Israel tells UN will only allow half agreed number of aid trucks into Gaza

Egyptian Red Crecent members monitor trucks carrying humanitarian aids as they enter the Rafah crossing between Egypt and the Gaza Strip, Oct. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Mohamed Arafat)
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Updated 14 October 2025
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Israel tells UN will only allow half agreed number of aid trucks into Gaza

  • Israel will not allow fuel or gas except for specific needs related to humanitarian infrastructure

Israel has told the United Nations it will only allow 300 aid trucks – half the agreed number – into the Gaza Strip from Wednesday and that no fuel or gas will be allowed into the enclave except for specific needs related to humanitarian infrastructure, according to a note seen by Reuters and confirmed by the UN.
Olga Cherevko, a spokesperson for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Gaza, confirmed the UN had received the note from COGAT, the arm of the Israeli military that oversees aid flows into Gaza.
COGAT had said on Friday that it expected about 600 aid trucks to enter Gaza daily during the ceasefire.
The COGAT note said the restrictions were being taken because “Hamas violated the agreement regarding the release of the bodies of the hostages.”


How the RSF is targeting the disabled in Sudan

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How the RSF is targeting the disabled in Sudan

  • Atrocities of the RSF in El Fasher were outlined in a damning report released by Human Rights Watch last month, in what the UN body called “hallmarks of genocide”  
  • According to the report, RSF members targeted, abused, and killed people with disabilities during and after their brutal takeover of North Darfur’s capital

PORT SUDAN: Long before checkpoints were erected, disabled civilians in El Fasher, the main city of Darfur in western Sudan, were already trapped.

When war erupted between Sudan’s army and the Rapid Support Forces, a paramilitary force, in April 2023, most residents could still flee advancing front lines. For many people with mobility impairments, visual disabilities or chronic illnesses, however, escape was never simple.

When the RSF encircled El Fasher in May 2024, that limited mobility hardened into confinement. The siege not only isolated a city; it immobilized a segment of its population first.

“We were watching others leave, but we had nowhere to go,” said Mariam M., a resident who uses crutches and fled the city three months ago. “Every time the shelling moved closer, my family would ask how we would carry me if we had to run.”

As time passed, people stopped talking about escape, understanding that if the fighters reached their neighborhoods, they would need to face them.

The atrocities of the RSF in El Fasher were outlined in a damning report released by Human Rights Watch last month, in what the UN body called “hallmarks of genocide.”  

According to the report, RSF members targeted, abused, and killed people with disabilities during and after their brutal takeover of North Darfur’s capital.

El Fasher was the last major urban center in Darfur outside full RSF control. Its capture promised strategic depth: access to cross-border routes into Chad and Libya, leverage over humanitarian corridors, and symbolic dominance in a region historically resistant to paramilitary expansion. Rather than risk immediate, costly urban combat, the RSF tightened the perimeter and applied pressure gradually.

For ambulant residents, shrinking markets and fuel shortages meant hardship. For those using wheelchairs or crutches, it meant disappearance from the public space, although over 20 percent became affected by some level of disability.

As fuel ran out, transport halted. As hospitals collapsed, prosthetics could not be repaired, infections went untreated, and temporary injuries became permanent impairments. When electricity failed, assistive devices that required charging stopped working.

Water shortages forced people to travel farther for basic survival — a distance some simply could not cover.

The siege functioned as attrition warfare that exhausted supply lines, fragmented civilian life, and weakened military defenders indirectly. But attrition accumulated unevenly. In a city where medical care had already been degraded by months of national conflict, the blockade multiplied disabilities — through untreated shrapnel wounds, malnutrition-related weakness, preventable amputations, and trauma.

At the same time, diplomatic efforts lagged behind events on the ground. The UN Security Council struggled to unify around enforcement measures, while competing mediation tracks diluted leverage. Allegations that the RSF continued to receive external support complicated calls for accountability.

In that vacuum, siege warfare dominated. For civilians whose disabilities made flight impossible, the absence of sustained international pressure translated into prolonged exposure.

Humanitarian agencies negotiated access with the same armed actors accused of abuses, producing delayed convoys, selective permissions, and corridors that opened and closed unpredictably.

