{"id":318937,"date":"2026-06-05T13:22:57","date_gmt":"2026-06-05T17:22:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/?post_type=document&p=318937"},"modified":"2026-06-19T13:26:09","modified_gmt":"2026-06-19T17:26:09","slug":"ocha-sitrep-5-june-2026","status":"publish","type":"document","link":"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/document\/ocha-sitrep-5-june-2026\/","title":{"rendered":"OCHA Humanitarian Situation Report – 5 June 2026"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p>\n
6 June 2026<\/p>\n
Over the past two weeks, violence, military operations, and movement restrictions have resulted in casualties, damaged homes and infrastructure, driven new and prolonged displacement, and limited access to essential services, livelihoods, and humanitarian aid. Increasingly, they are placing strain on an already fragile\u00a0economy, as disrupted markets, rising living costs, and declining household incomes make it harder for people to meet their basic needs. At the same time, growing operational and funding constraints are reducing the ability of humanitarian partners to respond at the required scale.<\/p>\n
The humanitarian situation in Gaza is volatile and insecure as strikes continue daily, reportedly causing civilian casualties. Most people remain displaced and confined to shrinking and overcrowded spaces where essential services are overstretched. Access to safe water is limited, and solid waste is accumulating in residential areas. This is attracting pests and rodents that contaminate food and living spaces and increase cases of illness, particularly among children. The recent rollout of a pest control campaign is a critical step, but its successful implementation depends on sustained entry of supplies.<\/p>\n
The broader humanitarian operation is further hampered by the tightening of\u00a0access restrictions. Since 24 May, the Israeli authorities have kept the Zikim Crossing in northern Gaza closed. As of 4 June, Kerem Shalom remains the only crossing point for approved cargo to enter Gaza. Furthermore, on 1 June, Israeli forces began routing humanitarian convoys through a new road, with a new checkpoint, to reach Kerem Shalom from inside Gaza. Since then, convoys have faced significant operational challenges at the new checkpoint \u2013 including delays, congestion, malfunctions, and slow screening. As a result, only some of the supplies planned to be collected from Kerem Shalom could be picked up and the volumes of incoming fuel dropped.<\/p>\n
These challenges are compounded by\u00a0funding shortfalls, significantly limiting the capacity of humanitarian actors to sustain and scale up essential services and respond effectively to people\u2019s needs.<\/p>\n
On 31 May, the UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR) reported an increase in Israeli attacks in Gaza since the eve of Eid Al Adha on 26 May, resulting in the killing of at least 26 Palestinians including six women and seven children. According to OHCHR, this brings the total to at least 32 children and eight women killed in this context since the announcement of the ceasefire.<\/p>\n
According to the Ministry of Health (MoH) in Gaza, which operates under the de facto authorities, 45 Palestinians were killed, five bodies were retrieved, two died of wounds, and 254 people were injured between 20 May and 3 June. This brings the overall reported casualty toll since the announcement of a ceasefire agreement on 10 October 2025 to 936 fatalities and 2,903 injuries, according to MoH.<\/p>\n
Strikes are affecting humanitarian and other critical assets. On 22 May, a retailer supported by food security partners sustained severe damage from a nearby strike. On 28 May, an air strike hit a residential area about 200 metres from five humanitarian facilities in Deir al Balah. This followed an order from the Israeli military to humanitarian partners in the area to shelter in place shortly before the strike. On 31 May, an airstrike hit the rooftop of a UN school building in An Nuseirat, creating a hole near the staircase area; no injuries were reported.<\/p>\n
Strikes or exchanges of fire have also caused damage to critical water and sanitation infrastructure. On 23 May the Emirati carrier line was hit and damaged, and on 28 May facilities near Al-Aqsa Hospital were also damaged. Although repairs are underway, progress remains slow due to shortages of essential materials such as pipes and fittings.<\/p>\n
Access to water in Gaza is limited to begin with. Information collected in March indicates that most households are unable to meet the minimum needs of 6 litres of water for drinking and cooking per person per day. UNICEF warns that, for families in Gaza, water shortages mean a daily trade-off between drinking, hygiene and disease prevention. Partners leading on water report that the overall water production in Gaza dropped by about 20 per cent in May compared with two months earlier, largely due to shortages of chemicals and spare parts.<\/p>\n
Between 26 April and 30 May, infectious diseases accounted for 20 per cent of consultations reported to the World Health Organization\u2019s (WHO) Early Warning, Alert and Response System (EWARS) in Gaza. Acute respiratory infections remained the leading cause of morbidity at 48 per cent of reported conditions. Ectoparasitic and other skin diseases and acute watery diarrhea followed as the second and third most reported conditions, showing increasing trends and accounting for 30 and 20 per cent of morbidity, respectively. Health Cluster partners are undertaking a rodent-associated disease risk assessment to inform outbreak preparedness and response efforts.<\/p>\n
