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Hello,
This week, the United Nations Security Council adopted a resolution demanding an immediate ceasefire between Israel and Palestinian militants Hamas, as fears of famine in the enclave continue with aid trucks struggling to get through.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged Israel on Monday to lift all obstacles to aid into Gaza and allow convoys of the U.N. Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA into the north of the coastal enclave.
Famine is imminent and likely to occur by May in northern Gaza and could spread across the enclave by July, according to a U.N.-backed report by a global authority on food security released last week.
Some Gazans have turned to a wild green plant called Khobiza for lack of anything else to eat.
Israel denies blocking aid to Gaza, and says delivery of aid once inside the territory is the responsibility of the U.N. and humanitarian agencies.
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The delivery of aid to the Gaza Strip is held up at multiple points. Published by Mariano Zafra Molina/ REUTERS
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Reuters report on the route for aid
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The resolution for a temporary ceasefire until the end of the holy month of Ramadan in two weeks comes as aid trucks struggle to get into Gaza while the need for food has risen dramatically due to the vast number of displaced people and the devastation of key infrastructure.
Reuters interviewed more than two dozen people, including humanitarian workers, Israeli military officials and truck drivers, in tracing the tortuous route that aid takes into Gaza in an effort to identify the chokepoints and reasons for delays of supplies.
Reuters also reviewed U.N. and Israeli military statistics on aid shipments, as well as satellite images of the border crossing areas, which revealed the long lines of trucks. Click here for the full in-depth report.
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Motionless food-filled trucks
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In mid-March, a line of trucks stretched for 3 kilometers along a desert road near a crossing point from Israel into the Gaza Strip. On the same day, another line of trucks, some 1.5 kilometers long, sometimes two or three across, was backed up near a crossing from Egypt into Gaza.
The trucks were filled with aid, much of it food, for the more than 2 million Palestinians in Gaza. About 50 kilometers from Gaza, more aid trucks – some 2,400 in total – were sitting idle this month in the Egyptian city of Al Arish, according to an Egyptian Red Crescent official.
These motionless food-filled trucks, the main lifeline for Gazans, are at the heart of the escalating humanitarian crisis gripping the enclave.
More than five months into Israel’s war with Hamas, the report by the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) said that malnutrition and food insecurity have probably exceeded famine levels in Gaza’s north, and hunger-linked death rates were likely to do so soon.
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‘Starvation as a weapon of war’
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The European Union’s foreign policy chief alleged Israel was using starvation as a “weapon of war.” And aid agency officials say Israeli red tape is slowing the flow of trucks carrying food supplies.
Israel stopped all imports of food, medicine, power and fuel into Gaza at the start of the war. Although it later let in aid deliveries, aid organizations say security checks and the difficulty of moving through a war zone have greatly hindered their operations.
The United States had been averse to the word ceasefire earlier in the nearly six-month-old war in the Gaza Strip and had used its veto power to shield ally Israel as it retaliated against Hamas for an Oct. 7 attack that Israel says killed 1,200 people.
At least 32,333 Palestinians have been killed and 74,694 injured in Israel’s offensive, including 107 Palestinians killed in the past 24 hours, the Gaza health ministry said on Monday.
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Cranes look in a field at the vast Hortobagy National Park, Hungary. REUTERS/Marton Monus
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- The European Union’s flagship policy to restore damaged nature is hanging in the balance, with a vote to pass the law on Monday canceled after Hungary withdrew its support for the bill.
- Shareholder resolutions: A record 263 climate-related shareholder resolutions have been filed so far this year for annual meetings of North American companies, a new tally showed on Tuesday, with proponents tailoring their wording to gain support.
- The abortion opponents who are seeking to convince the U.S. Supreme Court to limit access to the abortion pill mifepristone point to three studies by Gynuity Health Projects, a New York-based women’s health research group, to back up their arguments that it is unsafe despite its regulatory approval decades ago. Click here for the full Reuters report.
- U.S. diversity case: Three federal judges in Illinois have rescinded policies giving women and minority lawyers early in their careers more opportunities to argue cases in court that had become the subject of misconduct complaints by two conservative legal groups.
- European Union countries’ budget cuts have eaten into layers of government that need now to be reinforced given their vital role in the transition to a more green and digital economy, a senior EU official said.
- Disney shareholder drama: Walt Disney said that remarks by investor Nelson Peltz criticizing the company for making movies dominated by female and Black actors is evidence that he shouldn’t be on Disney’s board.
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“Up to 16% of children under five in northern Gaza are now malnourished, compared with less than 1% before the conflict began. Children are dying from the combined effects of malnutrition and disease, and lack of adequate water and sanitation. The future of an entire generation is in serious peril.”
Director-General of the World Health Organization,
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
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An artwork for Gas Leaks Project’s anti-gas campaign “Hot & Toxic”. Gas Leaks Project/Handout via REUTERS
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When environmentalists talk about climate change, it’s typically in stark terms, describing it as a crisis that threatens the future of the planet. But a scrappy group of filmmakers and activists think it can also be funny.
Meet the Gas Leaks Project, a group formed by climate advocacy veterans, who launched a $1 million campaign this week that uses humor to push back against oil and gas industry messaging that natural gas, which is lower emitting than coal, is a critical “bridge fuel” in the transition to renewable energy.
Called “Hot & Toxic,” the campaign’s trailer is a riff on a reality television show in which 21 irritating housemates symbolizing pollutants associated with natural gas descend on an unsuspecting homeowner. The message is clear: Using natural gas inside your home is not safe.
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A lesser valley coral under ultraviolet light, covered by nets set to collect coral eggs and sperm in the waters off Man Nai Island, Rayong province, Thailand. REUTERS/Napat Wesshasartar
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Elsewhere, on a starry night in Thailand, four marine biologists scuba dived through shallow waters off an island in the country’s south as billions of pink specks floated up from the ocean floor in a spectacle that takes place only once a year.
The pink specks were sperm and eggs released by coral. The scientists collected as many samples as possible for breeding, as they fight to save Thailand’s expansive reefs.
Their research is painstaking because the coral only spawn once a year, and it can take up to five years to raise the juveniles in a lab before they are ready to be transferred back onto the seabed. “We have hope that the degraded coral reefs can recover and return to their former beauty,” said one scientist, Nantika Kitsom.
The project came after as much as 90% of Thailand’s coral reefs were affected by a mass bleaching event that started in 2010, most likely triggered by rising water temperatures. Since the project was initiated, more than 4,000 coral colonies around Mun Nai Island have been restored, the department said.
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- 27 March, Georgia, United States: Former police officer Gregory McMichael, his son Travis McMichael, and neighbor William Bryan, were each convicted of felony murder federal hate crimes in the death of Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery, and other charges. All are appealing the convictions on March 27.
- 27 March, Karachi, Pakistan: Philanthropists offer free food to help poor families and travelers break their fast during the holy month of Ramadan.
- 27 March, Tokyo, Japan: The head of the U.N. Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA) Philippe Lazzarini is set to visit Japan on Wednesday, according to the Asahi newspaper. Japan, the six-biggest UNRWA donor as of 2022, has suspended its funding of the agency after allegations emerged that around 12 of its tens of thousands of Palestinian employees were suspected of involvement in the Oct. 7 attacks in Israel by Hamas.
- 27 March, Bangkok, Thailand: Thai parliament will consider, in second and third reading, a draft bill on same-sex marriage that put together four draft legislations that were approved in the first reading in December. Once approved the bill will be forward to the senate approval.
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Today’s Sustainable Switch was edited by Alexandra Hudson
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