Inclusive relief — ramps, assistive devices, rehabilitation support — requires logistical planning and sustained pressure. Those needing the most tailored assistance were the least likely to receive it.

By the time the final assault unfolded, the people of El Fasher were already hugely impacted by siege conditions, mostly deepening their already bad health conditions. When fighters later scrutinized civilians at improvised checkpoints, visible impairments were the physical residue of many months of collapse.

In an environment saturated with fear of hidden combatants, a missing limb could be misread as a battlefield wound. A limp could be recast as evidence. A cognitive disability could be dismissed as a mental illness. The long encirclement had stripped institutions away; what remained was judgment delivered in seconds, based on the body alone.

Fatima M., a 33-year-old teacher, could not run. She moved on aluminum crutches, the rubber tips slipping on broken pavement. She joined a cluster of civilians heading north, toward what they hoped was an open road.

Instead, they met a checkpoint forming in real time — pickup trucks, mounted guns, young men shouting instructions no one could fully hear over the panic. “If you cannot run, you are not a ‘civilian’ to them; you are a target who is too slow to escape,” she said.

What happened next followed a pattern that survivors would later describe with chilling consistency.

Men with visible impairments were separated first. Missing limbs drew suspicion, while cognitive disabilities were met with mockery. Fighters accused some of being wounded soldiers from the Sudanese Armed Forces hiding among civilians. Others were dismissed as “useless.”

Several were shot where they stood, Fatima M. described. Their bodies were left in the road as convoys were ordered forward. “They didn’t see people in us, but I begged them to spare me,” she said. “I saw them shoot a man just because his legs wouldn’t move as fast as their shouting.”

Such accounts are consistent with HRW’s report. Emina Cerimovic, associate disability rights director at HRW, said: “We heard how (the RSF) accused some victims, particularly those missing a limb, of being injured fighters and summarily executed them. Others were beaten, abused, or harassed because of their disability, with fighters mocking them as ‘insane’ or for not being a ‘complete person.’”

The atrocities in El Fasher represent just one grim facet of a nationwide crisis for Sudan’s estimated 4.6 million people with disabilities, who comprise about 15 percent of the 33.7 million individuals requiring humanitarian aid amid the ongoing war, a likely underestimate.  

Since the conflict erupted, over 40,000 injuries have been reported, with civilians bearing the brunt through direct attacks, explosive remnants, and sieges that exacerbate vulnerabilities like untreated wounds, leading to permanent disabilities.

Another challenge is that most displacement and casualty reporting categorizes civilians by age and gender, not by functional impairment. Disability is rarely tracked systematically in conflict assessments.

When it is not counted, it is not prioritized in ceasefire terms, evacuation corridors, or accountability debates. Violence against disabled civilians can therefore remain statistically submerged — visible in testimony, absent in negotiation frameworks.

Until today, despite mounting documentation of atrocities, accountability in Sudan remains partial and politically constrained. The UN Security Council has imposed targeted sanctions on select commanders, and investigations continue at the international level, but enforcement is uneven and slow. Broader measures — including comprehensive arms embargo enforcement or coordinated asset tracking — remain fragmented.

“It is clear that we need a ceasefire in Sudan,” Antonio Guterres, the UN Secretary-General, said, stressing the need for stronger external pressure but without directly addressing parties’ battlefield calculus. “The flow of weapons and fighters from external parties must be cut off.”

Mediation efforts are similarly splintered. The African Union has called for inclusive ceasefire talks, while parallel initiatives in regional capitals compete for influence rather than consolidate leverage.

External backing — alleged by UN experts to be flowing into Sudan despite embargo frameworks — further complicates negotiations. No single diplomatic track has secured sustained compliance from the warring parties.

For Darfur in 2026, this means entrenched instability. With El Fasher under RSF control, displacement remains high, humanitarian access fragile, and reconstruction distant.

Without unified pressure and credible accountability mechanisms, humanitarian organizations and activists warn that conflict risks hardening into a protracted territorial stalemate — one in which civilian protection, including for disabled communities, remains secondary to military consolidation.