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Gazans face food shortages, price hikes as Israel blocks aid amid ceasefire negotiations stalemate

A Palestinian boy sits in front of a mural at the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on March 3, 2025, during the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan. (Photo by Eyad BABA / AFP)
  • Humanitarian groups warn that the aid suspension is worsening an already dire crisis in Gaza.
  • Hamas official claims Israel allowed only 15 out of 65,000 promised mobile homes into Gaza

Gaza City, Palestinian TerritoriesPalestinians living in war-ravaged Gaza say they fear food shortages and price hikes after Israel halted the entry of aid into the territory to pressure Hamas to agree to its terms for a ceasefire extension.

The effect of the Israeli announcement on Sunday was immediate, and sent ripples through markets across the Gaza Strip.

Prices for basic goods soared despite attempts by the authorities to keep them stable, shoppers and aid workers told AFP.

“There is a lot of fear, today there are a lot of people buying food supplies and prices have risen a lot,” Belal al-Helou told AFP at a crowded street market in Gaza City.

As long as Gaza’s crossings are closed, “the prices will rise and increase even more”, Helou told AFP on Sunday.

“Today a kilo of sugar costs 10 shekels or 12 shekels,” he said — roughly $3, and more than twice the price before the war.

“Prices are rising and people are panicking about food supplies.”

Another shopper, Adly al-Ghandour, said prices had risen “80 percent so far, and if the crossing remains closed, prices will rise 200 percent”.

Around them, stalls were still well-stocked from the first phase of the ceasefire, which began on January 19 and enabled the entry of vital food, shelter and medical assistance after more than 15 months of war triggered by Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel.

Shopkeepers also sold decorations such as small lanterns and signs reading “happy Ramadan”, while bakers made hundreds of pancakes to be used in qatayef, a pastry filled with cream and nuts typically eaten during the Muslim holy month that started on Saturday in Gaza.

‘No panacea’

Caroline Seguin, emergency coordinator for Doctors Without Borders in Gaza, said trucks that were supposed to arrive on Sunday were turned back full.

“We were able to get a few trucks in during the six weeks of ceasefire, but it’s no panacea” for the humanitarian situation, Seguin told AFP Monday.

Palestinian children wait for a meal during food distribution at a charity kitchen at the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on March 3, 2025, during the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan. (Photo by Eyad BABA / AFP)

Although the organization’s stocks of medical equipment were somewhat replenished during the first phase, other items such as generators and supplies for water desalination were blocked because Israel labels them “dual use” items that could be used by militants to make weapons.

Seguin added that humanitarian aid “shouldn’t be a part of ceasefire negotiations while Gaza’s population needs assistance”.

In the northern city of Jabalia, displaced Palestinians who returned after the start of the ceasefire live in tents erected by charity organisations on a patch of cleared land, surrounded by bombed-out buildings, AFP journalists saw.

Senior Hamas official Osama Hamadan said on Monday that only 15 of the 65,000 mobile homes that were due to enter Gaza during the ceasefire had actually made it in.

Israel’s agency in charge of regulating the aid flow in Gaza did not respond to AFP when asked about the figure.

‘Completely demoralized’

Seguin said she had noted an instant price increase in Gaza markets, including for eggs, whose price went up 150 percent.

But above all, Seguin said the aid suspension was a hard blow to Gazans’ morale.

“They’re completely demoralised,” she said of her Gazan colleagues who had held on through 15 months of fighting.

“They’re afraid of a return to the November-December situation… when you couldn’t find bread and there wasn’t any meat in town.”

Meanwhile, Israeli government spokesman, David Mencer, accused Hamas of hoarding supplies and claimed the Palestinian Islamist movement had “enough food to fuel an obesity epidemic”.

“The supplies are there but Hamas don’t share,” Mencer told journalists.

Negotiations between Israel and Hamas for the continuation of the truce have hit an impasse in recent days.

Israel is pressing to extend the ceasefire’s first phase, while Hamas favours moving on to phase two of the deal, which envisions an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza and a more permanent end to the war.