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Israel to bar 37 aid groups as UK and EU warn of severe impact in Gaza
BBC
01/01/2026
Israel is to revoke the licences of 37 international non-governmental organisations (INGOs) working in Gaza and the occupied West Bank, saying they failed to meet requirements under new registration rules.
ActionAid, International Rescue Committee, Médecins Sans Frontières and Norwegian Refugee Council are among the aid agencies which will have their licences suspended on 1 January, with their operations to end within 60 days.
Israel said they had, among other things, failed to hand over “complete” personal details of their staff. The INGOs said that could put them at risk.
The move was condemned by 10 countries, which said the rules would have a severe impact on access to essential services.
In a joint statement, the foreign ministers of the UK, France, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Japan, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland said INGOs were integral to the humanitarian response in Gaza and that any attempt to stem their ability to operate was “unacceptable”.
“Without them, it will be impossible to meet all urgent needs at the scale required,” they warned.
The European Union’s humanitarian chief, Hadja Lahbib, said: “Israel’s plans to block INGOs in Gaza means blocking life-saving aid.”
International humanitarian law “leaves no room for doubt: aid must reach those in need,” she added.
UN human rights chief Volker Türk called the INGO suspensions “outrageous” and “arbitrary”, and said they made “an already intolerable situation even worse for the people of Gaza”.
The Humanitarian Country Team of the Occupied Palestinian Territory – a forum that brings together UN agencies and more than 200 local and international NGOs – urged the Israeli authorities to reconsider the registration decisions.
It has said INGOs run or support most of Gaza’s field hospitals and primary healthcare centres, emergency shelter responses, water and sanitation services, nutrition stabilisation centres for children with acute malnutrition, and critical mine action activities.
Norwegian Refugee Council spokeswoman Shaina Low told NPR that it would no longer be able to bring foreign aid workers into Gaza if it was deregistered, but that its 200 local staff would continue to support communities as best as they could.
Ms Low said NRC had tried to explain to the Israeli authorities why it could not provide them with lists of their Palestinian staff members.
“We’ve seen that hundreds of aid workers were killed over the last two years. And so, for us, it is a safety concern for our staff. And acknowledging who they are – it puts them at risk. Because we’ve seen that aid workers are just as unprotected, and at times, have been targeted by Israeli authorities,” she said.
She also said that the NRC and other INGOs were prevented by data protection laws from complying with an Israeli demand to share details about the funding they received from the EU and EU member states.
“The number one thing that we’re concerned about is the entry of aid,” she added. “We continue to call for Israel to lift these restrictions, to open all of the crossings to allow much more aid to enter than the current rate.”