The ICJ’s directive on Tuesday reinforces what Caritas, its partners, and most global aid groups have long advocated for: that humanitarian access is not a privilege, but a life-saving necessity.
The situation in Gaza remains catastrophic, with famine conditions, widespread displacement, and infrastructure in ruins. The entire population is now dependent on humanitarian assistance for food, water, shelter, and medical care.
Caritas Australia’s partners on the ground – Caritas Jerusalem and Catholic Relief Services – have reported that while the ceasefire has allowed some aid to flow, access remains severely constrained. Both organisations are ready to scale up their operations once aid access increases.
Partners also report that no large-scale reconstruction efforts have begun, with promised temporary shelters yet to materialise. They report that nearly all families in Gaza are living in poverty, with employment opportunities extremely limited. Only a few humanitarian organisations continue to operate, employing small numbers of local staff.
Few partner staff have returned home under the ceasefire conditions, as they do not have homes to return to. They continue to shelter in churches.
Caritas Jerusalem continues to operate in the area under extremely challenging conditions, focusing on southern Gaza where it manages seven medical points. The organisation has resumed infant formula distribution and reopened its main medical centre in the north, but staff cannot return due to unsafe conditions.
CRS has reopened its Gaza City office and resumed distribution of food, hygiene kits, tents, and cash assistance. CRS has supply pipelines ready in Jordan and Egypt and is prepared to scale up operations immediately if access routes are improved.
Read more: https://cathnews.com/2025/10/24/caritas-welcomes-icj-ruling-on-immediate-aid-to-gaza/
By Caritas Australia & ABC News