300 pallets full of hygiene kits, buckets, water containers, and jerry cans; 50 pallets of fortified cereals; and some 200 pallets of dignity kits, menstrual health kits, and midwifery supplies.On Sunday – based on initial data – UN teams collected nearly 1,000 pallets of blankets, tents, hygiene kits, water tanks, mats, winter clothes, tarpaulins and jerry cans, alongside one truckload of animal fodder.“All of this data is preliminary, and it covers the UN and our partners but does not include bilateral donations and the commercial sector,” UN Deputy Spokesperson Farhan Haq told reporters in New York on Monday.Meals and nutritionThe UN and partners are supporting 17 bakeries in Gaza – nine in the south and eight in the north – which produce 150,000 bread bundles every day, according to latest figures.“We’re also supporting 180 kitchens serving nearly 1,160,000 meals every day,” Mr. Haq continued. “On the nutrition front, we are currently supporting 133 treatment sites, including 20 in Gaza City, where famine was confirmed in August.”On Saturday and Sunday, teams also delivered 1,000 tarpaulins and 2,500 blankets to people in need.Since the ceasefire, the UN reproductive health agency, UNFPA, has supported an estimated 90,000 women and girls with reproductive health and hygiene items.IncubatorsThis includes the distribution of medical equipment and supplies to 13 health facilities across the Strip, including incubators and surgery equipment, Mr. Haq saidUNFPA has also distributed thousands of post-partum kits and dignity kits to women and girls.Meanwhile, renovation is ongoing in four schools, and, over the past three days, the UN and our partners have supported the reopening of five temporary learning spaces in Gaza City.
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28 October 2025
Desperate need for water and food continues as Gaza families head north
Many families are returning to shattered neighbourhoods where unstable buildings and unexploded ordnance pose deadly risks.“Water, food and essential services are still desperately needed,” OCHA said, as humanitarian partners race to meet soaring demand amid widespread destruction.Aid is getting inAid continues to enter Gaza, with more than 300 truckloads of supplies collected from the Palestinian side of the Kerem Shalom crossing between Friday and Saturday.The cargo included thousands of pallets of wheat flour, canned food, rice and supplies for hot meals, alongside medical equipment, tents, tarpaulins and winter clothing.While data from Sunday’s deliveries is still being compiled, the UN confirmed that hygiene kits, post-partum kits and shelter materials entered the Strip.The UN Office for Project Services which provides comprehensive emergency services (UNOPS) also distributed some 329,000 litres of diesel to keep hospitals, telecommunications and food operations running.Hot meals and breadHumanitarian partners, working with 170 community kitchens, have now provided more than one million hot meals – mostly in southern and central Gaza.In Deir al Balah, Khan Younis and Gaza City, 15 UN-supported bakeries are producing tens of thousands of bundles of bread daily, distributed free to shelters and communities across hundreds of sites.Teams are also expanding work to reduce the risk from unexploded ordnance – largely from the Israeli offensive – as people begin returning to their homes.Over the weekend, nearly 3,200 people in central and southern Gaza received safety briefings. Since October 2023, OCHA says, there have been 150 explosive ordnance incidents causing casualties, including among children.Olive grove attacks: West BankIn the occupied West Bank, OCHA reported ongoing violence linked to the olive harvest season, which began on 9 October.More than 85 settler attacks on Palestinian farmers and their land have disrupted harvesting, injuring over 110 people and damaging more than 3,000 trees across 50 villages.Seventeen attacks were recorded last week alone, mostly in the Ramallah governorate. “These repeated incidents have devastated livelihoods and deepened fears among farming communities,” OCHA said.Despite the aid inflows, the UN warns that Gaza’s humanitarian needs remain overwhelming, with food, water and shelter still in critically short supply as families risk everything to return home.
