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103 killed in Gaza Zionist bloodbath, ‘Hunger Games'

103 killed in Gaza Zionist bloodbath, ‘Hunger Games'

Kuwait Times12 hours ago

GAZA: The Gaza health authority on Thursday said 103 Palestinians were killed by Zionist fire and 400 wounded in the past 24 hours across the battered enclave — including 21 people killed near the US- and Zionist-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation sites. The Zionist offensive has killed at least 55,207 people, the majority of them civilians. Separately, at least eight Palestinians who worked for the organization died in an ambush, the GHF said on Thursday, blaming Hamas for the killings that rocked the troubled food distribution operation.
A bus carrying about two dozen GHF workers was raked with gunfire on Wednesday night as it headed to an aid center in southern Gaza, the foundation said, adding that many of its staff were injured and some might have been kidnapped. Social media channels in Gaza said Hamas had targeted the bus because it was allegedly carrying GHF workers tied to Yasser Abu Shabab, the leader of a large clan that has challenged Hamas' supremacy in the enclave and is being armed by the Zionist entity.
The Zionist foreign ministry alleged 'Hamas is weaponizing suffering in Gaza – denying food, targeting lifesavers and forsaking its own people.' When contacted by AFP to respond to the GHF accusation, the Hamas government media office in Gaza told AFP that GHF was a 'filthy tool' of Zionist forces and was being used to 'lure civilians into death traps'.
Abu Shabab released a statement on his Facebook page denouncing images posted on social media showing Gazans allegedly killed by Hamas and as it seeks to maintain power. 'Rumors of executions and killings are being spread by the corrupt, mercenaries and criminals of Hamas in an attempt to sow fear in the hearts of those who seek change and liberation from terrorism, oppression, and its unjust rule,' he said.
The Zionist military said it was continuing to target Hamas fighters in Gaza, killing three fighters who fired an anti-tank missile towards its soldiers, and hitting a building near a medical center that it said was being used to make weapons. It also said it had arrested several Hamas members in Syria overnight, accusing them of planning to attack Zionists.
Despite the bus attack, GHF said it handed out 2.6 million meals on Thursday — a daily record since it started operations in Gaza at the end of May, overseeing a new model of food distribution that the United Nations says is deeply flawed. 'This model will not address the deepening hunger. The dystopian 'Hunger Games' cannot become the new reality,' Philippe Lazzarini, the chief of the UN Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA), wrote on X.
'The UN including @UNRWA has the knowledge, expertise & community trust to provide dignified & safe assistance. Just let the humanitarians do their jobs,' he added. The Zionist entity has repeatedly called for UNRWA to be disbanded, accusing it of having ties with Hamas. UNRWA has denied this. Gaza's health ministry says more than 180 people have been killed by Zionist fire near the aid centers over the past three weeks, as the aid effort repeatedly degenerated into chaos and terror with locals scrabbling for limited supplies.
Gaza medics have said hospitals are being inundated with people wounded while trying to obtain food. At Gaza City's Al-Shifa Hospital on Wednesday, the emergency department said it had received dozens of people who had been killed or wounded while waiting for aid in recent days, including 200 in a single day. 'Many Gazans went to the Nabulsi and Netzarim areas to receive aid and were shot at and shelled with tanks,' said Mutaz Harara, head of Al-Shifa's emergency department. But with few medical supplies and no operating theatres, 'many patients died while waiting for their turn', he said.
The war has caused major damage to infrastructure across Gaza, including water mains, telecommunication cables, power lines and roads. The Palestinian Authority said Internet and fixed-line communication services were down in Gaza on Thursday following an attack on the territory's last fiber optic cable, which it blamed on the Zionist entity. The Palestinian Red Crescent said the outage was affecting its emergency response by impeding communication with first responders.
Meanwhile, an NGO representing activists detained aboard a boat attempting to breach the Zionist blockade of Gaza said six were en route to the airport for deportation. Egyptian authorities meanwhile detained more than 200 pro-Palestinian activists in Cairo ahead of a planned march to the Gaza border, the organizers said. – Agencies

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China helpless as Mideast war craters regional leverage
China helpless as Mideast war craters regional leverage

