Air Force: Green light to drop aid supplies over Gaza

air force
Green light for dropping aid supplies over Gaza

Dropping aid supplies over the Gaza Strip. photo

© -/petra/dpa

The Defense Minister has given the green light for aid flights over the Gaza Strip. At the end of the week, the Air Force is scheduled to bring humanitarian supplies of parachutes into the war zone.

The German The Air Force is scheduled to use transport aircraft to drop urgently needed relief supplies into the Gaza Strip this week. “The people in Gaza lack the bare necessities. We want to do our part to ensure that they have access to food and medicine,” said Defense Minister Boris Pistorius (SPD) after giving the green light for the order on Wednesday. For this purpose, Bundeswehr C-130 Hercules transport aircraft stationed in France will be used.

The Bundeswehr is providing two of these transport aircraft, each of which could transport up to 18 tons of load. “The truth is: the drop is not without danger,” explained Pistorius. “The crews designated for this are trained in the relevant procedures and are very experienced.”

According to aid organizations, the situation of the people in the coastal strip is becoming increasingly desperate. According to the UN, there is a risk of a hunger crisis if aid deliveries by truck are not increased. Around 2.2 million people live in the Gaza Strip. There is now criticism of the Israeli military’s actions from many countries.

With this operation, the Bundeswehr is taking part in the airlift for Gaza, which was initiated by Jordan. Other partners such as the USA and France are also taking part in the initiative. According to military information, the German part of the binational air transport squadron in Évreux, France, is taking on the task.

Relief supplies are to be loaded on board in Jordan

The Air Force itself describes the process as “gravity dropping,” in which goods leave the aircraft rolling over the loading ramp on a pallet and fall to the ground hanging from parachutes. You end up in a “dropping zone”. The Air Force inspector, Lieutenant General Ingo Gerhartz, granted special permission for the procedure with the Hercules aircraft. Technically, the method differs from so-called dropping, in which loads fall to the ground without braking. The Air Force can start such an operation within twelve hours. The relief supplies are to be brought on board the machines in Jordan.

The population in the Gaza Strip is now also being helped by sea. On Tuesday, the ship “Open Arms” belonging to the aid organization of the same name set sail from the Cypriot port of Larnaca towards the Gaza Strip. The converted tug pulls a platform onto which relief supplies have been loaded – around 200 tons of drinking water, medicine and food. The journey could take up to 60 hours as the ship moves slowly.

However, according to a United Nations spokesman, sea shipments of aid to the Gaza Strip do not make up for the lack of urgently needed truck deliveries. Access is also needed by land, and safe and regular distribution in the Gaza Strip must be guaranteed, it said. The United Nations recently pushed for aid deliveries to be expanded by truck and for goods to also be transported via border crossings to the particularly affected north of the Palestinian territory.

Aid deliveries are repeatedly looted

On Tuesday evening it became known that an aid convoy with food reached the north of the Gaza Strip via a new Israeli military road. The military said it was a pilot project to prevent the aid supplies from falling into the hands of the Islamist Hamas. The results would now be presented to the government.

According to the UN, all order in the Gaza Strip has now collapsed due to the war. Trucks carrying relief supplies are repeatedly looted. In the fight for aid deliveries, there are also regular violent scuffles among desperate residents.

The Gaza war was triggered by the worst massacre in Israel’s history, which was carried out in Israel on October 7th by terrorists from the Islamist Hamas and other extremist Palestinian organizations. On the Israeli side, more than 1,200 people were killed. Israel responded with massive air strikes and a ground offensive in the Gaza Strip. On the Palestinian side, more than 31,100 people have been killed since the war began, according to the Hamas-controlled health authority.

dpa

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