UN warns of 'unacceptable' level of violence against aid workers

Picture of some of a total of 120 shrouds stained with red paint and marked with Palestinian flags which were placed by NGO Rio de Paz on Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, taken on November 3, 2023. Aug. 19, 2024 marks the World Humanitarian Day, and the U.N. lashed out at the "unacceptable" violence that has led to the deaths of 280 aid workers in 2023, a record that was fuelled by the war in Gaza and threatens to be surpassed in 2024.

The United Nations on Monday condemned the "unacceptable" level of violence that has become commonplace against humanitarian workers, a record 280 of whom were killed worldwide in 2023.

It warned that the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza is potentially fueling even higher numbers of such deaths this year.

"The normalization of violence against aid workers and the lack of accountability are unacceptable, unconscionable, and enormously harmful for aid operations everywhere," Joyce Msuya, acting director of the U.N.'s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), said in a statement on World Humanitarian Day.

"With 280 aid workers killed in 33 countries last year, 2023 marked the deadliest year on record for the global humanitarian community," which reflects a 137 percent increase over 2022, when 118 aid workers died, OCHA said in the statement.

It cited the Aid Worker Security Database, which has tracked such figures back to 1997.

The U.N. reported that more than half of the deaths in 2023, or 163, were aid workers killed in Gaza during the first three months of the war between Israel and Hamas, mainly due to air strikes.

South Sudan, wracked by civil strife, and Sudan, where a war between two rival generals has been raging since April 2023, are the next deadliest conflicts...

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