As resettling of the Palestinian refugees in the North of Gaza continue, UNICEF is making available fuel which it describes as the lifeblood of humanitarian operations and the people depend on alternative for electricity.
UNICEF spokesperson Tess Ingram, on a mission to North of Gaza said the fuel is important to ensure the effective function of bakeries, hospitals, water pump for safe and clean water for the people of Gaza city and beyond.
Though Supplies are come to the people of Gaza they are experience delay as UNICEF and its fuel tanker which they partner with are made to queue as they wait to be checked before entering northern Gaza.

Palestinians returning home are also made to wait in their cars with their belongings, hoping to enter as well.
UNICEF Communication Specialist, Tess Ingram said the wait hours spans for as long as 13 hours. He added that the hope for free flow into Gaza city as time goes on.
UNICEF has been handing out nutrition supplies, identity bracelets and leaflets about unexploded ordnance along the way that families are taking to go north.
Meanwhile residents seek limited alternatives for power as electricity network has been damaged during Israeli onslaught. This has led to the emergence of new professions such as solar-powered charging stations and alternative battery repair.
The electricity crisis in the Gaza Strip has persisted since the onset of the Israeli attack in October 2023, with the infrastructure of the electricity networks being severely damaged across all cities in the region.
According to the Gaza Electricity Company, initial losses in areas that crews managed to access amounted to $450 million, with destruction exceeding 80 percent. In the streets of Gaza, electricity poles and streetlights no longer stand, as most of them were either destroyed or severely damaged during more than 14 months of warfare.