During the same five days, the Site Management Cluster\u2019s Incident Alert System recorded incidents across 29 displacement sites in Khan Younis, Deir al Balah, and Gaza city, with rodent and insect infestations identified as the most critical concern. Affected people face increased public health and protection risks such as bites, skin infections, psychosocial distress, and damage to shelters and belongings. Reports highlight repeated cases of children being bitten during sleep, while overcrowding, damaged shelters, and poor waste management are worsening conditions. Site Management partners are responding with cleaning materials, rubble removal, fumigation, rodent control, waste management support, and complementary shelter assistance.<\/p>\n
Across Gaza, partners leading on water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) continue the roll-out of a Pest Control Plan launched on 17 May to address infestations of rodents and ectoparasites. To date, treatment has started at 1,180 priority locations, including areas around hospitals, food storage facilities, sewage channels, lagoons, shelters, and temporary dumping sites, in coordination with community leaders and solid waste actors. Continued implementation will require the regular entry of pesticides.<\/p>\n
Solid waste management remains a significant challenge, as it continues to rely on temporary dump sites near displacement areas, increasing public health risks for affected populations. Since early March, WASH Cluster partners have removed approximately 100,000 cubic metres of waste from the Firas Market in Gaza city and transferred it to the newly identified dump site in Abu Jarad. The new site, however, cannot be fully developed or effectively utilized without the geotextile materials that have only now been approved and are in the procurement and supply phase. More generally, partners working on sanitation have stressed the need to secure access to Gaza\u2019s landfills close to the eastern perimeter as well as approval to take into Gaza equipment and inputs needed to clear explosive ordnance and remove waste and rubble.<\/p>\n
In May, according to UN 2720 mechanism data, UN and partners offloaded approximately 51,900 pallets of aid at the Kerem Shalom and Zikim crossings for collection from within Gaza. This represents an increase compared with the 49,400 pallets in April and 47,500 in March, but remains below levels recorded earlier in the year, including 54,600 in February and 58,600 in January.<\/p>\n
The closure of Zikim since 24 May has affected the dispatch plan from Jordan and forced all cargo through Kerem Shalom. Under the Jordan plan, convoys running through King Hussein (Allenby) bridge between Jordan and the West Bank run twice weekly, 50-60 trucks per crossing, while the Jordan River Crossing (Sheikh Hussein Bridge) which connects Jordan with Israel operates five days per week at 15 trucks daily. On 29 May, Israeli authorities closed the Jordan River Crossing after fire broke out nearby, on the Israeli side; trucks queued for transit remained on site until called forward, while King Hussein Bridge (Allenby) continued operating as normal. Operations are now expected to resume as planned.<\/p>\n
Between 18 and 31 May, only half of all aid trucks from Egypt could offload at the Israeli-controlled Kerem Shalom Crossing, based on data tracked by the Logistics Cluster, continuing a trend observed in the first half of the month.<\/p>\n
On the commercial front, data from the Gaza Chamber of Commerce suggests that 708 private-sector truckloads entered Gaza between 25 and 31 May. The number is still below pre-regional escalation average (1,000-1200), and it was further driven down by the Eid holidays and the complete closure of Zikim crossing. For further consideration, 222 out of 708 truckloads (31 per cent) carried non-essential items, such as ground coffee and candies, effectively reducing the quantities of necessary commodities transported to the markets. Of those carrying essential items, the vast majority carried fresh or frozen food, staples and cooking gas. Only 31 truckloads carried hygiene items, 49 shelter materials, eight stationaries for children, three animal feed and one truckload transporting medical supplies. This represents discrepancies among supply chains that compound affected households’ capacity to meet their multiple and varied sectoral needs beyond food.<\/p>\n
According to data from the Gaza Chamber of Commerce\u2019s daily monitoring, food prices remained relatively stable between 25 and 31 May, with minor variations across fresh products; the exception were eggs that, compared with the previous week, experienced a 22 per cent decline. The prices of non-food items remained unchanged. However, prices still represent a 235 per cent increase compared with the time before October 2023 and an 88 per cent increase compared with the period between the declaration of a ceasefire in October 2025 and the regional escalation of 28 February 2026.<\/p>\n
Cash-out commission rates have decreased to 11 per cent, down from 23 per cent just after the October 2025 ceasefire agreement. The gradual decrease improves the purchase power of those beneficiaries opting to use cash instead of relying exclusively on digital transactions, particularly for small purchases or payments, such as transportation costs. To be noted, further reductions in the current circumstances would be difficult to obtain due to the persistence of extreme liquidity shortages across the Gaza Strip.<\/p>\n
