logo
IDF issues denial after reports of at least 31 people killed in Israeli attack near aid distribution site

IDF issues denial after reports of at least 31 people killed in Israeli attack near aid distribution site

Sky News2 days ago

At least 31 people have been killed near an aid distribution centre in the Rafah area of southern Gaza, according to the Hamas-run Palestinian health ministry.
Earlier, a nearby hospital run by the Red Cross reported that at least 21 people had been killed. The hospital, which has been receiving bodies and the wounded, also said another 175 people had been injured.
Witnesses said the deaths came after Israeli forces opened fire at a roundabout near the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation hub, a new aid organisation backed by Israel and the US.
However, Palestinian and Hamas-linked media have attributed the deaths it has reported on to an Israeli airstrike.
It is not yet clear if eyewitnesses and Hamas-affiliated media are giving different accounts of the same incident.
The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said "false reports have been spread" in recent hours.
The statement said: "[these include] serious allegations against the IDF regarding fire toward Gazan residents in the area of the humanitarian aid distribution site in the Gaza Strip.
"Findings from an initial inquiry indicate that the IDF did not fire at civilians while they were near or within the humanitarian aid distribution site and that reports to this effect are false."
Witnesses tell of shooting
The area where the reported shooting took place is controlled by Israeli forces.
Ibrahim Abu Saoud, an eyewitness, said Israeli forces opened fire at people moving toward the aid distribution centre.
"There were many martyrs, including women," the 40-year-old man said. "We were about 300 metres away from the military."
Abu Saoud said he saw many people with gunshot wounds, including a young man who he said had died at the scene. "We weren't able to help him," he said.
Mohammed Abu Teaima, 33, said he saw Israeli forces open fire and kill his cousin and another woman as they were heading to the hub.
He said his cousin was shot in his chest and died at the scene. Many others were wounded, including his brother-in-law, he said.
"They opened heavy fire directly toward us," he said as he was waiting outside the Red Cross field hospital for word on his wounded relative.
Minister doesn't confirm reported attack
In an interview on Sky News' Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips, Israel's deputy minister of foreign affairs Sharren Haskel suggested reports of the attack could be "Hamas propaganda".
Asked about the alleged attack near the aid hub, she said: "The IDF said it's actually reviewing this issue right now... They didn't have any information to give me before [this interview].
"But I have to say that during the last week, we have heard so much propaganda coming from Hamas about the humanitarian distribution point that I wouldn't be surprised if that's another case like that."
She added: "We've just heard about this case from your media, that was literally two minutes before I came online to your show."
Controversial new aid system
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) operates as part of a controversial aid system which Israel and the US says is aimed at preventing Hamas from siphoning off assistance.
Israel has not provided any evidence of systematic diversion, and the UN denies it has occurred.
The foundation's distribution of aid has been marred by chaos, and multiple witnesses have said Israeli troops fired on crowds near the delivery sites.
UN agencies and major aid groups have refused to work with the new system, saying it violates humanitarian principles because it allows Israel to control who receives aid and forces people to relocate to distribution sites, risking yet more mass displacement in the territory.
Before Sunday, at least six people had been killed and more than 50 wounded, according to local health officials.
Aid distribution is a 'death trap'
Philippe Lazzarini, the commissioner-general of UNRWA, the UN Agency for Palestinian Refugees, said the Rafah incident shows aid distribution in Gaza "has become a death trap".
In a post on X on Sunday, Mr Lazzarini pointed to "mass casualties, including scores of injured and killed among starving civilians due to gunshots this morning", quoting international medics on the ground.
Under the Israeli-American plan, an aid distribution point had been placed "far south in Rafah", forcing "thousands of hungry and desperate people to walk for tens of miles to an area that's all but pulverized due to heavy bombardment by the Israeli Army".
It was "humiliating", he said, as he called for the delivery and distribution of aid to be "at scale and safe", something that in Gaza "can be done only through the United Nations, including UNRWA".
The agency was banned by Israel from operating in Occupied East Jerusalem and Israel in January over alleged links to Hamas in Gaza, which the organisation denies.
Israel must "lift the siege and allow the UN safe + unhindered access" to deliver and distribute aid, he said, adding it was "the only way to avert mass starvation, including among one million children," Mr Lazzarini said.
0:53
GHF says aid distributed 'without incident'
The foundation says the private security contractors guarding its sites did not fire on the crowds, while the Israeli military has acknowledged firing warning shots on previous occasions.
Following Sunday's allegations, the foundation said: "All aid was distributed today without incident. No injuries or fatalities as noted in our daily update sent out earlier.
"We have heard that these fake reports have been actively fomented by Hamas. They are untrue and fabricated."
In an earlier statement, the organisation said it distributed 16 truckloads of aid on Sunday. It dismissed what it referred to as "false reporting about deaths, mass injuries and chaos".
Meanwhile, the UN's aid system has struggled to bring in aid after Israel slightly eased its total blockade of the territory last month.
Those groups say Israeli restrictions, the breakdown of law and order, and widespread looting make it extremely difficult to deliver aid to Gaza's roughly two million Palestinians.
Experts have warned that the Palestinian territory is at risk of famine if more aid is not brought in.
3:29
The war in Gaza began when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on 7 October 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting 251.
They are still holding 58 hostages, around a third of them believed to be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire agreements or other deals.
Israel's military campaign has killed more than 54,000 people, mostly women and children, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which does not say how many of the dead were civilians or combatants.
The offensive has destroyed vast areas of the territory, displaced around 90% of Gaza's population and left people almost completely reliant on international aid.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Three Israeli soldiers killed in combat in northern Gaza, army says
Three Israeli soldiers killed in combat in northern Gaza, army says

