Israel says the number of trucks entering the enclave has doubled to an average of 400 a day. The U.N. disputes that, but agrees that the pace of deliveries has quickened.
Read Also
- Traders reassess Bank of England rate cuts as UK grows at fastest rate in nearly 3 years
- Auto & Transport Roundup: Market Talk
- Heavy fighting in Gaza's Rafah keeps aid crossings closed, sends 100,000 civilians fleeing
- Makeshift shelter saves hundreds of dogs amid floods in southern Brazil
- Israel bombs Rafah, prepares for ground invasion after ceasefire talks with Hamas fall apart
- Energy & Utilities Roundup: Market Talk
- Switzerland reckons with historic neutrality as it prepares to host Ukraine peace summit
- Will Canada get temporary visa cuts? Ottawa, provinces could decide in meet
- Donald Trump gets own son Barron’s age wrong
- Today's Logistics Report: Baltimore Port Sets Reopening Plan; China's Export Flows are Shifting
Latest The New York Times
- Middle East Crisis: White House Aide Warns Israel Against ‘Smashing Into Rafah’
- How Pro-Palestinian Students Pushed Trinity College Dublin to Divest
- How Pro-Palestinian Students Pushed Trinity College Dublin to Divest
- Kherson Residents Rebuild and Brace for New Russian Attack
- After Her Sister Wed at 11, a Girl Began Fighting Child Marriage at 13
- How a Remote Australian Town Nearly Ran Out of Food
- UK Shakes Off Recession as Economy Grows Faster Than Expected
- Britain Shakes Off Recession as Economy Grows Faster Than Expected
- Friday Briefing
- Jacob Zuma, Once Leader of the A.N.C., Becomes Its Political Rival