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24 October 2025
UN Official Calls for Swift Action to Secure Fragile Peace in Gaza
“After two years of devastating war and unimaginable human suffering, we now have an opportunity to conclude a dark chapter in the history of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and set the course for a more just and peaceful future,” said Ramiz Alakbarov, Deputy Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process. Since the ceasefire took effect, the UN and its partners have launched a 60-day response plan. Aid deliveries rose by 46 per cent in the first week, supported by Israeli facilitation and tracking through the UN 2720 Mechanism for Gaza. “But this is not enough,” he warned, stressing that meeting humanitarian targets requires more crossings, safe corridors, and unrestricted entry of goods, fuel, and humanitarian staff.Reconstruction, he added, “must be a collective, Palestinian-led effort.” Working with the Palestinian Authority, international partners, civil society and the private sector, the UN stands ready to coordinate recovery efforts in line with the ceasefire, the New York Declaration and the Arab Plan for Recovery and Reconstruction.A ‘Momentous But Precarious’ JunctureMr. Alakbarov called for the immediate release of remaining deceased hostages and large-scale humanitarian access across Gaza. “All parties must abide by their commitments under the deal and agreements should be reached to implement the next phase.”Reconstruction, meanwhile, will require “a collective effort and should be Palestinian-led”, he said. Working with the Palestinian Authority, international partners, civil society and the private sector, the UN is ready to help coordinate recovery efforts in accordance with the ceasefire, the New York Declaration and the Arab Plan for Recovery and Reconstruction.“We are at a momentous but precarious juncture,” Mr. Alakbarov said. President Trump’s 20-point plan and the Sharm el-Sheikh Agreement to End the War in Gaza have created “a viable path towards ending the war”. The upcoming Cairo Reconstruction Conference — co-hosted by Egypt, the Palestinian Authority and the UN — will advance recovery and rebuilding efforts.For its part, the UN will continue to support all efforts to end the occupation and resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, in line with international law and UN resolutions, he said. This is critical to realize “a two-State solution — Israel and Palestine, of which Gaza is an integral part — living side by side in peace and security within secure and recognized borders, on the basis of pre-1967 lines, with Jerusalem as the capital of both States”.
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23 October 2025
Israel is obliged to let aid flow into Occupied Palestinian Territory, says World Court
The International Court of Justice (ICJ) says that Israel must uphold its responsibilities as the “occupying power” by ensuring aid can flow freely and by respecting the rights of the UN and other humanitarian agencies working in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.In a detailed advisory opinion requested by the General Assembly, the UN’s top court found that Israel is required to “ensure that the population of the Occupied Palestinian Territory [OPT] has the essential supplies of daily life, including food, water, clothing, bedding, shelter, fuel, medical supplies and services.”The court called on Israel to also “respect and protect” all aid workers, medical personnel and facilities.By ten votes to one, judges also held that Israel “has an obligation” to cooperate in good faith with the UN, “providing every assistance in any action it takes in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations,” including the Palestine refugee relief agency, UNRWA.UN Secretary-General António Guterres described the ICJ opinion as “very important”, adding that it came at a moment when the UN is doing all it can to surge aid into Gaza following the ceasefire.The opinion – requested in December 2024 – addresses Israel’s obligations in relations to the UN and other international organizations and countries vested in humanitarian operations in Palestine.In a sign of the level of international engagement in the case, 45 States and organizations filed written statements, and 39 presented oral arguments during hearings held from 28 April to 2 May 2025.Why the court mattersThe ICJ, based in The Hague, is the principal judicial organ of the United Nations.It settles legal disputes between States and gives advisory opinions at the request of UN bodies.The opinions are not legally binding, but they carry significant moral and legal authority and often guide international policy and practice.Bound by international lawThe ICJ held that Israel is bound by international humanitarian law and human rights law to respect and protect civilians in the OPT, ensuring that aid workers and medical facilities are safeguarded and that no civilians are forcibly transferred or deprived of food.Ten of the eleven judges agreed that Israel must respect the privileges and immunities of the UN and its officials, in accordance with the UN Charter. This includes “the inviolability” of all UN premises – including those managed by UNRWA.Vice-President Julia Sebutinde of Uganda cast the sole dissenting vote in several sections.The ICJ also reaffirmed Israel’s obligation to allow the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) access to detainees in the OPT and to “respect the prohibition on the use of starvation of civilians as a method of warfare.”Israel’s Foreign Ministry said in a social media post that it “categorically rejects” the ICJ’s advisory opinion, describing it as “yet another political attempt to impose political measures against Israel.”
