SHARE
COPY LINK

MIDDLE EAST

France sending warship to provide medical aid to Gaza

France is preparing to send its Dixmude helicopter carrier to the eastern Mediterranean to offer medical assistance in Gaza, the office of the French president said Sunday.

A French LHD Dixmude military ship pictured in Jakarta in March 2023
A French LHD Dixmude military ship pictured in Jakarta in March 2023. France is sending one of these warships to provide medical aid to Gaza. (Photo by ADEK BERRY / AFP)

The Dixmude will set sail “at the start of the week and arrive in Egypt in the coming days,” President Emmanuel Macron’s office said.

A charter flight carrying more than 10 tonnes of medical supplies is also planned for the start of the week.

“France will also contribute to the European effort with medical equipment on board European flights on November 23 and 30,” the presidential office said.

It added that “France is mobilising all its available means to contribute to the evacuation of wounded and sick children requiring emergency care from the Gaza Strip to its hospitals”.

Macron said later on X, formerly Twitter, that up to 50 children could be flown for treatment in hospitals in France “if useful and necessary”.

Also on Sunday, Macron spoke with Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani and with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi about ongoing negotiations to free hostages held by Hamas in Gaza.

French defence minister Sebastien Lecornu on Saturday was in Qatar, which is leading the mediation efforts.

The French president and his Egyptian counterpart agreed on the “need to increase the number of trucks entering Gaza and to reinforce coordination to deliver humanitarian aid and treat the wounded,” Macron’s office said. 

About 1,200 people, most of them civilians, were killed in Israel during Hamas’s October 7 attack and around 240 taken hostage, according to Israeli officials.

In Gaza, around 12,300 people, more than 5,000 of them children, have been killed by Israel’s response, officials in the Hamas-run territory have said.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

POLITICS

France and Jordan airdrop aid to Gaza

France and Jordan teamed up to airdrop seven tonnes of aid to civilians and aid workers in Gaza, as Israel continued to bomb the Palestinian territory.

France and Jordan airdrop aid to Gaza

“In a difficult context, France and Jordan delivered aid by air to the population and those aiding them,” Macron wrote on X (formerly Twitter).

“The humanitarian situation remains critical in Gaza” after three months of conflict, he added.

The French leader posted a photograph of an airman standing on the cargo ramp of a military plane, with parachutes visible in the sky below. Macron’s office said the “extremely complex operation” took place late on Thursday, saying it had been made possible by close ties between the French and Jordanian militaries.

Each nation sent a C-130 transport plane with mixed French-Jordanian crews, bringing a total of seven tonnes of “humanitarian and health” aid, the presidency said. At least 22,600 people have been killed in Gaza in Israel’s response to the October 7 attack by militant group Hamas, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.

The United Nations estimates that 1.9 million Gazans — 85 percent of the pre-war population — have been displaced, with hundreds of thousands risking famine and most hospitals out of action.

There are serious shortages of food, water, fuel and medicines despite a UN Security Council resolution demanding deliveries of humanitarian aid.

In Gaza, “a quarter of the population is (facing) catastrophic levels of hunger,” World Food Programme chief economist Arif Husain told the New Yorker on Wednesday.

The supplies dropped by France and Jordan were equipped with systems that remotely guided them to a Jordanian field hospital operating in the territory, the French presidency said.

The mission “allows us to show that such operations are possible,” the Elysee added, without saying whether it would be repeated.

SHOW COMMENTS