World Central Kitchen to Resume Gaza Operations
©(Photo by MOHAMMED ABED / AFP)
The World Central Kitchen is to resume operations, according to an announcement made by its CEO Erin Gore. The nonprofit organization was supplying meals in Gaza until seven of its aid workers were killed by an Israeli strike nearly a month ago.

The US-based charity, founded by celebrity Spanish-American chef Jose Andres, provides food to communities facing humanitarian crises and disasters.

On the night of April 1, seven of its workers were killed in three air strikes over four minutes by an Israeli drone as they ran for their lives between their three vehicles, the Israeli military said.

The deaths – of an Australian, three Britons, a North American, a Palestinian and a Pole – triggered renewed levels of global outrage over Israel's military operations.

"We continue to grieve and mourn the loss of seven of our friends and colleagues who were killed in an IDF attack in Gaza," Goer said in a statement on Sunday.

She added that the World Central Kitchen was nonetheless "resuming operations in Gaza."

Gore noted that the organization had 276 trucks, with the equivalent of almost eight million meals, ready to enter through the Rafah Crossing.

"We will continue to get as much food into Gaza, including northern Gaza, as possible – by land, air, or sea," she said.


WCK would also send trucks from Jordan, Gore said, adding that the organization was exploring a maritime corridor and utilizing Israel's Ashdod Port.

Although the roofs of the three aid workers' vehicles were emblazoned with large WCK logos, retired general Yoav Har-Even, who is leading Israel's investigation, said that the drone's camera could not see them in the dark.

An internal Israeli military inquiry found that the drone team had made an "operational misjudgment" after spotting a suspected Hamas gunman shooting from the top of an aid truck.

Gore said that WCK had to make a difficult choice to "stop feeding altogether during one of the worst hunger crises ever... or keep feeding knowing that aid, aid workers, and civilians are being intimidated and killed."

WCK has 68 community kitchens in the region, and is building a third high-production facility in Mawasi in addition to the other two in Rafah and Deir al-Balah.

 

With AFP
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