NEWSAR
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SRCNew York Times - World
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SUN · 2025-12-14 · 10:18 GMTBRIEF NSR-2025-1214-2544
News/Has the humanitarian crisis in Gaza been/Floods, Mud and Cold Add to Gazans’ Misery
NSR-2025-1214-2544News Report·EN·Human Interest

Floods, Mud and Cold Add to Gazans’ Misery

Following a recent rainstorm in Gaza in December 2025, the already dire living conditions for Palestinians have worsened. Over two months after a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, rebuilding efforts are stalled due to ongoing political negotiations.

Aaron Boxerman and Saher AlghorraNew York Times - WorldFiled 2025-12-14 · 10:18 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
NEW YORK TIMES - WORLD
Reading time
3min
Word count
669words
Sources cited
1cited
Entities identified
4entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Following a recent rainstorm in Gaza in December 2025, the already dire living conditions for Palestinians have worsened. Over two months after a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, rebuilding efforts are stalled due to ongoing political negotiations. Approximately 1.3 million Palestinians lack adequate shelter, with many residing in flooded tents or damaged buildings. The storm affected over 100,000 people and overwhelmed sanitation systems, leading to sewage contamination and increased risk of disease. Gazans face challenges in staying warm due to limited access to cooking gas, firewood, electricity, and central heating, creating a potential public health crisis.

Confidence 0.90Sources 1Claims 5Entities 4
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Human Interest
Human Rights
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.80 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
1
Limited
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

More than 120,000 buildings in Gaza were destroyed.

statisticThe United Nations
Confidence
1.00
02

More than 100,000 Palestinians were estimated to have been affected by the storm.

statisticThe United Nations’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
Confidence
1.00
03

About 1.3 million Palestinians in Gaza lack proper shelter.

statisticThe United Nations’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Jerusalem
Confidence
1.00
04

At least 11 people were killed this week when damaged buildings collapsed on those taking shelter there during the storm.

factualGaza’s civil defense emergency workers
Confidence
1.00
05

More than two months into the cease-fire, many of Gaza’s two million Palestinians still have no permanent homes.

factualnull
Confidence
1.00
§ 04

Full report

3 min read · 669 words
The rainstorm that battered the enclave this week has left many shivering in tent camps. Despite a cease-fire, rebuilding is still a long way off.Credit...SKIP Dec. 14, 2025Tents flooded as rain poured down outside. Children huddled around campfires in buildings half-smashed by fighting. Roads torn up by two years of war turned to muddy tracks.For Gazans, the storm that battered the enclave this week was a reminder that while the bombs may have stopped falling for now, life is still far from normal.Palestinians had hoped the cease-fire between Israel and Hamas would permit the devastated enclave to begin rebuilding as soon as possible. But they are likely to be kept waiting as Israel, the United States and Hamas wrangle over Gaza’s future.ImageGazans moving through flood water in the Al-Zahraa camp in the Mawasi area of Khan Younis on Friday.More than two months into the cease-fire, many of Gaza’s two million Palestinians still have no permanent homes. Instead, they are often forced to choose between living under rubber tarps between mounds of rubble or in partly destroyed buildings.Both options can be dangerous: Gaza’s civil defense emergency workers said that at least 11 people were killed this week when damaged buildings collapsed on those taking shelter there during the storm.Staying warm, for many, is a constant battle. Cooking gas can be prohibitively expensive, and firewood damp and difficult to light. Gazans lucky enough to be living in stable buildings rarely have access to electricity or central heating.ImageTrying to keep warm by a fire in Sheikh Radwan, a neighborhood in northwestern Gaza City, on Wednesday. The cold weather and possibly contaminated water supplies are threatening to create a public health crisis.The United Nations’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Jerusalem has reported that about 1.3 million Palestinians in Gaza lack proper shelter. More than 100,000 Palestinians were estimated to have been affected by the storm, which flooded more than 200 displacement sites, according to the agency.The flooding brought sewage into the streets as well — overwhelming sanitation systems badly damaged in the war — according to the U.N.’s humanitarian office, raising the risk of turning clean water supplies into dangerous sources of disease.ImagePalestinians making their way through part of Gaza City during the storm amid torn-up roads turned to mud. The conditions are worst in those areas that suffered the greatest damage in the war.Israel’s military campaign against Hamas killed tens of thousands in Gaza. It also flattened much of its cities through a relentless drumbeat of airstrikes and the systematic razing of entire residential neighborhoods.According to the United Nations, more than 120,000 buildings in Gaza were destroyed and tens of thousands more were either moderately or severely damaged — in all, about 81 percent of the structures in the enclave.Rebuilding them is likely to cost around $70 billion, according to U.N. agencies, and it is far from clear which nations might be willing to provide the funds. With Hamas and Israel still at loggerheads, potential donors say they fear pouring money into buildings that could be brought crashing down if the conflict reignites.ImageIn Al-Zahraa, floodwaters poured through tent camps, spreading misery and potentially disease. United States officials have said they would not allow large-scale reconstruction to take place in the half of Gaza still controlled by Hamas, which began the war by attacking Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. But a vast majority of the two million Gazans live in that area.Israel says it is allowing international relief organizations to bring large amounts of winter supplies — like tents and tarps — into Gaza, but United Nations officials say that, so far, it is not nearly enough.ImageTrying to dry out belongings in Gaza City on Thursday.Aaron Boxerman is a Times reporter covering Israel and Gaza. He is based in Jerusalem.SKIP Site IndexNewsHome PageU.S.WorldPoliticsNew YorkEducationSportsBusinessTechScienceWeatherThe Great ReadObituariesHeadwayVisual InvestigationsThe MagazineArtsBook ReviewBest Sellers Book ListDanceMoviesMusicPop CultureTelevisionTheaterVisual ArtsLifestyleHealthWellFoodRestaurant ReviewsLoveTravelStyleFashionReal EstateT MagazineOpinionToday's OpinionColumnistsEditorialsGuest EssaysOp-DocsLettersSunday OpinionOpinion VideoOpinion AudioMoreAudioGamesCookingWirecutterThe AthleticJobsVideoGraphicsTrendingLive EventsCorrectionsReader CenterTimesMachineThe Learning NetworkSchool of The NYTinEducationAccountSubscribeManage My AccountHome DeliveryGift SubscriptionsGroup SubscriptionsGift ArticlesEmail NewslettersNYT LicensingReplica EditionTimes Store
§ 05

Entities

4 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

10 terms
gaza
1.00
floods
0.90
humanitarian crisis
0.80
displacement
0.70
rebuilding
0.70
cease-fire
0.60
shelter
0.60
public health
0.50
contaminated water
0.50
storm
0.40
§ 07

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