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Major aid groups call for Gaza ceasefire

By AFP - Nov 09,2023 - Last updated at Nov 09,2023

Palestinians walk past a damaged mosque as they flee Gaza City and other parts of northern Gaza towards the southern areas on Wednesday (AFP photo)

PARIS — An alliance of 13 major aid groups including Doctors Without Borders (MSF), Amnesty International and Oxfam has urged world leaders to push for a ceasefire in Gaza after one month of war between Hamas and Israel.

The organisations "call on French President Emmanuel Macron and heads of state... to do everything in their power to obtain an immediate ceasefire", they said in a statement, one day before a humanitarian conference on the Gaza Strip is due to be held in Paris.

Other priorities should include "concrete measures to free civilian hostages and protect all civilian populations, guaranteeing entry of humanitarian aid to Gaza and respecting international humanitarian law," the groups said.

As well as MSF, Amnesty and Oxfam, the signatories also include Action Against Hunger, the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) and the International Federation for Human Rights.

"We are getting increasingly desperate appeals for protection and aid from our humanitarian workers inside the locked-down Gaza Strip," NRC chief Jan Egeland said in the statement.

"It is unacceptable that there is still no humanitarian ceasefire, no humanitarian corridor and no end to the suffocating siege" of the enclave, he added.

Thursday's humanitarian conference has been hastily put together on the margins of the annual Paris Peace Forum.

It will aim to "mobilise all partners and stakeholders to respond to the needs" of Gazans, a Macron adviser told reporters on Wednesday on condition of anonymity.

Macron's office also said that no Israeli representative will attend, although he will inform prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu of the results.

The territory’s Hamas-controlled health ministry says almost 10,600 people, including more than 4,000 children, have been killed in the Israeli offensive.

G-7 foreign ministers meeting in Japan on Wednesday called for “humanitarian pauses and corridors” to protect civilians, but stopped short of calling for a ceasefire.

 

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