Recent assertions circulating regarding the number of aid and supply trucks entering Gaza have been strongly contradicted by verified field figures, which point to a significantly lower level of access than suggested. According to documented data for 9 April 2026, a total of 207 trucks entered the territory, among them 79 carrying humanitarian assistance. This stands in stark contrast to claims of 602 trucks and underscores a persistent gap between declared figures and conditions on the ground.
Available data further indicates that the overall rate of entry since the start of the ceasefire framework remains well below expected thresholds, not exceeding 38% of the agreed levels. Such shortfalls continue to intensify already severe humanitarian pressures, with essential supplies failing to reach the population at the scale required to meet urgent needs in a context described by many observers as an ongoing genocidal war.
Questions are increasingly being raised over the effectiveness and credibility of international oversight mechanisms tasked with ensuring compliance with agreed arrangements. Despite repeated public commitments to safeguard civilian welfare, there is growing concern over the absence of meaningful enforcement, as the gap between commitments and implementation continues to widen.
In this context, calls are mounting for urgent international action to ensure the uninterrupted flow of humanitarian assistance and to address what is widely viewed as a rapidly deteriorating humanitarian catastrophe affecting civilians across the territory.
Source : Safa News