Jordan and France have been airdropping food into the Gaza Strip at a moment international organizations are warning of mass starvation of Palestinians. While Jordan has been doing this since the opening weeks of the war, France has recently increased its humanitarian activity, at a moment aid trucks are said to be backed up by the hundreds at the Rafah border crossing.

But sometimes these high-risk humanitarian overflight airdrops, which require approval from the Israeli government to conduct, go wrongas is seen in fresh video which is circulating widely this week.

While Jordan has thus far conducted an estimated 16 airdrops to Gaza, Monday’s drop saw at least part of the aid destroyed as it was accidentally released over the Mediterranean Sea, reportedly outside Rafah. 

Arab media news source Al Mayadeen reported that “most of the supply drops were swimming with the fish before they made it to the hands of the people of Gaza as they were dropped straight into the Mediterranean Sea instead of on the coast of southern Gaza.” However, based on one of the videos to emerge, at least some of the aid was successfully recovered by men in small fishing boats.

Jordan’s air mission, which is directly authorized and overseen by King Abdullah, is “aimed at delivering aid to the population directly and drop it along the coast of the Gaza Strip from north to south.” It could be that Jordan’s military views the beach or shallow waters off the coast as potentially the safest place to drop it.

The aid is described as comprised “relief and food supplies, including ready-made meals of high nutritional value, to alleviate the suffering of the people of the Gaza Strip,” according to a Jordanian government statement. The aid drops also frequently contain vital medical supplies for field hospitals as well.

The images and footage from this week’s failed air drop were surreal…

Some UN officials have accused Israel of a policy of collective punishment which involves keeping food from the Strip’s Palestinian population. However, Israel has said it too has conducted humanitarian aid missions and food supply drops.

Michael Fakhri, the UN special rapporteur on the right to food, was cited in The Guardian Tuesday as saying, “There is no reason to intentionally block the passage of humanitarian aid or intentionally obliterate small-scale fishing vessels, greenhouses and orchards in Gaza – other than to deny people access to food.”

Below is a first-hand account from Middle East Eye of the dire lengths people are going through to find enough nutrition to survive as the war against Hamas grinds on…

The famine in northern Gaza, caused by Israel’s strangling siege, has reached extreme levels, Palestinian residents. There have been several reports of people dying from malnutrition, including infants. 

Life for over half a million people there now revolves around a single task every day: finding something to eat. In this following account, a resident of Gaza City, who did not wish to be named, recounts to MEE’s Lubna Masarwa the struggle to survive in a war-torn city.  

Things are difficult. Getting anything has become a difficult task, even simple things like sugar, salt and rice. We go on looking for them everywhere, even in old shops and abandoned homes. If and when we find them in shops, they are sold at crazy prices. 

About four days ago, around 800 bags of wheat flour came in. There are up to 700,000 people in northern Gaza. This means one bag for around every 1,000 people or so.

My cousin was among those people who managed to get a bag. It’s 25kg. He distributed it among our extended family and each of us got one kilo. Just like everyone else in Gaza, my sister and I mixed our share with corn and soy flour. We do this to increase the quantity.

I spent three hours in the morning starting the fire and cooking it, and in the end, it wasn’t good. It was hard, uncooked and tasted weird. My sister started crying and I tried to calm her by saying we could add thyme to it and eat it that way. 

Then I visited my aunt’s house and they were struggling to get the fire started because the remaining wood in Gaza is not good. So I spent the next three hours helping them. After that, I went to my uncle’s house and they had the same problem, so I helped them. 

My uncle didn’t seem right to me during the visit. I asked him what was wrong and he didn’t answer. Later, his son told me he hadn’t eaten. He gave the small thyme pies they made to the children and refused to eat. At the end of this very long and tiring day, an air strike hit nearby. I was terrified because I was on the upper floor. It was very close.

Dying en masse

We’ve reached our limit. Things are miserable and get worse every day. It’s beyond famine. I’ve become so frail. I was a healthy guy. I used to ride horses and run. Now I can’t even go up the stairs without feeling very exhausted.

I have completely forgotten what food tastes like. I no longer know what fruit or chicken taste like. We had only rice and even that is scarce now.

If found, one kilo of rice costs 80 shekels ($22), when before the war it cost seven shekels ($1.90). We are running out of things like cooking oil, yeast, corn and barley. Even animal feed that we were forced to eat at some point is running out. Every day something runs out.

I know people who started to eat wild herbs. If we stay like this for another week, I think we will start seeing people die from starvation en masse. There’s nothing left here. Healthy people are getting sick and sick people are dying. 

It doesn’t matter whether you have money or not. It doesn’t matter whether you stored food at the start of the war or not. Everything has run out. We’re all the same. There’s no way around it.

To die from the bombs is better than to die from this hunger. At least with air strikes, you die right away. But now, we keep going round and round each day just to find a bite to keep us standing.