GENEVA / GAZA FOOD AID UPDATE

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Food is slowly returning to the shelves in Gaza amid “apocalyptic scenes,” but supplies are still desperately inadequate, UN humanitarians said as they issued fresh calls for wider access and continued financial support. UNTV CH
Description

STORY: GENEVA / GAZA FOOD AID UPDATE
TRT: 04:36
SOURCE: UNTV CH / WFP
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS

DATELINE: 04 NOVEMBER 2025, GENEVA, SWITZERLAND / 20 OCTOBER - 2 NOVEMBER 2025, GAZA, PALESTINE / FILE

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Shotlist

WFP - 21 OCTOBER - 2 NOVEMBER 2025, GAZA CITY, GAZA, PALESTINE

1. Various shots, destruction

FILE - GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

2. Wide shot, exterior, Palais des Nations

04 NOVEMBER 2025, GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

3. Wide shot, speaker at the podium of the press conference; speaker on screens; journalists in the press room
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Abeer Etefa, Senior Spokesperson for the Middle East, North Africa and Eastern Europe, World Food Programme (WFP):
“In October, hundreds of thousands of people have returned to northern Gaza, many of them to homes that are in ruins. The access to food is severely limited, their access to food is severely limited. Most displaced households remain in the South, often living in tents and without access to food and services.”
4. Med shot, speaker at the podium of the press conference; speaker on screens
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Abeer Etefa, Senior Spokesperson for the Middle East, North Africa and Eastern Europe, World Food Programme (WFP):
“Three and a half weeks into the cease-fire in Gaza, we have distributed food parcels to around one million people across the Gaza Strip. That's part of the broad operation to push back hunger in Gaza. But to continue to expand operations to the level required and the level that we have committed to, we really need more access, more border crossings to be opened and you know, more access to key roads inside Gaza.”
6. Wide shot, journalists in the press room; speaker on screens
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Abeer Etefa, Senior Spokesperson for the Middle East, North Africa and Eastern Europe, World Food Programme (WFP):
“Getting food into the north remains difficult. A major obstacle is the continued closure of the northern crossings into the Gaza Strip. Aid convoys are obliged to follow a slow, difficult route from the south.”
8. Wide shot, speaker at the podium of the press conference; speaker on screens; journalists in the press room
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Nour Hammad, Communications Officer, Country Office, World Food Programme (WFP):
“Amid the apocalyptic scenes we see across Gaza, we also witness on people's faces the joy that the guns have fallen silent after all this time and the fear of whether or not the silence will last. And the shock, of course, and the destruction that they described to us as the aftermath of an earthquake.”
10. Wide shot, journalists in the Press room; speaker on screens
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Nour Hammad, Communications Officer, Country Office, World Food Programme (WFP):
“In every distribution point I have been to across the Gaza Strip over the past couple of days, people tell me one thing: this assistance matters, and after months of surviving on bits and pieces, rationing food, stretching one meal over days, Palestinians finally are receiving fresh bread, food parcels, cash transfers and nutrition and support from WFP and other humanitarian partners. And this is where the journey to recovery starts.”
12. Med shot, speaker at the podium of the press conference; speaker on screens
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Nour Hammad, Communications Officer, Country Office, World Food Programme (WFP):
“Food is slowly coming back to the shelves, but prices are still beyond the reach of families, considering, of course, that they have depleted their resources to survive two years of war. Today, for example, I buy one apple at the cost of a kilo before the war.”
14. Med shot, technician in the press room
15. SOUNDBITE (English) Nour Hammad, Communications Officer, Country Office, World Food Programme (WFP):
“Families invite us into their tents most of the time in the field, and their tents are worn out by winter cold and summer heat, and they want to show us their reality. And their reality is that people need food. People need shelter, people need warm clothing because winter is around the corner, and they need continued support.”
18. Various shots, journalists in the press room