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Press Release
18 November 2025
The Ramallah Municipality launches the first Palestinian VLR as part of Inter-regional SDG Localization Workshop
Amman, 12 November 2025, as part of the Inter-regional SDG Localization Workshop, the Ramallah Municipality launched its first Voluntary Local Review during a special session held in the Jordanian capital, with the participation of representatives from the United Nations, local governments, civil society, and academia from across the Arab region.This initiative comes within the framework of local and regional efforts aimed at localizing the Sustainable Development Goals in Palestine. The activity was carried out under the project titled “Fostering COVID-19 recovery and SDG implementation through local action in Asia-Pacific, Arab and African countries”. Such reviews have become a key tool for localizing the seventeen Sustainable Development Goals globally. They represent a pioneering approach that strengthens the capacity of cities to measure progress, share experiences, and align policies based on clear evidence.The Ramallah Municipality has adopted a participatory approach, led by a steering committee comprising the Ministries of Planning and International Cooperation and the Ministry of Local Government, Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, the Association of Palestinian Local Authorities, in addition to representatives from various departments within the Ramallah Municipality, alongside the Municipal Council for Children and a number of active civil society organizations contributing to the city’s social and cultural identity. This document serves as a roadmap for aligning Ramallah City’s strategic objectives and local development plans with global sustainability standards, by highlighting progress made across six key Sustainable Development Goals: Quality Education (Goal 4), Decent Work and Economic Growth (Goal 8), Sustainable Cities and Communities (Goal 11), Climate Action (Goal 13), Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions (Goal 16), and Partnerships for the Goals (Goal 17).In this context, Ms. Rania Hedeya, Regional Director of UN-Habitat, emphasized that “Ramallah today is part of a growing regional and global movement of cities striving to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals,” underscoring that “UN-Habitat remains committed to translating the Sustainable Development Goals into tangible realities across the Arab region, with a particular focus on Goal 11, which concerns building inclusive, safe, and resilient cities.”Mr. Ahmed Abu Luban, City Director and Chair of the steering committee for the Voluntary Local Review, also emphasized that “sustainable development begins in cities, and despite the significant challenges, Ramallah is moving forward with confident steps.” He noted that “this review was not merely a moment for assessment and evaluation, but a platform for development and change.” He further affirmed that this initiative, in alignment with Ramallah Municipality’s strategy and vision, complements the municipality’s other initiatives, as “we view each initiative as a link in an interconnected and integrated chain, reflecting our understanding and commitment to a Horizontal Integrative Approach.”
