Aid organizations that serve civilians in Gaza say they are receiving record amounts of donations in a sign of public support for relief efforts even as a growing stock of supplies remain stalled at Egypt's Rafah border crossing.
In the Gaza Strip, where 2.3 million people live, civilians are in dire need of clean water, food and medicine, emergency medics say.
However, with a web of political and logistical obstacles on getting aid in, much of the money and supplies intended for Gaza is in limbo, forcing aid groups to wait as they amass truckloads of goods.
Aid groups say they are building up supplies in hopes of eventually getting them through to civilians in Gaza, nearly half of whom are children.
The majority of support comes from donors based in the United States, he added, with individual donations averaging around $138.
Persons:
Aurora Ellis, Steve Sosebee, Derek Madsen, Anera, Rabia, Anera's Madsen, Basma Bsharat, Diane Craft, Rosalba O'Brien
Organizations:
REUTERS, Palestine Children's Relief, Israel, Palestine Aid Society, UNRWA, Hamas, Palestinian American, U.S, Thomson
Locations:
Gaza, Bay Ridge, Brooklyn , New York, U.S, United States, Israel, Rafah, Canada, Ann Arbor , Michigan, Palestine, Crescent, UN, Palestinian, Palestinian American, Brooklyn, Clifton , New Jersey