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Gaza civil defence says 44 killed in Israeli strikes on Thursday

Gaza civil defence says 44 killed in Israeli strikes on Thursday

Middle East Eye2 days ago

Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli strikes killed 44 people on Thursday, including 23 in an attack on a home in the centre of the Palestinian territory.
"Twenty-three people were killed, others injured and several [are] missing following an Israeli air strike on the Qreinawi family's home east of Al-Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza," civil defence official Mohammad Al-Mughayyir told AFP.
According to the latest update by the Palestinian Ministry of Health, at least 54,249 Palestinians have been killed and 123,492 wounded since the start of Israel's war on Gaza.
The Israeli army has killed 3,986 Palestinians and wounded 11,451 others since violating the ceasefire agreement on 18 March.
The ministry said that 67 bodies and 184 injured people arrived at Gaza hospitals in the past 24 hours.
Palestinians inspect the damage at the site of an Israeli strike on a house, in Jabalia, northern Gaza, 29 May 2025. (Reuters)

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What is the legal position on starvation as a weapon of war? Starving a population during a time of war has long been used as a tactic by warring parties to force surrender or to annihilate a population. However, International Humanitarian Law (IHL), specifically Article 54 in the Geneva Convention, is unequivocal in its prohibition of starvation as a war strategy. Article 54 also prohibits the destruction of objects or material indispensable to the survival of the civilian population, including denying access to humanitarian aid intended for civilians in need and deliberately impeding humanitarian aid. Israel has been repeatedly found in breach of Article 54 over the course of the past 19 months. It has shut down Gaza's access to electricity and water, and restricted the entry of essential energy, aid, food and medicinal supplies. It has also killed Palestinians as they assembled to receive supplies, with one of the more infamous incidents being termed the "Flour Massacre". As early as December 2023, human rights experts began accusing Israel of intentionally starving Palestinians as a part of a "genocidal" project across the Gaza Strip. By July 2024, around 33 children, mostly in northern Gaza, had died from symptoms associated with malnutrition, prompting UN experts to accuse Israel of weaponising food and aid as a form of collective punishment, which constituted starvation crimes, and therefore war crimes. Several Israeli leaders, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, have been accused of alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed since the Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel on 7 October 2023. Warrants are still out for their arrest.

UAE to UN: Arab Group says Israel's use of 'starvation as weapon of war is evident'
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