Reuters

time14 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Three Israeli soldiers killed in combat in northern Gaza, army says

June 3 (Reuters) - Three Israeli soldiers have been killed in fighting in the northern Gaza Strip, the military said on Tuesday. The soldiers' deaths were announced hours after Hamas' armed wing said on Monday its fighters were engaging in "fierce clashes" with Israeli forces in the north of the territory. Israel began its offensive in Gaza after Hamas militants burst through the border from Israeli-blockaded Gaza, attacking Israelis in homes, cars and at an all-night music festival. Israel says 1,200 people were killed and 251 people taken as hostages into Gaza. An additional four were already held by Hamas. Israel's campaign has devastated much of Gaza, killing more than 54,000 Palestinians and destroying most buildings. Much of the population now lives in shelters in makeshift camps.

Attack at demonstration calling for Israeli hostages' release was first where group faced violence
Attack at demonstration calling for Israeli hostages' release was first where group faced violence

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Attack at demonstration calling for Israeli hostages' release was first where group faced violence

Demonstrators with Run for Their Lives have staged global events since 2023 calling for Hamas to release Israeli hostages, but organizers say Sunday's walk in Boulder, Colorado, where 12 people were injured in a fiery attack, was the first in which they have faced violence. The group was wrapping their weekly demonstration at a bustling pedestrian mall when a man with a makeshift flamethrower yelled 'Free Palestine' and threw Molotov cocktails into the crowd, authorities said. Little was known immediately about the 12 victims injured in the attack, and none were ready to talk as of Monday, according to police liaisons assigned to them. They range in age from 52 to 88, and their injuries spanned from serious to minor, Boulder Police Chief Steve Redfearn said. The violence in downtown Boulder unfolded against the backdrop of the Israel-Hamas war that continues to inflame global tensions and has contributed to a spike in antisemitism in the United States. A week earlier, a man who also yelled 'Free Palestine' was charged with fatally shooting two Israeli embassy staffers outside a Jewish museum in Washington. U.S. supporters of the Israeli hostages say they're scared but have vowed to keep demonstrating. Attacker wanted to 'kill all Zionist people' The man charged in the Boulder attack told police he planned it for a year and was driven by a desire 'to kill all Zionist people,' a reference to the movement to establish and sustain a Jewish state in Israel. Mohamed Sabry Soliman, whose first name also was spelled Mohammed in some court documents, confessed to trying to kill members of the local Run for Their Lives chapter with Molotov cocktails and told police he would do it again, according to an FBI affidavit. He had posed as a gardener to get close to the group as they waved U.S. and Israeli flags and read out the names of the 58 people believed to still be in captivity in the Gaza Strip. Run for Their Lives is a global grassroots initiative that started in October 2023 after Hamas militants from the Gaza Strip stormed into Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking 250 others hostage. The group's 230 chapters seek to raise awareness of the hostages' plight, with many of the chapters still walking weekly, said Shira Weiss, the global coordinator for Run for Their Lives. 'We're really about humanity and nothing else,' Weiss said. Demonstrators marched for 'life' The Boulder group walks every weekend for 18 minutes, the numerical value of the Hebrew word 'chai,' which means 'life.' Participants include retirees, families with children, Jewish and non-Jewish community members. Rachel Amaru, leader of the Boulder chapter, had spoken to local police the night before the demonstration but was out of town the day of, said fellow organizer Miri Kornfeld in Denver. Amaru had requested extra security following the attack in Washington and, moving forward, will ask for a police escort for the group. Federal and state prosecutors filed separate criminal cases against Soliman, charging him with a hate crime and attempted murder, respectively. He faces additional state charges related to the incendiary devices, and more charges are possible in federal court, where the Justice Department will seek a grand jury indictment. Photos and video from the scene in Boulder, 30 miles (48 kilometers) from Denver, showed a burning woman lying on the ground in a fetal position and a man helping to put out the flames using a jug of water. Witness Alex Osante said he was across the pedestrian mall when he heard the crash of a bottle breaking and a 'boom' followed by people yelling and screaming. Six of the injured people were taken to hospitals, and four have since been released, Kornfeld said. Others may have been treated at the scene, she said. Jewish community grapples with fear during holiday The attack also came at the start of the Jewish holiday of Shavuot, which commemorates God giving the Torah to the Jewish people at Mount Sinai in Egypt. Rabbi Yisroel and Leah Wilhelm, directors of the Rohr Chabad House at the University of Colorado, have asked people to keep victims in their prayers and not let the attack take the joy out of their Shavuot celebrations. 'Run for Their Lives is an organization built on love, and if you ever have the chance to walk with them, you will feel that love to the utmost," said Caleb Loewengart, a student at the University of Colorado Boulder who grew up in the community. Loewengart and his parents have marched with the group in the past but were not in attendance for Sunday's attack. Many of the people who show up weekly to walk along Pearl Street have been present in Loewengart's life since his early childhood. The college student said he's heartbroken for the Jewish community that raised him and grappling with newfound fear as a vocal Israel supporter on the nearby university campus. But that fear, he said, will not stop him from speaking out. Jewish people who are not outspoken about Israel are afraid, too, Kornfeld said. 'This issue isn't something that's just contained to the Middle East. It's not something that is just contained in Israel,' Kornfeld said. 'We're seeing the effects of unchecked antisemitism all around the world. And we must stand up in the strongest way possible. Elected officials and everybody who has a heart needs to stand up against it in all of its forms all around the world.'

