Germany calls for large-scale aid access to Gaza as Scholz heads to Israel

Relief goods on a pallet are dropped on March 16, 2024 over the Gaza Strip from a C-130 transport airplane of the German-French bi-national "Rhein" (Rhine) squadron as part of an air bridge operation for the starving people of Gaza amid an Israeli siege. (German Armed Forces Bundeswehr photo/via AFP)
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  • Germany’s air force said it dropped pallets with four tons of relief goods by air into the enclave on Saturday
  • Scholz is set to meet on Sunday with Jordan’s King Abdullah and later with Israeli PM Netanyahu

BERLIN: German Chancellor Olaf Scholz urged Israel on Saturday to allow humanitarian aid access to Gaza on a larger scale, ahead of a two-day trip to the Middle East.
Scholz will travel to the Jordanian Red Sea port of Aqaba on Saturday to meet on Sunday with Jordan’s King Abdullah before flying on to Israel to meet with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
“It is necessary for aid to reach Gaza on a larger scale now. That will be a topic that I also have to talk about,” Scholz told journalists ahead of his trip.
He also voiced concern about Israel’s planned offensive in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, where more than half the Palestinian’s enclave’s population of 2.3 million have taken shelter.
“There is a danger that a comprehensive offensive in Rafah will result in many terrible civilian casualties, which must be strictly prohibited,” he added.
Germany’s air force said it dropped pallets with four tons of relief goods by air into the enclave on Saturday.
“Every package counts. But airdrops are just a drop in the ocean,” the foreign ministry said on the social media platform X.
Israel’s air and ground campaign in Gaza, triggered by Hamas’ attack on Oct. 7, has displaced most of the population and left people in dire need of food and other essentials.