Kuwait Times

time4 hours ago

  • Kuwait Times

China helpless as Mideast war craters regional leverage

BEIJING: China has been able to do little more than stand back and watch as war between its key partner Iran and Zionist entity harms its hard-fought leverage in the Middle East, analysts say. Beijing has sought to frame itself as a mediator in the region, facilitating a 2023 rapprochement between Saudi Arabia and Iran and portraying itself as a more neutral actor in the Zionist-Palestinian conflict than its rival the United States. And its position as the largest purchaser of Iranian oil has served as a crucial lifeline for Tehran as its economy is battered by crippling international sanctions. But as Zionist entity and Iran engaged in an unprecedented exchange of attacks and the United States struck key targets on Iranian soil in the past week, Beijing has offered little beyond calls for de-escalation. 'Beijing has offered Tehran no real help — just rhetoric that paints China as the principled alternative while it stays safely on the sidelines,' Craig Singleton, senior China fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies think tank, told AFP. China, he said, 'sticks to rhetoric — condemnations, UN statements, talk of 'dialogue' — because over-promising and under-delivering would spotlight its power-projection limits'. 'The result is a conspicuously thin response that underscores how little real heft China brings to Iran when the shooting starts.' 'Strategic' friendship China — alongside its 'no limits' partner Russia — has long been a key backer of Iran, deepening ties in the wake of the United States' withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action nuclear deal in 2018. President Xi Jinping described relations as 'strategic' in a 2023 meeting with Iran's then-president Ebrahim Raisi, and backed Tehran in its fight against 'bullying'. Liu Qiang, a retired Chinese Senior Colonel, was even more explicit in an article on the academic website Aisixiang this month. 'Iran's survival is a matter of China's national security,' said the director of the Academic Committee of the Shanghai International Center for Strategic Studies. Beijing, he insisted, must take 'proactive measures' in light of the recent war to ensure that Tehran 'will not be broken by the military conflict' or 'jointly strangled by the US and Zionist entity'. Analysts say Beijing's ties with Tehran are central to its efforts to ensure a regional counterbalance against both the United States and Zionist entity as well as the Gulf States. 'Iran fits into Beijing's broader campaign to counterbalance US-led hegemony and to a lesser extent NATO encroachment,' Tuvia Gering, non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council's Global China Hub, told AFP. Those efforts have gone into overdrive following blows to other 'Axis of resistance' players since the start of the Gaza war — the collapse of Bashar Al-Assad's rule in Syria and the degradation of Hamas and Hezbollah in fighting with Zionist entity. 'Beijing has sought to prevent a total unravelling of Iran's regional role,' Gering said, pointing to Chinese efforts to resurrect the nuclear deal. China has condemned recent US strikes on Iran and called for parties in the region, 'especially (Zionist entity)', to de-escalate. And it has called for a political solution to help a declared ceasefire hold. Fighting last month between India and Pakistan saw Beijing furnish its long-time allies in Islamabad with state-of-the-art military gear. Analysts don't expect China to extend the same courtesy to its comrades in Tehran, given the risk of direct confrontation with the United States. 'Iran needs more than statements at the UN or missile components,' Andrea Ghiselli, a lecturer at the University of Exeter, told AFP. 'It needs air defenses and fighter jets, which are things that China could provide but would require much time to be put into use—not to mention the likely extremely negative reaction by Zionist entity and, especially now that is directly involved, the US,' he added. The United States has urged China to use its influence on Iran to help deter its leaders from shutting down the Strait of Hormuz, a vital route for oil and gas. But Ahmed Aboudouh, an associate fellow with the Chatham House Middle East and North Africa Program, was skeptical that Beijing has the leverage. 'China's position in the Middle East after this conflict' has been badly affected, he told AFP. 'Everybody in the Middle East understands that China has little leverage, if any, to play any role in de-escalation.'— AFP

103 killed in Gaza Zionist bloodbath, ‘Hunger Games'
103 killed in Gaza Zionist bloodbath, ‘Hunger Games'

Kuwait Times

time12 hours ago

  • Kuwait Times

103 killed in Gaza Zionist bloodbath, ‘Hunger Games'

