Gaza: Israel’s shelter restrictions force nearly a million people to endure summer heat in tents

via the Norwegian Refugee Council (June 18, 2026

As Gaza enters the sweltering summer months, Israel’s destruction of homes and restrictions on shelter materials have trapped displaced families in Gaza in dangerously hot tents and makeshift shelters, warns the Shelter Cluster in Palestine.

Across Gaza, around 170,000 households, equivalent to nearly one million people, live in tents. Another 5,000 households sleep outdoors, while 52,000 households live in overcrowded shelters. This month, 850,000 people still lack emergency shelter items such as plastic sheeting, plywood, and rope. These figures point to a shelter crisis driven not by weather, but by destruction, displacement, and blocked relief.  

Summer heat will only sharpen the risks families face, with daytime temperatures reaching 34.5C in the warmest month and the number of hot days with temperature recording 35C or higher expected to increase. 

“Gaza’s families are not facing a natural disaster. They are being forced to endure deadly heat in emergency shelters that were never designed to withstand prolonged displacement or high temperatures. Simple measures such as shading, ventilation and basic shelter improvements can significantly reduce risks and improve living conditions, but this is currently not available inside of Gaza and deliberately not being allowed to enter,” said Jehan Salim, Shelter Cluster Coordinator. 

Without these supplies, preventable risks will deepen. Children, older people and those with chronic illnesses face higher risks of heat stress, dehydration, respiratory distress, and disease. Women and girls face greater danger in overcrowded sites where poor lighting, lack of privacy and unsafe sanitation deepen fear and exposure. 

“It is an outrage that families in Gaza, after months of displacement and loss, now face summer heat in makeshift tents because Israel continues to restrict shelter materials,” said Jan Egeland, Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) Secretary General. “The Shelter Cluster and its partners have the expertise and capacity to help Palestinians secure safer and more dignified shelter. But skills cannot replace materials. Israel must allow shelter supplies into Gaza now so our partners can help families protect themselves from heat, exposure and further harm.” 

Israel’s military operations have destroyed and damaged 76.6 per cent of Gaza’s housing stock, displaced families again and again, and left entire communities with no safe place to go.  

Families need proper tents and basic shelter materials, including tarpaulins, shade nets, plastic sheeting and basic repair supplies. These materials will not rebuild Gaza, but they can make the difference between a tent that traps heat, smoke, dust and disease, and a shelter that gives a family shade, airflow, privacy and a measure of protection. 

“I could not bear to be inside the tent from 8am until 7pm, because as soon as the sun rises, ants, flies, and insects begin to spread inside, and the heat starts to soar,” said a 44-year-old husband and father of three from Deir al-Balah. “My wife and children ended up with burns on their faces.” 

The Shelter Cluster calls for rapid, predictable and sustained entry of shelter materials through all available crossings, alongside urgent donor support for summer-specific household items such as bedding, clothing, solar fans, lighting and safe storage. This includes substantial quantities of tents, sealing-off kits, emergency shelter materials, and other critical shelter supplies that remain outside Gaza despite being approved for entry. These delays continue to limit the ability of humanitarian actors to improve shelter conditions and respond to urgent needs at scale. 

“This summer does not have to strip away more lives and dignity,” said Salim. “The solutions are known, the response capacity exists, and partners are ready to act. What is needed now is sustained entry of shelter materials to help families protect themselves from heat, exposure and further harm.” 

Notes to editors

  • Photos from Gaza can be downloaded for free use here.

  • The Norwegian Refugee Council leads the Shelter Cluster in Palestine, which coordinates humanitarian shelter actors responding to emergency shelter needs in Gaza and the West Bank. 

  • The Shelter Cluster identifies Gaza’s main summer shelter risks as heat stress, dehydration, overcrowding, poor ventilation, shelter deterioration, pest infestation, dust exposure, fire hazards, WASH-related health risks and reduced dignity. 

  • The Shelter Cluster, citing Site Management Cluster data, reports that 170,000 households live in tents, 58,000 households rely on emergency shelter kits or distributed items, 30,000 households live in shelters built from locally sourced materials, 5,000 households sleep outdoors and 52,000 households live in overcrowded shelters. 

  • The “nearly one million people” figure applies the Shelter Cluster’s average household-size assumption of 5.8 people to the 170,000 households living in tents, giving an indicative scale of around 986,000 people. 

