Israel said on Dec. 30 it suspended more than two dozen international humanitarian organizations from operating in the Gaza Strip and parts of the West Bank, saying they failed to comply with new registration requirements.
The announcement was made by Israel’s Ministry of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Antisemitism, which said more than 30 organizations had not met the criteria. Those affected include major aid providers such as Doctors Without Borders, also known as Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).
“The message is clear: humanitarian assistance is welcome—the exploitation of humanitarian frameworks for terrorism is not,” said Diaspora Affairs Minister Amichai Chikli.
“It should be clarified that the organizations that received notice regarding the suspension of their activities in the Gaza Strip did not bring aid into Gaza throughout the current ceasefire,” COGAT said, adding that their combined contribution in the past had amounted to “only about 1% of the total aid volume.”
COGAT said about 4,200 aid trucks would continue to enter Gaza each week via the U.N., donor countries, the private sector, and international organizations that remain registered and approved.
“We emphasize that the registration process is intended to prevent the exploitation of aid by Hamas,” COGAT said on Dec. 30, adding that the refusal by some organizations to cooperate with transparency and security checks “raises genuine concern regarding the nature of their activities and the entities with which they operate.”
Western Allies and EU Criticize Move
The suspensions drew swift criticism from Western governments and humanitarian officials.“Without them, it will be impossible to meet all urgent needs at the scale required,” they said, calling any attempt to curb their operations “unacceptable” and Israel’s registration requirements for NGOs “restrictive.”
The ministers called for the United Nations and its partners, including the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), to be allowed to continue their work across Gaza. The call follows a broader Israeli dispute with the aid agency, which Israel earlier this year accused of being infiltrated by Hamas.
Aid targets, including 4,200 trucks per week, should be treated as a minimum, not a cap, and bureaucratic delays must be reduced to allow supplies in at the scale required, the ministers said.
“It reflects a recurring pattern of detached criticism and one-sided demands on Israel, while deliberately ignoring the essential requirement of disarming Hamas—a prerequisite for the security of Israel and the region,” the ministry said.
European Union humanitarian aid chief Hadja Lahbib also condemned the NGOs suspension in a Dec. 31 post on X.
COGAT has rejected claims that Israel was undermining the humanitarian system, saying hundreds of international staff are currently operating in Gaza, most of them affiliated with the United Nations and the International Committee of the Red Cross.
Last week, MSF alleged that the new registration requirements could have severe consequences for civilians.
MSF said its operations support nearly half a million people in Gaza through emergency care, water provision and assistance to a shattered health system, warning that loss of access would deprive civilians of critical medical services.