GAZA: The Gaza health authority on Thursday said 103 Palestinians were killed by Zionist fire and 400 wounded in the past 24 hours across the battered enclave — including 21 people killed near the US- and Zionist-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation sites. The Zionist offensive has killed at least 55,207 people, the majority of them civilians. Separately, at least eight Palestinians who worked for the organization died in an ambush, the GHF said on Thursday, blaming Hamas for the killings that rocked the troubled food distribution operation. A bus carrying about two dozen GHF workers was raked with gunfire on Wednesday night as it headed to an aid center in southern Gaza, the foundation said, adding that many of its staff were injured and some might have been kidnapped. Social media channels in Gaza said Hamas had targeted the bus because it was allegedly carrying GHF workers tied to Yasser Abu Shabab, the leader of a large clan that has challenged Hamas' supremacy in the enclave and is being armed by the Zionist entity. The Zionist foreign ministry alleged 'Hamas is weaponizing suffering in Gaza – denying food, targeting lifesavers and forsaking its own people.' When contacted by AFP to respond to the GHF accusation, the Hamas government media office in Gaza told AFP that GHF was a 'filthy tool' of Zionist forces and was being used to 'lure civilians into death traps'. Abu Shabab released a statement on his Facebook page denouncing images posted on social media showing Gazans allegedly killed by Hamas and as it seeks to maintain power. 'Rumors of executions and killings are being spread by the corrupt, mercenaries and criminals of Hamas in an attempt to sow fear in the hearts of those who seek change and liberation from terrorism, oppression, and its unjust rule,' he said. The Zionist military said it was continuing to target Hamas fighters in Gaza, killing three fighters who fired an anti-tank missile towards its soldiers, and hitting a building near a medical center that it said was being used to make weapons. It also said it had arrested several Hamas members in Syria overnight, accusing them of planning to attack Zionists. Despite the bus attack, GHF said it handed out 2.6 million meals on Thursday — a daily record since it started operations in Gaza at the end of May, overseeing a new model of food distribution that the United Nations says is deeply flawed. 'This model will not address the deepening hunger. The dystopian 'Hunger Games' cannot become the new reality,' Philippe Lazzarini, the chief of the UN Palestinian refugee agency (UNRWA), wrote on X. 'The UN including @UNRWA has the knowledge, expertise & community trust to provide dignified & safe assistance. Just let the humanitarians do their jobs,' he added. The Zionist entity has repeatedly called for UNRWA to be disbanded, accusing it of having ties with Hamas. UNRWA has denied this. Gaza's health ministry says more than 180 people have been killed by Zionist fire near the aid centers over the past three weeks, as the aid effort repeatedly degenerated into chaos and terror with locals scrabbling for limited supplies. Gaza medics have said hospitals are being inundated with people wounded while trying to obtain food. At Gaza City's Al-Shifa Hospital on Wednesday, the emergency department said it had received dozens of people who had been killed or wounded while waiting for aid in recent days, including 200 in a single day. 'Many Gazans went to the Nabulsi and Netzarim areas to receive aid and were shot at and shelled with tanks,' said Mutaz Harara, head of Al-Shifa's emergency department. But with few medical supplies and no operating theatres, 'many patients died while waiting for their turn', he said. The war has caused major damage to infrastructure across Gaza, including water mains, telecommunication cables, power lines and roads. The Palestinian Authority said Internet and fixed-line communication services were down in Gaza on Thursday following an attack on the territory's last fiber optic cable, which it blamed on the Zionist entity. The Palestinian Red Crescent said the outage was affecting its emergency response by impeding communication with first responders. Meanwhile, an NGO representing activists detained aboard a boat attempting to breach the Zionist blockade of Gaza said six were en route to the airport for deportation. Egyptian authorities meanwhile detained more than 200 pro-Palestinian activists in Cairo ahead of a planned march to the Gaza border, the organizers said. – Agencies

Kuwait leads GCC push for calm as US-Iran war escalates
Kuwait leads GCC push for calm as US-Iran war escalates