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Press Release
07 November 2025
Mass demolition orders threaten forced displacement in Umm Al Khair–South Hebron Hills
The demolition orders threaten a new wave of forced displacement of Umm Al Khair residents—a community of 35 extended families who have lived there since their expulsion from their lands in Negev during the mass forcible displacement of Palestinians in 1948-1949, known as the Nakba. For years, Israeli authorities have subjected Umm Al Khair residents to persistent discriminatory land regulations enforced by the Israeli Civil Administration, as well as several rounds of systematic Israeli demolitions of Palestinian structures and associated displacements. Similar to other Palestinian villages in the South Hebron Hills and nearby Masafer Yatta, the Israeli authorities consider most Palestinian structures in Umm Al Khair to be illegal for lacking Israeli building permits, which are almost impossible for Palestinians to obtain. In the meantime, Israeli settlers have been allowed to expand settlements and to build new outposts connected to the nearby Carmel settlement. In September, settlers erected an outpost in the centre of Umm Al Khair and intensified harassment of the Palestinian residents to force them to leave. Despite a temporary injunction order issued by the Jerusalem District Court to stop construction and bar settlers from entering the outpost, authorities have taken no action to enforce the order, in stark contrast to the frequent and swift demolitions of Palestinian structures. The impunity extends to unchecked settler violence, which has surged since 7 October 2023. On 28 July 2025, a well-known Israeli settler shot and killed Palestinian rights defender Owdeh Hathaleen during a protest against the construction of a new settlement road on the community land. Hathaleen recorded his own shooting, and a video filmed by another resident clearly identified the shooter. But the accused was detained on house arrest for three days and then released with no further consequences. In 2024, the International Court of Justice concluded that Israel’s expansion of settlements, demolition of Palestinian homes and property, movement restrictions, and discriminatory zoning measures have created a coercive environment compelling the displacement of Palestinians, which constitutes forcible transfer and amounts to a war crime. “The case of Umm Al Khair is emblematic of an ever-escalating wave of Israeli steps to consolidate its annexation of the West Bank, particularly Area C, in violation of international law,” said Ajith Sunghay, Head of the UN Human Rights office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. “Time is ticking. The international community must exercise pressure to protect Umm Al Khair residents from the imminent threat of forced displacement, and from any further violence and dispossession.”
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Press Release
28 October 2025
Israeli settler attacks surging: displacement and steps to annex intensify in the occupied West Bank
The olive harvestOn 24 October, a video verified by the UN Human Rights office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory shows an Israeli settler, joined by Israeli security forces, together severely assaulting a 58-year-old olive farmer in Nahhalin, Bethlehem.The Israeli military said the incident is being investigated. However, settlers and Israeli security forces have so far enjoyed complete impunity for attacks against Palestinians, even deadly ones. Attacks against Bedouin communitiesSettler violence is escalating far beyond the olive harvest season, making life impossible for Palestinians in many communities across the occupied West Bank and leaving them with no genuine choice but to leave their homes.In another grave incident on Saturday, 25 October, a mob of masked Israeli settlers first attacked Palestinians picking olives in Mikhmas, then set fire to six Palestinian homes in the nearby Khallet As Sidra, a Bedouin Palestinian community northeast of occupied East Jerusalem.According to monitoring by the UN Human Rights office, the community, like many others in the West Bank, has been repeatedly attacked by Israeli settlers over the past two years to force residents to leave and expand illegal outposts in the area. Recently, all Palestinian women and children relocated from Khillet As Sidra for safety reasons, and the men stayed to prevent seizure of their homes by settlers. The Saturday arson reportedly engulfed several of the homes held by the remaining men. During the attack, settlers also injured five Palestinian men and two Israeli women solidarity activists. As Israel escalates its campaign of forced transfer to clear large swaths of the occupied West Bank from Palestinian residents, entire Bedouin communities have been displaced over the past two years. According to the UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), about 3,200 Palestinians from dozens of Bedouin and herding communities have been forcibly displaced by settler violence and movement restrictions since 7 October 2023, mostly from Area C. Consolidating annexationOver the past year, there have been 84 new settler outposts compared to 49 the year before, according to data from the Israeli NGO Peace Now. This marks a rapid escalation compared to the yearly average of eight outposts in the past decade. In association, settler violence is also surging with 757 attacks recorded in the first half of 2025 alone- 13 per cent higher than the same period last year. Most attacks have been recorded in Area C, which is increasingly being emptied of Palestinians. However, the UN Human Rights office has also been increasingly documenting attacks in Area B, indicating an ever-shrinking space for Palestinians. The International Court of Justice concluded that the occupation must end, and Israel must withdraw from all the Occupied Palestinian Territory, both the West Bank and Gaza. This includes immediately dismantling all settlements and evacuating all settlers.
