Prime Minister Kathari pointed out that the United Nations should be allowed to restore the allocation of aid in Gaza.
Kathari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said the recent attacks on Israel’s recent performances in Gaza show that Israel is not interested in ending the war.
Al Thani said in an interview with U.S. news outlet CNN on Wednesday that he hopes to release an Israeli soldier from his captivity in Gaza - an Israeli soldier will be a "breakthrough that will help make the speech faster and faster", but Israel chose to strike against striptease.
"Unfortunately, Israel's response to this was to send a delegation the next day (bombing)" he said.
Al Thani also said there is no need to distribute aid in the Gaza region through newly formed groups. Humanitarian and UN aid groups said they already had the means to provide assistance to Gaza, but Israel prevented it.
Since March 2, Israel has completely cut off Gaza's access to food, water, fuel and humanitarian aid, prompting monitors of extreme hunger worldwide to warn possible famine and accusing hunger of hunger as a weapon of war for human rights groups.
Israel claims there is no evidence that members of the armed Palestinian group Hamas are stealing most of the aid into the zone and pushing for the exclusion of the United Nations from Israeli authorities' long-standing views on the United Nations.
A newly formed agency, our support called Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, said Wednesday that it will begin operations in Gaza by the end of May and asked Israel to allow additional aid to be added to the strip.
Critics say the new group has achieved Israel's goal of confining the United Nations and independent international organizations from the distribution of aid in Gaza.
"The GHF stressed that a successful humanitarian response must ultimately include the entire civilian population in Gaza," Jake Wood, the foundation's executive director, wrote in a letter to the Israeli government.
He added: "The GHF respectfully requests (the Israeli military) to identify and dismiss sufficient locations in northern Gaza to be able to host a securely allocated location for GHF operations that can operate within 30 days."
Observer, a report from a UK-based news outlet, notes that the GHF fundraising documents appear to reflect claims on humanitarian aid issues in Gaza, which do not include the actions of the Israeli government itself but are blamed on the “collapse” of the “traditional humanitarian channels”, which are due to aid transfer and combat operations.
During the lockdown in Israel for weeks, thousands of aid trucks were bottled outside Gaza, and UN officials stressed that they were ready and able to restore the allocation of aid in the Raster area if Israel lifted its siege.