Kuwait Times

time12 hours ago

  • Kuwait Times

Kuwait leads GCC push for calm as US-Iran war escalates

Food and water supply stable; Institutions, including KU, KFF, discuss emergency plans VIENNA/KUWAIT: The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries on Monday issued a strong call for de-escalation and restraint as military tensions continue to rise in the region following direct US strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities and Tehran's retaliation with missile and drone attacks on the Zionist entity. Speaking on behalf of the GCC ambassadors accredited to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Kuwaiti Ambassador Talal Al-Fassam stressed the need to halt the regional escalation immediately. 'The recent developments are of great concern and pose a direct threat to security and stability in the region and the world,' he warned during an emergency session of the IAEA Board of Governors in Vienna. The IAEA's emergency meeting was called to assess the security and radiation risks following the attacks on Iran's nuclear infrastructure. Al-Fassam emphasized that the targeting of Iran's nuclear facilities carries potentially catastrophic consequences. 'Calm and restraint represent the most effective path to avoid further tension,' he said, reiterating the Gulf countries' support for diplomacy and dialogue as means of resolving conflicts. He urged the international community, particularly the IAEA's Board of Governors, to take its responsibility seriously and act to address longstanding regional issues. 'These issues have become a growing threat to regional and international peace and security,' Al-Fassam said. The GCC envoys reaffirmed their unified stance on resolving disputes peacefully and promoting regional security through cooperation and lessons learned from past crises. They also acknowledged IAEA updates on radiation monitoring and requested continued briefings amid the ongoing conflict. The GCC's statements follow a sharp military escalation sparked by US strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities in Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan. Iran responded by launching missiles and drones against Zionist targets and the Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. The Iranian Supreme National Security Council said the missile strike was away from residential areas in Qatar. 'This action does not pose any threat to the friendly and brotherly country, Qatar, and its noble people, and the Islamic Republic of Iran remains committed to maintaining and continuing warm and historic relations with Qatar,' the council said in a statement. Qatar said it successfully intercepted the attack, which it condemned as a blatant violation of its sovereignty. VIENNA: Kuwaiti Ambassador Talal Al-Fassam speaks during an emergency session of the IAEA Board of Governors. Kuwait Fire Force Chief Major General Talal Al-Roumi meets UAE emergency management chief Ali Al-Neyadi to explore ways of boosting cooperation in disaster and crisis response. Local preparations Earlier Monday, Iran's top military official, Abdolrahim Mousavi, accused the US of directly entering the war and warned that Iran would not hesitate to attack American interests. 'We will never back down,' he said in a statement Monday morning. As regional tensions rise, Kuwaiti institutions continue to step up their emergency preparedness. Kuwait University's administration announced on Monday that it had reviewed emergency protocols in coordination with relevant national authorities. The university confirmed its readiness and reaffirmed its commitment to continuous coordination with the state. 'The university administration, led by Director Dr Dina Al-Mailem, will maintain constant communication with national entities to stay updated on developments,' read an official statement, urging the public to report emergencies via its 24/7 hotline: 24983333. No food shortages In the economic sphere, the Ministry of Commerce and Industry assured citizens that the country's food supply remains stable. 'The situation is completely stable. There is no shortage of essential food items,' said ministry spokesperson Abdullah Al-Herz. He noted that water production continues around the clock, supply chains remain uninterrupted, and consumer cooperatives are operating as usual. 'Emergency plans are fully in place,' Al-Herz added, highlighting that commercial inspection teams are actively monitoring markets to ensure price stability and stock availability. Security and defense Meanwhile, regional military and emergency coordination is ongoing. In Kuwait, Naval Forces Commander Major General Sulaiman Al-Hamlan met with UK Defense Senior Advisor for the Middle East and North Africa, Vice Admiral Edward Algerine, at Mohammed Al-Ahmad Naval Base. The two sides discussed key military topics and areas of joint interest. Kuwait Fire Force Chief Major General Talal Al-Roumi also met with UAE emergency management chief Ali Al-Neyadi to explore ways of boosting cooperation in disaster and crisis response. The meeting, which included cybersecurity officials, focused on coordination and joint readiness in light of the regional security environment. — Agencies

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