UN agency says has ‘two weeks’ left of food supplies in Gaza

The UN’s World Food Programme warned Thursday it had only two weeks’ worth of food left in Gaza, where “hundreds of thousands of people” are at risk of severe hunger and malnutrition. (AFP)
The UN’s World Food Programme warned Thursday it had only two weeks’ worth of food left in Gaza, where “hundreds of thousands of people” are at risk of severe hunger and malnutrition. (AFP)
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Updated 27 March 2025

UN agency says has ‘two weeks’ left of food supplies in Gaza

UN agency says has ‘two weeks’ left of food supplies in Gaza
  • Israel resumed military operations in enclave just over a week ago, shattering fragile ceasefire
  • WFP reducing individual rations so agency can feed more people overall

GAZA: The UN’s World Food Programme warned Thursday it had only two weeks’ worth of food left in Gaza, where “hundreds of thousands of people” are at risk of severe hunger and malnutrition.
“WFP has approximately 5,700 tons of food stocks left in Gaza — enough to support WFP operations for a maximum of two weeks,” the Rome-based agency said in a statement.
Israel resumed military operations in the Palestinian territory just over a week ago, shattering weeks of relative calm brought by a fragile ceasefire.
The United Nations said on Wednesday that the renewed Israeli operations had displaced 142,000 people in just seven days, and warned of dwindling supplies after Israel resumed a block on humanitarian aid entering Gaza.
WFP said Thursday that it and others in the food security sector had been “unable to bring new food supplies into Gaza for more than three weeks.”
“Hundreds of thousands of people in Gaza are again at risk of severe hunger and malnutrition as humanitarian food stocks in the Strip dwindle and borders remain closed to aid,” it said.
“Meanwhile, the expansion of military activity in Gaza is severely disrupting food assistance operations and putting the lives of aid workers at risk every day,” WFP added.
The agency said that due to the deteriorating security situation and rapid displacement of people, it will “distribute as much food as possible, as quickly as possible.”
It is reducing individual rations so the agency can feed more people overall. It plans to distribute food parcels to half a million people, meaning the packages will feed a family for roughly one week, it said.
Israeli officials say the new operations are meant to pressure Hamas, which controls Gaza, into releasing the remaining hostages following a stalemate in talks with mediators on extending the truce.
Of the 251 hostages seized during the Islamist group’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, which triggered the war, 58 are still held in Gaza, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.
The attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Israel’s retaliatory military offensive has killed at least 50,208 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to the health ministry.


Tunisia opposition figure on hunger strike beaten in prison: family

Tunisia opposition figure on hunger strike beaten in prison: family
Updated 13 November 2025

Tunisia opposition figure on hunger strike beaten in prison: family

Tunisia opposition figure on hunger strike beaten in prison: family
  • Ben Mbarek’s father, leftist activist Ezzedine Hazgui, said at the same press conference that he had met with the prison director, who accused Khemiri of “exaggerating the situation“
  • Hazgui, however, said he was convinced “criminal guards beat my son“

TUNIS: A prominent Tunisian opposition figure on hunger strike for two weeks to protest his incarceration was beaten unconscious in prison by nearly a dozen guards and fellow inmates, his family alleged on Wednesday.
Jawhar Ben Mbarek, co-founder of the National Salvation Front, Tunisia’s main opposition alliance, has been detained since February 2023.
His sister, Dalila Ben Mbarek Msaddek, said in a Facebook video that “six prisoners and five guards” at the Belli prison where Ben Mbarek is being held “beat him until he lost consciousness” on Tuesday.
“The guards ordered the prisoners to assault him,” she said. “They tortured him because he refused to eat.”
The alleged beating took place days after relatives and lawyers warned that Ben Mbarek’s health was in an “alarming” state due to the hunger strike.
His lawyer, Hanen Khemiri, who visited Ben Mbarek earlier in the day, said she had filed a complaint to the public prosecutor alleging “torture.”
Khemiri said in a press conference Wednesday that Ben Mbarek bore the “traces of torture” and was left with a broken rib.
Ben Mbarek’s father, leftist activist Ezzedine Hazgui, said at the same press conference that he had met with the prison director, who accused Khemiri of “exaggerating the situation.”
Hazgui, however, said he was convinced “criminal guards beat my son.”
In April, after more than two years of pre-trial detention, Ben Mbarek was sentenced to 18 years behind bars on charges of “conspiracy against state security” and “belonging to a terrorist group” in a mass trial criticized by rights groups.
His appeal, alongside about 40 other defendants, is scheduled for next week.
Rights groups have warned of a sharp decline in civil liberties in Tunisia since a sweeping power grab by President Kais Saied in July 2021.
Many of the president’s critics are currently behind bars.
Several other opposition figures — including Rached Ghannouchi, the 84-year-old leader of the Ennahdha party who is also serving hefty prison sentences on similar charges — have launched a hunger strike in solidarity with Ben Mbarek.
Prison authorities have previously denied “the rumors about the deterioration in the health of any detainees, including those claiming to be on hunger strike,” maintaining they were under “continuous medical supervision.”
According to local media reports, the Tunis prosecutor’s office ordered Wednesday that an investigation be opened into three lawyers based on complaints from the prison administration that they had spread “rumors and false information” about the hunger strikes.
Without naming the lawyers accused, the reports cited a judicial source as saying the complaints also concerned the circulation of information regarding prisoners’ health.