DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip — Rains drenched Gaza's tent camps and dropping temperatures chilled Palestinians huddling inside them Thursday as winter storm Byron descended on the war-battered territory, showing how two months of a ceasefire have failed to sufficiently address the spiraling humanitarian crisis there.
Families found their possessions and food supplies soaked inside their tents. Children's sandaled feet disappeared under opaque brown water that flooded the camps, running knee deep in some places. Trucks moved slowly to avoid sending waves of mud toward the tents. Piles of garbage and sewage turned to waterfalls.
''We have been drowned. I don't have clothes to wear and we have no mattresses left,'' said Um Salman Abu Qenas, a displaced mother in a Khan Younis tent camp. She said that her family couldn't sleep the night before, because of the water in the tent.
Aid groups say not enough shelter aid is getting into Gaza during the truce. Figures recently released by Israel's military suggest it hasn't met the ceasefire stipulation of allowing 600 trucks of aid into Gaza a day, though Israel disputes that finding.
''Cold, overcrowded, and unsanitary environments heighten the risk of illness and infection,'' the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, said in a terse statement posted on X. ''This suffering could be prevented by unhindered humanitarian aid, including medical support and proper shelter."
Rains wreak havoc in Gaza
Sabreen Qudeeh, also in the Khan Younis camp, in a squalid area known as Muwasi, said that her family woke up to rain leaking from their tent's ceiling and water from the street soaking their mattresses.
''My little daughters were screaming,'' she said.