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Press Release
23 October 2025
With UN-Habitat support, 25 families in Gaza Strip will start repairing their homes
Gaza, 22 October 2025 - Amidst critical humanitarian needs, the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat), in partnership with the Palestinian Housing Council (PHC) and with generous funding from the Government of Japan, has launched a vital initiative to rehabilitate partially damaged homes in the Gaza Strip. Implemented under the project “Urgent Early Recovery and Resilience Building Towards Reconstruction in the Gaza Strip,” this intervention supports immediate relief efforts while empowering affected families to rebuild their homes with dignity. By adopting a self-help approach, the project empowers affected communities to take an active role in repairing and rehabilitating their own homes, fostering a sense of ownership, resilience, and recovery.As winter approaches in Gaza, and in light of the recent positive developments following the announcement of a ceasefire, this intervention comes at a crucial moment. The initiative is critical for the well-being of families who lost their homes and have been enduring dire living conditions. This community-driven model not only addresses urgent shelter needs but also contributes to alleviating the broader humanitarian crisis. It provides emotional and social support by helping families return to their original homes, restoring a sense of stability and normalcy in their lives.Ms. Rania Hedeya, Regional Director of UN-Habitat, highlighted that “the importance of this initiative goes beyond addressing the immediate and urgent needs of affected families. Its true value lies in its scalability and sustainability, as it offers a replicable model that strengthens community engagement, promotes livelihood opportunities, and ensures cost-effective and efficient implementation. Through the self-help approach, this model can be expanded across multiple neighbourhoods in the Gaza Strip, empowering communities to actively participate in the recovery and reconstruction process.” On the work methodology and implementation on the ground, Chairman of the PHC, Dr. Samih Al Abed, explained that PHC implements a locally led, area-based self-help model: “we begin with rapid structural-safety assessments, prioritize households through dynamic maps, issue clear technical guidance and standardized materials lists, and disburse targeted grants on payments linked with the achievement under mutual-commitment agreements. Then we verify quality through field visits and digital monitoring to ensure safe, dignified, and cost-effective repairs that accelerate families’ return home.”Ambassador for the Palestinian Affairs and Representative of Japan to Palestine Mr. ARAIKE Katsuhiko stated: “Japan remains steadfast in its support for the Palestinian people facing dire situation through various projects including this which is implemented by UN-Habitat to help rebuild lives and strengthen communities through community-led housing rehabilitation. Japan continues to be committed to working hand in hand with our partners in the Palestinian government, civil society, and the private sector to improve the humanitarian and economic situation in Gaza Strip and West Bank, and strengthen the bonds of friendship and cooperation between Japan and Palestine.”
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Press Release
17 October 2025
1001 Palestinians killed in West Bank since 7 October 2023 - one in five are children
The fatality brings the total number of Palestinian killed by ISF and settlers since 7 October 2023 in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, to 1001. One in five of the victims is a child including 206 boys and 7 girls. The number also includes 20 women and at least 7 persons with disabilities. This does not include Palestinians who died in Israeli detention during the same period.The figure represents 43 per cent of all Palestinians killed in the occupied West Bank in the past 20 years.Since 7 October 2023, 59 Israelis have been killed in Palestinian attacks or armed clashes in the West Bank and Israel, including 16 women and 5 children. Twenty-two of the Israeli fatalities were members of the Israeli security forces.Documentation by the UN Human Rights Office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory attributes this staggering number of killings of Palestinians to the ISF’s systematic use of lethal force against Palestinians in the vast majority of cases, including live fire, airstrikes, and shoulder-fired missiles, in an unlawful, unnecessary, and disproportionate manner, with evident disregard for Palestinians’ right to life, including children.The youngest of the fatalities is two-year-old Laila Khatib, who was shot to death by ISF while in the bedroom of her