WFP scales up operations in Gaza as ceasefire passes 100 days
Here are the latest updates on WFP operations and food security in Gaza:
WFP Operations:
- In the 100 days since the ceasefire, WFP has expanded operations, reaching over 1 million people each month through food parcels, bread bundles, hot meals, and school meals.
- WFP and our partners now operate hundreds of distribution sites and 20 warehouses inside Gaza, including areas near the yellow line such as Bait Lahia and Jabalia Camp.
- WFP and partners are now delivering:
- For the first time since the beginning of the war, a full ration of 2 wheat flour bags and 2 food boxes to over one million people in Gaza each month.
- Hot Meals: Over 400,000 meals served daily in via 45 community kitchens.
- Nutrition: Malnutrition prevention to 200,000 pregnant/breastfeeding women and children under 5, and treatment to nearly 14,000 women each month.
- Education: School snacks for 235,000 children in 250 temporary learning spaces - reaching almost 40 percent of school-aged children.
- Digital Payments:Support to 60,000 households (300,000 people) monthly to buy food from local markets.
- For the first time since the beginning of the war, a full ration of 2 wheat flour bags and 2 food boxes to over one million people in Gaza each month.
- Bakeries in Gaza continue to be a vital lifeline. By supporting bakeries, WFP provides food and jobs.
- The WFP-led Logistics Cluster is facilitating the transportation of tents, blankets, wash stations and mattresses on behalf of humanitarian partners.
Food Security Situation in Gaza:
- The food security gains achieved over the last 100 days remain fragile.
- According to the most recent Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) analysis in December, 77 percent of the population is still facing crisis levels food insecurity (IPC-3 and above), with over 100,000 people experiencing catastrophic levels of hunger (IPC-5).
- Almost all families in Gaza are dependent on food aid. This is not sustainable in the long term. We must continue the life-saving flow of aid while rebuilding livelihoods, dietary diversity, and self-sufficiency towards recovery.
- More commercial goods are entering Gaza, but most families still cannot afford them as food prices remain far too high.
- Access to nutritious food, such as fresh fruit, vegetables, meat and dairy, is limited. WFP’s digital cash assistance to the most vulnerable families helps them buy the food they need while also stimulating the economy to improve supplies.
Challenges for Recovery:
- Border crossings must stay open, volumes of food aid and commercial goods must keep flowing, and the ceasefire must hold if we are to prevent Gaza from slipping back into the worst levels of hunger.
- Additional safe humanitarian corridors via Jordan and Egypt are essential for delivering food, water, medicine, and shelter. Internally, reopening Salah Eddin road would significantly improve transport efficiency and reduce exposure to security threats.
- Support for the private sector is critical to boost markets; damaged infrastructure, movement restrictions, and the lack of refrigerated supply chains has slowed improvements.
- Many families are still ill-equipped to endure the winter months in the open as hundreds of thousands are still displaced from their homes, living in tents or heavily damaged buildings.
- To sustain life-saving assistance, uninterrupted access is critical for WFP and its humanitarian partners.
- The road to recovery for the families in Gaza is long. WFP is committed to supporting the most vulnerable to ensure stability, dignity and hope.
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The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.
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Topics
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For more information please contact (email address: firstname.lastname@wfp.org):
Abeer Etefa, WFP Cairo, Mob + 20 106 6634 352
Maxime Le Lijour, WFP Gaza, Mob +97 005 62 56 20 52
Azfar Deen, WFP/ Rome, Mob. +39 345 846 6425
Martin Rentsch, WFP Berlin, Mob +49 160 99 26 17 30
Shaza Moghraby, WFP/New York, Mob. + 1 929 289 9867
Rene McGuffin, WFP Washington Mob. +1 71 245 4268