Overall, data gathered by the Cash Working Group evidences that markets remain under severe pressure, with unpredictable supply chains continuing to undermine recovery and resilience.<\/p>\n
The UN is only able to confirm the entry of supplies tracked by UN 2720. For breakdowns of those, see the\u00a0online UN 2720 Mechanism Dashboard<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n For a detailed account of the latest humanitarian operations in Gaza, see\u00a0Annex 1\u00a0below.<\/p>\n Funding constraints are increasingly limiting the humanitarian response across Gaza. Some partners have already been forced to scale down or suspend critical services. Other partners\u2019 ability to plan, pre-position, and respond effectively is weakening.<\/p>\n Water:<\/strong>\u00a0Since mid-May, four partners were forced to start phasing out trucking activities – some have already ceased operations, while others are expected to complete the phase out by mid-June – leaving over 330,000 people across approximately 250 sites at risk of losing their primary drinking source.<\/p>\n Meals:<\/strong>\u00a0As of 28 May, 23 food security partners delivered 678,000 meals every day through 80 kitchens to 1,107 locations, down from 1.5 million daily meals in mid-March. While a shift from in-kind assistance to cash and livelihood support is being actively promoted, in line with the re-activation of commerce, the private sector does not yet offer enough fresh, diverse and affordable food to offset the reduction, which is driven mostly by underfunding.<\/p>\n Agriculture:<\/strong>\u00a0Agricultural recovery interventions, including livestock support and agricultural asset rehabilitation, are being suspended or scaled down.<\/p>\n Site management:<\/strong>\u00a0Partners are only able to sustain operations in 505 out of more than 1,600 displacement sites across the Gaza Strip; of these, just 139 sites have benefited from site improvement works.<\/p>\n Education:<\/strong>\u00a0Shortfalls are limiting temporary learning spaces (TLS), teacher incentives, education supplies, psychosocial support, and the overall capacity to maintain and expand services.<\/p>\n Child Protection:<\/strong>\u00a0Lack of funding is constraining the continuity of high-risk child protection case management, mental health and psychosocial support services, outreach activities, and child-friendly spaces, with many already facing disruptions.<\/p>\n Women and girls:<\/strong>\u00a0Twelve safe spaces for women and girls remained closed in May.<\/p>\n For an overview of humanitarian funding across the Occupied Palestinian Territory, see the\u00a0Funding section below.<\/em><\/p>\n Across the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, Israeli forces\u2019 operations, movement restrictions, demolitions and settler violence continue to drive humanitarian needs and generate displacement, while disrupting Palestinians\u2019 access to housing, livelihoods and essential services. These practices, together with reduced access to labour markets and broader fiscal pressures, continue to undermine household resilience and economic conditions across the West Bank.<\/p>\n On 31 May, Israeli forces extended a military order titled \u201cRestriction of Movement and Traffic\u201d for Tulkarm and Nur Shams refugee camps and surrounding neighbourhoods until 31 July 2026. The order designates \u201cclosure areas,\u201d where entry and exit are prohibited without a permit issued by the Israeli military commander or an authorized official; such permits may be personal or general and limited by area, time, purpose, or route. Since January 2025, more than 33,000 Palestine refugees have been displaced from Tulkarm, Nur Shams and Jenin refugee camps and surrounding areas, according to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA). This has become the largest and longest displacement crisis in the West Bank since 1967. Prolonged operations and movement restrictions continue to undermine access to housing, livelihoods and essential services in affected areas.<\/p>\n Against this backdrop, concerns regarding access to essential services for Palestine refugees have intensified following recent Israeli measures seeking to affect UNRWA\u2019s operations and facilities. On 29 May, the Secretary-General\u00a0condemned<\/a>\u00a0Israeli authorities\u2019 decision to establish military facilities at the UNRWA Sheikh Jarrah compound in East Jerusalem, stating that the measure breaches the inviolability of United Nations premises and obstructs the implementation of UNRWA\u2019s General Assembly mandate. He called on the Israeli authorities to rescind the decision and immediately return the compound to the United Nations, warning that continued actions against UNRWA further undermine the Agency\u2019s ability to operate and provide essential services to Palestine refugees across the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), including East Jerusalem.<\/p>\n Humanitarian partners continue to respond to growing needs among displaced and at-risk communities. According to the Shelter Cluster, over the past two weeks, partners reached approximately 100 households, comprising about 500 people, with shelter and non-food items (NFI) assistance. Assistance focused on internally displaced persons and communities affected by demolitions and included emergency shelter support, bedding kits and kitchen sets. Shelter Cluster partners also continue to support displaced households from refugee camps through cash-for-shelter interventions, prioritizing families living in inadequate shelter conditions, while assessing needs in communities at risk of displacement, including in Khan al Ahmar, where assessments indicate that dozens of families would require emergency shelter assistance in the event of mass demolitions.