Israel Supreme Court freezes foreign aid organizations Gaza ban

Israel’s Supreme Court decided in a ruling published on Friday to freeze a government ban on 37 foreign NGOs working in Gaza and the occupied West Bank pending a final decision. (AP/File)
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Updated 27 February 2026
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Israel Supreme Court freezes foreign aid organizations Gaza ban

  • The decision theoretically allows the NGOs to continue working in Gaza and the West Bank until the court issues a final ruling
  • The court said in its ruling that there existed a “genuine legal dispute” due to the foreign NGOs’ responsibilities

JERUSALEM: Israel’s Supreme Court decided in a ruling published on Friday to freeze a government ban on 37 foreign NGOs working in Gaza and the occupied West Bank pending a final decision.
“Without taking any position, a temporary interim order is hereby issued,” the court said in a ruling responding to a petition from more than a dozen NGOs, seeking to reverse the ban after Israel’s government revoked their status in Israel.
The decision theoretically allows the NGOs to continue working in Gaza and the West Bank until the court issues a final ruling, though aid groups expressed uncertainty as to how the freeze would be implemented.
The organizations, including Doctors Without Borders (MSF), Oxfam, the Norwegian Refugee Council and CARE were notified on December 30, 2025 that their Israeli registrations had expired and that they had 60 days to renew them by providing lists of their Palestinian staff.
If they failed to do so, they would have to cease operations in Gaza and the West Bank, including east Jerusalem, from March 1.
The NGOs petitioned the Supreme Court via an umbrella organization, AIDA, after their charity registration in Israel was revoked at the end of a year-long battle during which the NGOs had refused to provide lists of their Palestinian employees to Israeli authorities.
The court said in its ruling that there existed a “genuine legal dispute” due to the foreign NGOs’ responsibilities to their employees’ privacy under European law.
“We are still waiting to see how the injunction will be interpreted by the state and whether or not this will mean an increase in our ability to operate,” Athena Rayburn, AIDA director, told AFP, calling it “a step in the right direction.”
- ‘Breathing room’ -
Yotam Ben-Hillel, a lawyer who represented the NGOs in court, welcomed the injunction, but told AFP that “we still don’t know how it will play out.”
“Today, the High Court of Justice has given the residents of Gaza and the West Bank some breathing room,” he said.
Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967 and strictly controls all entries to and exits from Gaza.
Craig Kenzie, a project coordinator for MSF in Gaza, told AFP that the organization’s 28 foreign staff left the Palestinian territory on Thursday and would not be able to return unless the ban was reversed.
“It’s a positive step, but it’s very light on the details so it’s not clear what that results in in terms of getting supplies and foreign staff inside,” he said.
The organization’s supplies are running low because none have been allowed in since the end of 2025, he said, but added 1,200 Palestinian staff would be seeing to day-to-day operations, which include clean water provision, surgeries, and maternity health.
He said that though commercial cargo has entered Gaza, the goods they bring in are unaffordable for many Gazans left destitute by the war, and that as far as he was aware no other deregistered NGO has been able to get supplies in in recent months.


Safety of Jordanians a priority during regional conflict, says country’s crown prince

Updated 05 March 2026
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Safety of Jordanians a priority during regional conflict, says country’s crown prince

  • He visits Civil Defense Department and is briefed on the work it is doing to manage emergencies and protect lives and property amid attacks by Iran

LONDON: The safety of citizens is a priority for authorities in Jordan amid regional tensions, the country’s Crown Prince Hussein bin Abdullah Al-Hashimi said on Wednesday as he visited the Civil Defense Department for a briefing and iftar event.

He stressed the importance of keeping pace with the latest developments in civil protection systems and taking every opportunity to enhance the skills of Civil Defense personnel, the royal court said.

The department, which operates under the Ministry of Interior, has been working to manage emergencies and protect lives and property amid a barrage of missiles and drones launched by Tehran in recent days in response to attacks on Iran by the US and Israel. The strikes have targeted civilian and military areas in Jordan and other countries in the region.

During his visit the crown prince was greeted by Maj. Gen. Obeidallah Maaytah, director of the Public Security Directorate, and Brig. Gen. Nasser Sweilmeen, the Civil Defense director, and briefed on the work of the Civil Defense Department, the systems it uses, and the ways in which it is responding to the regional conflict.

In addition to firing missiles into Israel, Iran has targeted US forces at Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan and other American military sites in Gulf countries. Military personnel and civilians in several countries have been killed or injured by missiles or falling debris.