June 20, 2025, Friday
Nepal 1:37:26 pm

Head of controversial Israel-backed Gaza aid group resigns

The Nepal Weekly
May 27, 2025

The chief of an organisation set up to distribute aid in Gaza as part of a controversial Israel-backed plan has tendered resignation saying it could not work in a way that adhered to “humanitarian principles”.

Jake Wood quit the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) late on Sunday, saying it would not be able to fulfil the principles of “humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence”. The plan, also backed by the US, envisions private contractors delivering aid to Palestinians via Israel-designated distribution sites. The UN has strongly criticised the move saying it will not participate.

Israel insists the plan is required to stop Hamas stealing aid, which the armed group denies doing.

Under the GHF plan, Palestinians would be expected to collect boxes weighing up to 20kg  containing food and basic hygiene items from four distribution points in southern Gaza.

It is unclear how the weak or injured would be able to collect the aid.

UN aid chief Tom Fletcher said it would force further displacement, restrict aid to only one part of Gaza and make “starvation a bargaining chip.” In his resignation statement, Wood, a former US marine, said: “Two months ago, I was approached about leading GHF’s efforts because of my experience in humanitarian operations.

“Like many others around the world, I was horrified and heartbroken at the hunger crisis in Gaza and, as a humanitarian leader, I was compelled to do whatever I could to help alleviate the suffering.”

He said he was “proud of the work I oversaw, including developing a pragmatic plan that could feed hungry people, address security concerns about diversion, and complement the work of longstanding NGOs in Gaza.” But, he said, it had become “clear that it is not possible to implement this plan while also strictly adhering to the humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence, which I will not abandon.” In response, the GHF said it would “not be deterred” by Wood’s resignation and would begin delivering aid on Monday, with an aim to reach one million Palestinians by the end of the week.

The group said that critics “who benefit from the status quo have been more focused on tearing this apart than on getting aid in, afraid that new, creative solutions to intractable problems might actually succeed.”

“Our trucks are loaded and ready to go.” An Israeli official said “the goal of this new approach is to eliminate the Gazan population’s dependence on Hamas,” it added. Israeli media reported that the first of four distribution centres would be opened by GHF on Monday morning. Last week, Israel eased an 11-week blockade on all food, fuel, medicine and other supplies entering Gaza, with the first aid trucks reaching civilians in recent days – but the UN has said it’s a “drop in the ocean of what’s needed”.

It says 57 children died from malnutrition during Israel’s blockade – while the World Food Programme (WFP) warned last week that Gaza’s entire population was “on the brink of starvation”. Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council, told media that the GHF is “militarised, privatised, politicised” and “not in conformity with neutrality”. “The people behind it are military – they are ex-CIA and ex-military people… Let’s go back to the system that worked” he said. The GHF has also come under intense scrutiny around its funding, origins and backing.

Over the weekend, an investigation by The New York Times suggested the group may have been conceived in Israel by a group of Israeli officials and military officers and their partners in the Israeli business sector.