house in As Shuhada, Jenin. Laila was killed on 25 January 2025 during the Israeli operation known as “Iron Wall,” which resulted in the emptying of three Palestinian refugee camps in Jenin and Tulkarem. In another recent example of child killings, on 8 September, Islam Majarmeh and Mohammad Musaqla, both aged 14, were killed by ISF while trying to get back into Jenin refugee camp, posing no threat whatsoever to soldiers.According to the UN Human Rights Office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, among the 968 Palestinians killed by ISF, almost half (449) were unarmed, and not involved in any violence or confrontation at the time of their killing. One hundred and seventy-four Palestinians, including 71 children, were killed while throwing stones or Molotov cocktails, often at well-equipped and protected ISF or ISF vehicles. In both cases, the use of lethal force appears unnecessary and disproportionate.Seventy-nine Palestinians were killed in attacks and alleged attacks against Israelis, and 247 during exchange of fire with ISF following ISF incursions into Palestinian towns and villages. In many of these cases, the lethal force used appears either unnecessary or disproportionate, which requires full investigation, and where the ISF may be required to explain in what circumstances it became necessary to use lethal force, and what other measures were taken to protect the right to life.At least 331 of these killings raise serious concerns of extrajudicial executions, including the targeted killing of Palestinians accused of participating in or planning attacks against Israelis, as well as the intentional killing of Palestinians only perceived to pose a threat, or no longer posing a threat.Confirming consistent patterns of intentional killings, the UN Human Rights Office documented that among 640 Palestinians killed with live ammunition by ISF, at least in 55 per cent (or 355) were shot in the head or other upper part of the body. In at least 244 of the cases, ISF delayed or obstructed medical assistance to those injured.Despite the absence of hostilities in the occupied West Bank, ISF launched 108 airstrikes and used other weapons designated for warfare to mainly target refugee camps in Jenin, Tulkarem, Tubas, and Nablus. During these operations, ISF killed 445 Palestinians (361 men, 10 women, 70 boys, 4 girls), of whom 258 by airstrikes and 46 by shoulder-fired projectiles, destroyed large parts of the camps, and forcibly displaced between 30,000 and 40,000 Palestinians. While ISF claims that those killed were “terrorists” during such operations, the UN Human Rights Office has verified that the majority of them were unarmed, potentially indicating systematic unlawful killings.Many other cases appear to reflect a callous indifference to Palestinian life. In one of many similar cases, on 8 January 2025, ISF struck with an air-to-ground missile and killed two boys aged 8 and 10, Rida Ali Ahmed Bisharat and Hamza Ammar Ahmed Bisharat, respectively, and a 23-year-old man, Adam Khair Al-Deen Ahmed Bisharat, all unarmed and not posing any threat, while they were within their courtyard in Tammun, Tubas. ISF first stated they struck a possible terrorist cell but later admitted they had not taken sufficient steps to verify the identity of the victims.Following 7 October 2023, settler attacks against Palestinians also reached a new peak in scale and severity, enabled by Israeli policy to draft thousands of settlers into the army and to provide further weapons to settlers. This has led to the killing of 33 Palestinians, including 3 children, 19 of whom were killed by settlers, while 14 were killed by settlers and the army shooting side by side.International standards require Israel to ensure an independent and effective investigation of all incidents where individuals have been killed in violent or suspicious circumstances, including as a result of the use of force by agents of the State. However, Israeli authorities have only announced investigations into deaths following settler violence and the use of lethal force by Israeli security forces in extremely rare cases. In these few cases, there appears to have been no progress, maintaining the almost complete impunity for the use of unlawful force and the unlawful killing of Palestinians in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. The large numbers of Palestinians killed in this period, the prevalence of the unlawful use of force, the enabling and support for settler violence and the endemic impunity for crimes committed against Palestinians, all suggest that Israeli security forces use lethal and potentially lethal force as a tool to control and repress Palestinians, rather than as the last resort to restore and maintain public order and civil life for the Palestinians.
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