  • Average daytime temperatures in Palestine reach 34.5C in the warmest month, according to the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre, which warns that hot days above 35C could rise sharply in the decades ahead. 

  • According to the UN, around 1.7 million people lived across roughly 1,600 displacement sites by late May, with 88 per cent in makeshift sites. According to the UN, 850,000 people needed emergency shelter items by early June. 

  • The Gaza Strip Rapid Damage and Needs Assessment, prepared by the UN, EU and World Bank, found that 76.6 per cent of Gaza’s housing units, 371,888 out of 485,361, had been destroyed or damaged as of October 2025. 

  • According to the UN, shelter and essential-item stocks approached depletion by 5 June. Access constraints also tightened during the reporting period, with Zikim closed since 24 May, Kerem Shalom serving as the only crossing for approved cargo as of 4 June, and only 49 private-sector truckloads carrying shelter materials between 25 and 31 May. 

For more information or to arrange an interview, please contact:  

  • Norwegian Refugee Council's global media hotline:  media@nrc.no
    +47 905 623 29  

Displaced Palestinians staying in flimsy tents amid rising temperatures in Gaza. Photo: Zyad Abu Mariam/NRC

Inspiring! Listen/watch until the end...

https://youtu.be/lvGbUgUxQg4?si=UB-sisnV_Vlx34F0 

WE WILL REBUILD GAZA | Ahmed Abu Amsha

 

They destroyed my home…

They destroyed everything…

But they could not destroy our voice.

 

 WATCH NOW: [ https://youtu.be/lvGbUgUxQg4?si=UB-sisnV_Vlx34F0 ]

 

I went back to my home during the first ceasefire…

I stood above the ruins of my destroyed house, studio, and musical instruments.

 

Everything was gone.

The memories, the music, the life we built.

 

I was deeply overwhelmed.

I cried while standing there…

And in that moment, above the rubble of my home, I wrote this song.

 

This song is for every family that lost a home.

For every child still dreaming under the destruction.

For everyone who still believes that Gaza will rise again.

 

“We will rebuild Gaza.”

“Free Palestine.”

They Want to Control Our Imagination

"When oppression works its way into society, it does so by limiting our imagination first, stopping us from finding our way out of the tyranny of control by forcing us to curb what is possible, what we may need and not yet know.

The recent story coming out of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) that Savneet Talwar, the director of its graduate art therapy program, was placed on leave after she asked students to “create a mock therapeutic treatment plan for a queer Arab woman who sympathized with pro-Palestinian protests and feared retaliation under the Trump administration” is a prime example of this decay that authoritarianism can insert into a democratic society, one that we have to fight at every turn. "

For decades, Palestine, or the “P-word” as many refer to it nowadays, has become a third rail of creative and academic spaces that should know better than to control the minds of youth, who will solve the problems we face today and tomorrow. For almost three years now, this verbal and intellectual kryptonite in the US, Germany, and elsewhere has created a climate of fear that many are finding hard to navigate. The crackdown on pro-Palestine campus encampments in 2024 instilled that chill, while persecution of its leaders and activists, like Mahmoud Khalil, has outlined the potential penalties those who step out of line will suffer. 

Read the article in Hyperallergic here.

Gaza is not an aberration - Israel planned this genocide decades ago

Jonathan Cook

11 June 2026 07:25 BST

In October 2023, Israel found an excuse to breathe new life into an old story of slaughter and expulsion. The chief differences this time have been of scale and duration

The truth slowly comes to light: Israel's genocide in Gaza was planned decades ago.

Listen to the testimonies of four Israeli soldiers who served in Gaza. 

Soldier 1: “Human lives didn’t matter. You could kill, there was no law. No one would say a word to you. But it’s not a good feeling. It mainly kills your humanity.”

Soldier 2: “At first I wasn’t willing to execute Arabs who weren’t resisting [that is, civilians]. Then we came to the conclusion that we had to kill. We went through the process of ceasing to see them as human beings.”

Soldier 3: “We caught guys, lined them up and eliminated them. In retrospect, it looks like murder.”

Soldier 4: “We would roam through refugee camps in Gaza and carry out purges... Every soldier who was there created a ‘concentration camp’, and they didn’t hesitate to kill people who caused a slight disturbance.”

No, these testimonies are not new. The whistleblowers did not serve in Gaza during the current, ongoing genocide there. These accounts are nearly 60 years old, published last week by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz under the headline "We were ordered to kill”. 

Read the article in the Middle East Eye here.