UN unveils 60-day aid plan for Gaza once ceasefire starts

A displaced Palestinian looks towards the horizon at sunrise at a makeshift camp by the beach in Al-Zawayda city, near Deir al-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip, Oct. 9, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 10 October 2025
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UN unveils 60-day aid plan for Gaza once ceasefire starts

  • The UN plan calls for providing food to 2.1 million people
  • It also wants to get temporary schools set up for 700,000 children

The United Nations said Thursday it had a detailed 60-day plan to rush aid into Gaza once a ceasefire is declared to start helping Palestinians in the war-ravaged territory.
“Our plan, detailed and tested, is in place,” said Tom Fletcher, the UN head of humanitarian operations.
“Our supplies, 170,000 metric tons, food, medicine and other supplies, are in place. And our team, courageous and expert and determined, are in place,” Fletcher told a press conference by video link from Saudi Arabia.
Large swathes of the besieged Palestinian territory have been largely reduced to rubble by Israel’s military offensive following Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack.
Israel’s blockade has seen life-saving aid to Gaza slashed, with the UN declaring a famine in parts of Gaza and hundreds of Palestinians dying of malnutrition.
Fletcher said that the UN aimed to surge aid into Gaza so that hundreds of trucks enter the territory every day.
“Famine must be reverted in areas where it has taken hold and prevented in others,” Fletcher said.

Food, water, health care

The plan calls for providing food to 2.1 million people — almost Gaza’s entire population — and specific nutritional aid to 500,000 who are severely malnourished.
The plan will give food to people and also support bakeries, collective kitchens, and provide cash for 200,000 people so they can choose what food they want to buy.
The initiative will also seek to provide 1.4 million people with water and sanitation services.
“We’ll help to restore the water grid,” said Fletcher. “We will repair sewage leaks and pumping stations. We will move solid waste away from residential spaces, and will provide hygiene supplies, soap, shampoo, laundry detergent, sanitary pads.”
The United Nations will work to restore Gaza’s decimated health care system — crippled by Israel’s military operations — by providing equipment and medicine, among other assistance.
“We’ll help scale up emergency care, primary health, child health, sexual reproductive, maternal and neonatal health, non-communicable diseases, mental health and rehabilitation,” said Fletcher.
With most of the buildings in Gaza destroyed by Israel’s offensive, the plan calls for bringing in thousands of tents per week.
The United Nations also wants to get temporary schools set up for 700,000 children.
But Fletcher said that for all this to succeed, there were a number of critical things that also needed to happen.
They include sustained entry of at least 1.9 million liters of fuel every week and resumption of the flow of cooking gas.
He said relief supplies need to come in through multiple corridors, and there need to be more scanners in place so aid convoys can move more swiftly, plus security guarantees to prevent looting.
He said aid needs to come in unimpeded and there has to be money to pay for all of this.
At the moment, only 28 percent of the $4 billion in a UN appeal for Gaza has been funded, said Fletcher.
And the UN will need to go beyond the 170,000 tons of aid it now has pre-positioned in Israel, Jordan, Egypt and Cyprus, which is not enough for the first 60 days after the war ends.
“Let’s be clear, this problem won’t go away in two months,” said Fletcher.


Israel says Gazans who landed in S. Africa unexpectedly had third-country approval

Updated 55 min 44 sec ago
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Israel says Gazans who landed in S. Africa unexpectedly had third-country approval

  • South African President Cyril Ramaphosa told journalists on Friday that it seemed “like they were being flushed out”
  • South Africa’s home affairs ministry said 130 of the group entered the country, while the remaining 23 took onward flights to other destinations

JERUSALEM: Israeli authorities said on Saturday that 153 Palestinians who turned up unexpectedly in South Africa, triggering questions from its president, had received entry approval from an unnamed third country.
Shimi Zuaretz, a spokesman for COGAT, the Israeli body that runs civil affairs in the Palestinian territories, told AFP they had only been allowed to leave Gaza “after COGAT received approval from a third country to receive them.”
He did not name the country.
After landing in Johannesburg on Thursday, the Gazans were kept aboard their plane for 12 hours because they did not have departure stamps from Israel in their passports, South African border police said.
The home affairs ministry finally allowed the passengers to disembark when an NGO said it would provide them with accommodation.
The NGO, Gift of the Givers, told South African media it did not know who had chartered the flight or a previous one that brought 176 Gazans on October 28.
An Israeli official who did not wish to be identified told AFP that the organization which coordinated the transfer had submitted third-country visas to COGAT for all the evacuated residents.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa told journalists on Friday that it seemed “like they were being flushed out.”
“These are people from Gaza who somehow mysteriously were put on a plane that passed by Nairobi and came here,” he said.
South Africa’s home affairs ministry said 130 of the group entered the country, while the remaining 23 took onward flights to other destinations.
Zuaretz said COGAT facilitates the departure of Gaza residents through Israel to receiving countries, for patients requiring medical treatment, dual citizens and their family members, “or those possessing visas to third countries.”
Israel “bases its decisions solely on requests received from foreign countries,” he added, saying the departure of more than 40,000 Gaza residents had been facilitated since the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, which sparked the retaliatory war in the Gaza Strip.
South Africa, which hosts the largest Jewish community in sub-Saharan Africa, has largely been supportive of the Palestinian cause.
The government filed a case against Israel with the International Court of Justice in 2023, accusing it of genocide in Gaza.