Oneeee-Chan!!! said: Which country is helping Gaza the most? |
Qatar, they have been doing all the negotiations and made the 7 day ceasefire possible.
Qatar negotiated a recent deal to get medicine to the hostages and by request of Hamas also to hospitals in Gaza
Negotiators strike deal to deliver medication to hostages held by Hamas
Negotiators have struck a deal that will allow medicine to be delivered to more than 40 hostages held in Gaza, an official familiar with the discussions said. Some logistical issues still need to be resolved, but the expectation is that Qatar will soon make a shipment to Egypt, which will then hand it over to the Ministry of Health in Gaza via Rafah crossing. The ministry will then figure out how to get it to the hostages through Hamas.
The Red Cross is not expected to play a role, as it has in other hostage deals in Gaza. There have been some delays to providing the medication to the hostages, including that Doha is waiting for medicine to arrive from another unnamed country before it can ship it into Gaza, according to the official.
Hamas only agreed to the deal if more medicine was sent for hospitals and Palestinians in Gaza, the official said. Originally, the request asked Hamas to allow the Red Cross to visit the more than 40 hostages Israel believes are in need of medical treatment or medicine. But Hamas refused to let the Red Cross visit the hostages, according to the official.
And Egypt keeping the border open, facilitating aid deliveries and taking in patients from Gaza, working against Israel's delay tactics
Egypt blames Israel’s ‘stubbornness’ for blocking aid through Rafah
The lack of aid entering Gaza through Rafah and other border crossings has been solely caused by Israel, according to Diaa Rashwan, the chairman of Egypt’s State Information Service (SIS).
“Throughout these 100 days, has been the stubbornness and intentionality of the occupying Israeli authorities, at other Gaza Strip crossings, delaying the inspection of aid before allowing its passage to the Palestinian side, by virtue of its military control over the territory of the Gaza Strip,” he was quoted as saying in an SIS post on Facebook.
Rashwan added that the Rafah crossing hadn’t been closed “for a single moment” on the Egyptian side, while Israeli authorities deliberately disrupted or delayed the entry of aid “under the pretext of inspecting it”.