WFP - 21 OCTOBER - 2 NOVEMBER 2025, GAZA CITY, GAZA, PALESTINE

19. Various shots, destruction and people returning to their homes

WFP - 21 OCTOBER, GAZA CITY, GAZA, PALESTINE

20. Various shots, displaced family returning to their home

WFP - 26 OCTOBER, GAZA CITY, GAZA, PALESTINE

21. Various shots, distribution of WFP family food parcels

WFP - 30 OCTOBER, KHAN YOUNIS, GAZA, PALESTINE

22. Various shots, WFP hot meals distribution

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Storyline

Food is slowly returning to the shelves in Gaza amid “apocalyptic scenes,” but supplies are still desperately inadequate, UN humanitarians said today (4 Nov) as they issued fresh calls for wider access and continued financial support.

Briefing reporters in Geneva, Abeer Etefa, Senior Spokesperson at the World Food Programme (WFP), said that in October hundreds of thousands of people returned to northern Gaza – where famine was declared at the end of August – and that their access to food is “severely limited.”

While many returnees have found their homes in ruins, the displaced who remain in the south are “often living in tents and without access to food and services”, she warned.

Speaking from Cairo, Etefa said that three and a half weeks into the fragile ceasefire WFP has distributed food parcels to around a million people across the Strip against a target of 1.6 million as “part of the broad operation to push back hunger in Gaza.”

“Supplies are still limited, so each family is receiving a reduced food ration, which is one parcel, and that's enough food for 10 days,” she explained.

The WFP spokesperson explained that in order to continue to expand operations “to the level required and the level that we have committed to, we really need more access, more border crossings to be opened and… more access to key roads inside Gaza.”

UN aid coordination office OCHA said on Monday that no food aid convoy has reached the north via any direct crossings since 12 September.

“We still have only two border crossing points that are operational,” Etefa emphasized, referring to Kerem Shalom in the south of the enclave and Kissufim in central Gaza. “This severely limits the quantity of aid that WFP and other agencies are able to bring in to stabilize the markets and to address people's needs,” she said, highlighting the fact that the continued closure of the northern crossings into the Gaza Strip means that aid convoys are obliged to “follow a slow, difficult route from the south.”

The UN food relief agency spokesperson also said that some 700,000 people receive fresh bread on a daily basis through 17 WFP-supported bakeries, nine in south and central Gaza and eight in the north, with a goal to ramp up to 25.

Speaking from Gaza, WFP Communications Officer Nour Hammad said that while she was witnessing “apocalyptic scenes” across the enclave she also saw on people’s faces “the joy that the guns have fallen silent after all this time and the fear of whether or not the silence will last.”

She said that Gazans likened the destruction brought on by over two years of war to “the aftermath of an earthquake.”

“In every distribution point I have been to across the Gaza Strip over the past couple of days, people tell me one thing: this assistance matters,” she said. After months of “surviving on bits and pieces, rationing food, stretching one meal over days”, people are finally accessing “fresh bread, food parcels, cash transfers, nutrition and support.”

“This is where the journey to recovery starts,” she stressed.

While 200,000 of the most vulnerable are now receiving digital cash payments in order to “complement the food baskets with fresh foods” from local markets, prices there remain prohibitive.

“Food is slowly coming back to the shelves, but prices are still beyond the reach of families, considering… that they have depleted their resources to survive two years of war,” Hammad said. “Today, for example, I buy one apple at the cost of a kilo before the war,” she explained.

The fragility of the ceasefire and of aid flows is at the centre of people’s preoccupations, Hammad said, as she told the story of a displaced mother whom she met in Gaza City. Even though the woman is receiving assistance she has warned her children against eating the rations right away as “she cannot trust that tomorrow we'll bring food too,” the WFP communicator said.

“Families invite us into their tents…worn out by winter cold and summer heat, and they want to show us their reality. And their reality is that people need food. People need shelter, people need warm clothing because winter is around the corner and they need continued support,” she concluded.

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UNTV CH
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3490960
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3490960