I told the truth about the West Bank and was threatened and assaulted. Now I'm relying on you to act
I told the truth about the West Bank and was threatened and assaulted. Now I'm relying on you to act

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

I told the truth about the West Bank and was threatened and assaulted. Now I'm relying on you to act

Each of the 22 illegal settlements approved by Israel last week is another nail in the coffin of the peace process, hammered in by the complicity of western governments and corporations. Israeli settlements are not benign civilian neighbourhoods – they are primary instruments of dispossession, control and apartheid. Settlements are closed militarised zones on Palestinians' stolen land, cutting off our access to our resources, our farms, our schools, our jobs and each other. Palestinian lands rapidly shrink, our livelihoods are devastated, our rights are systematically violated and our identity is undermined. Western lawmakers look on, expressing commitment to peace through a two-state solution but choosing to do nothing to achieve this goal. Instead, their policies and inaction enable yet further settlement activity. In the West Bank we live in an obvious two-tier system, yet most lawmakers continue to shun the word 'apartheid' despite Palestinian, Israeli and international human rights organisations concurring on its accuracy and the international court of justice (ICJ) reaffirming it last July. The Settlers, the BBC documentary by Louis Theroux, helped expose this reality, showing me being prevented from even walking on the same streets as Israelis in the neighbourhood of Hebron, where I was born. In response to the documentary, Israeli settlers and soldiers broke into my yard, vandalised it and assaulted me. Soldiers made no arrests but instead threatened to arrest me if I filed a complaint. Then one morning at 4am, young settlers made a bonfire on private Palestinian land outside my home and chanted that they hoped to see me killed. One individual showed up right in front of my house in army fatigues and with a semi-automatic rifle to intimidate me. Settlers then stole my pan-African flag, given to me by Black Lives Matter, and burned it among a pile of Palestinian flags. It is the same story in nearby Masafer Yatta, featured not only in The Settlers but also in the Oscar-winning film No Other Land. Directors Basel Adra and Yuval Abraham called for interventions last week to help stop its destruction, and co-director Hamdan Ballal was detained and beaten in reprisal for its production. The ICJ found Israel responsible for the crime of apartheid, yet western leaders bite their tongues. It found that not only Israel's settlements but also its whole occupation of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip are unlawful, and that the international community is obliged to help dismantle the settlements, evacuate the settlers and end the occupation as quickly as possible. Why are western leaders inert? It seems that western governments would rather undermine the international justice system than hold Israel to account. Even when there are some stronger criticisms of Israel, it continues with its war crimes, as Nesrine Malik wrote last week, regardless. Governments must urgently, as required by the ICJ, take steps to halt trade relations which help sustain the illegal occupation, starting with a ban on all trade with and investment in settlement businesses. Not only individual settlers but also the senior officials responsible for illegal settlements and apartheid must be sanctioned and brought to justice for these war crimes. Not just some but all arms transfers to Israel must be halted. And you, dear reader of conscience, must not only read and watch what is happening but also use your voice and take action. We are relying on you to keep highlighting Gaza and the West Bank, and to hold your parliamentarians, governments and corporations to account. Change your bank or pension fund if it invests in companies involved in the illegal settlements or supplying genocidal and apartheid Israel with arms. Without concrete actions now, we will be erased across the West Bank as well as in Gaza. Forty thousand Palestinian refugees have been expelled from their West Bank homes since January. Twenty Palestinian communities have been expelled from their West Bank lands after attacks from settlers and the occupying army employing bulldozers. Last week the last remaining 30 families of Maghayir al-Deir, near Ramallah, were forced to flee after months of escalating state-backed settler violence. Despite these extraordinarily dark times, I write this with a great sense of hope in my heart inspired by the many people of conscience in the world who stand with us. This is a test for global leadership. Not just of policy, but of principle. We Palestinians need protection and justice now, before it is too late. Issa Amro is a Palestinian human rights defender and co-founder of Youth Against Settlements Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store