Mark Owen is pleased to welcome Yossi Mekelberg, Senior Consulting Fellow for the MENA Programme at Chatham House. The “truce” in Gaza reads more like a reduction in intensity, while the conditions of civilian life remain precarious: Ongoing military operations, persistent hunger, inadequate shelter. He sees the humanitarian picture as a collective failure of governance and international mobilisation. All-out bans on dozens of key humanitarian providers, including UNRWA, translate directly into the daily suffering of ordinary people, especially children.
Analysis & Context
Mark Owen is pleased to welcome Yossi Mekelberg, Senior Consulting Fellow for the MENA Programme at Chatham House. The “truce” in Gaza reads more like a reduction in intensity, while the conditions of civilian life remain precarious: Ongoing military operations, persistent hunger, inadequate shelter. He sees the humanitarian picture as a collective failure of governance and international mobilisation. All-out bans on dozens of key humanitarian providers, including UNRWA, translate directly into the daily suffering of ordinary people, especially children.
This article provides comprehensive coverage and analysis of current events.
Mark Owen is pleased to welcome Yossi Mekelberg, Senior Consulting Fellow for the MENA Programme at Chatham House. The “truce” in Gaza reads more like a reduction in intensity, while the conditions of civilian life remain precarious: Ongoing military operations, persistent hunger, inadequate shelter. He sees the humanitarian picture as a collective failure of governance and international mobilisation. All-out bans on dozens of key humanitarian providers, including UNRWA, translate directly into the daily suffering of ordinary people, especially children.