United Nations workers arrive to distribute aid to Palestinians
Gaza Peace Council submits status report to UN Security Council
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- Over 300,000 tons of aid entered Gaza.
- 70% increase in humanitarian assistance.
- 85% of buildings are damaged or destroyed, leaving 70 million tons of rubble.
- Rebuilding requires over $30 billion, but funding remains strictly contingent upon the full disarmament of Hamas.
- An international stabilization force is currently preparing to deploy under a unified United States command.
The Gaza Peace Council has submitted a major performance and assessment report to the United Nations Security Council, detailing the fragile stability of the region seven months into the active truce.
According to the council's findings, the Gaza ceasefire has successfully held for a seven-month duration, persevering through persistent operational violations and ongoing localized challenges on the ground.
Humanitarian aid vs. staggering destruction
The report notes a significant shift in logistics, revealing that humanitarian assistance entering the Gaza Strip has surged by more than 70% since the implementation of the ceasefire.
Approximately 300,000 tons of diversified aid have successfully crossed into the territory since the truce went into effect.
Despite this influx, the council emphasized that the humanitarian needs within the enclave remain absolutely immense, driven by ongoing internal displacement and severe shortages of clean water and essential medicines.
The physical devastation documented in the report remains catastrophic:
- Approximately 85% of all buildings and infrastructure in Gaza have sustained severe damage or complete destruction.
- An estimated 70 million tons of rubble and debris must be cleared from municipal zones.
Disarmament bottleneck
The Gaza Peace Council projects that the comprehensive reconstruction of the territory will require an excess of $30 billion.
Thus far, the council has secured international pledges totaling $17 billion to fund the rebuilding effort.
However, the council explicitly informed the UN Security Council that any actual investment and the physical commencement of reconstruction are strictly conditional.
Rebuilding cannot begin until full disarmament is achieved under strict international oversight.
The report identifies Hamas' disarmament and handing over administrative control as the primary obstacle preventing the execution of the comprehensive reconstruction plan.
Consequently, the Gaza Peace Council called directly upon the UN Security Council to exert diplomatic pressure on Hamas and allied Palestinian factions to accept the established roadmap.
International stabilization force deployment
Looking toward future security arrangements, the report confirmed that an international stabilization force is currently finalizing preparations to deploy to the region.
This multinational security apparatus will operate under a unified command led by the United States to secure the territory and oversee transitional stability.



