Some of them, he said, haven't spoken to people back home for nearly a decade. And helping them has also helped with the transition back to his old life.
Without being able to enter Gaza and report independently, it is difficult to investigate the unfolding events.Violent criminal gangs have been heavily implicated in stealing aid. Hamas is threatening violence against groups and individuals it accuses of theft.
Two people were shot outside an Unrwa warehouse but it is not clear who killed them. A local activist who was present blamed Hamas."Hamas is hoarding food, depriving the hungry population of food, and selling food at very high prices. The population protested and demanded that the food be distributed or they would take it by force. Hamas fired live ammunition at the hungry," said Moumen al-Natour, a lawyer and protest leader.All of this is happening in the context of a growing hunger and the breakdown in order that has accompanied the war and blockade.
The Israeli cabinet has approved an. It says it aims to destroy Hamas - a goal that has proved elusive for the last 19 months of war.
There are also reports that Israel plans to use private security companies to oversee the distribution of aid in Gaza, although no date for this has been made public.
The United Nations and major aid agencies have described this as a politicisation of aid with which they will refuse to co-operate.This includes people who arrive on small boats, or hidden in lorries, and people who remain in the UK after their legal visa expires.
The vast majority of UK immigration is legal - this includes people who have been granted permission to come to work, study, claim asylum or for other authorised purposes.Over the past 12 months about 44,000 people entered the UK illegally - about 5% of the nearly one million people who immigrated to the UK between April 2024 and March 2025.
The government has also promised "".