<\/p>\n Between 19 May and 1 June (the reporting period for this West Bank section), Israeli forces killed three Palestinian men while over 70 Palestinians, including nine children, were injured by Israeli forces or settlers across the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. Two Israeli girls (children) were injured in a Palestinian ramming attack at Gush Etzion settlement junction in Bethlehem governorate.<\/p>\n Nearly 60 per cent of Palestinian injuries occurred during Israeli forces\u2019 search operations and other raids, while the remainder were reported during settler attacks. Since 7 October 2023, when Israeli authorities revoked or suspended most permits issued to Palestinians to access East Jerusalem and Israel for work and other purposes, and as of 1 June, OCHA has documented the killing of 20 Palestinians and the injury of over 290 others while attempting to cross the Barrier.Settler attacks continued across multiple governorates during the reporting period, resulting in the injury of 30 Palestinians and widespread damage to Palestinian property, livelihoods and essential infrastructure. OCHA documented at least 65 settler attacks that resulted in casualties, property damage or both, bringing the number of such incidents recorded since the beginning of 2026 to over 950 across more than 230 communities; an average of six incidents per day.<\/p>\n Many of the attacks targeted agricultural livelihoods and productive assets. Across Nablus, Salfit, Hebron, Ramallah, Tulkarm and Jerusalem governorates, settlers vandalized at least 350 olive and almond trees and saplings, damaged irrigation infrastructure, set fire to more than 80 dunums (20 acres) of cultivated land and three greenhouses, and damaged agricultural structures, water tanks, fodder supplies and farming equipment. Elsewhere, settler attacks damaged Palestinian homes, vehicles and civilian infrastructure, further undermining livelihoods and increasing protection concerns for affected communities.<\/p>\n During the reporting period, Israeli authorities demolished 73 Palestinian-owned structures, including 19 homes and 54 livelihood-related, water and sanitation, and other structures for lacking Israeli-issued building permits, which are nearly impossible for Palestinians to obtain. Overall, 60 structures were demolished in Area C and 13 in East Jerusalem, resulting in the displacement of 25 households comprising 126 people, including 57 children, of whom 77 people were displaced in East Jerusalem and 49 in Area C.<\/p>\n The demolitions affected residential, agricultural, livelihood and water-related structures in about 15 communities across the West Bank. Since the beginning of 2026, about 71 per cent of the approximately 440 structures demolished in Area C for lacking Israeli-issued building permits have been agricultural, livelihood-related, or water and sanitation structures, underscoring the growing impact of demolitions on livelihoods and access to essential services.<\/p>\n Livelihoods and economic conditions across the West Bank continue to be affected by movement restrictions, reduced employment opportunities, recurrent operations by Israeli forces, and ongoing fiscal pressures. While labour market indicators improved somewhat during 2025 compared with the severe deterioration recorded in 2024, conditions remain significantly worse than prior to October 2023. According to recent labour force data cited by WFP, unemployment in the West Bank stood at 30 per cent in the first quarter of 2026, down from the peak levels observed in 2024 but still more than double the pre-crisis rate.<\/p>\n The World Food Programme\u2019s (WFP<\/a>) latest food security assessment, released in May 2026 and covering the fourth quarter of 2025, highlights the continued impact of these conditions on household welfare. Poverty increased from 12 per cent before October 2023 to 28 per cent, while 78 per cent of surveyed households reported a decline in income and more than 60 per cent were unable to meet their basic monthly expenses. Rising food and fuel prices, coupled with reduced purchasing power, have further strained household resources and coping mechanisms.<\/p>\n The report also points to a deterioration in food consumption patterns. The proportion of households with poor or borderline food consumption nearly tripled, increasing from 5 per cent in June 2022 to 14 per cent by late 2025. Households increasingly reported relying on less preferred and less expensive foods, reducing meal portions and cutting the number of meals consumed per day to cope with economic hardship.<\/p>\n See\u00a0Annex 2\u00a0for selected incidents in the West Bank during the reporting period.<\/p>\n For key figures and additional breakdowns of casualties, displacement, and settler violence between January 2005 and April 2026, please refer to the\u00a0OCHA West Bank April 2026 Snapshot<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\nFunding Shortfalls<\/strong><\/h3>\n
West Bank<\/strong><\/h2>\n
Casualties and Settler Violence<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Property Damage and Displacement<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Economic Pressures Continue to Undermine Household Resilience<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Funding<\/strong><\/h2>\n