The Latest: Israeli strikes in Gaza kill at least 21 people, health authorities say
Desperation is mounting in the Palestinian territory of more than 2 million, which experts say is at risk of famine because of Israel's blockade and nearly two-year offensive. A breakdown of law and order has led to widespread looting and contributed to chaos and violence around aid deliveries.
More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces since May while trying to get food in the Gaza Strip, mostly near aid sites run by an American contractor, the U.N. human rights office said Tuesday.
More than 100 human rights groups and charities signed a letter published Wednesday demanding more aid for Gaza and warning of grim conditions causing starvation.
More than 59,000 Palestinians have been killed during the Israel-Hamas war, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which is part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals. Its count doesn't distinguish between militants and civilians, but the ministry says that more than half of the dead are women and children. The U.N. and other international organizations see it as the most reliable source of data on casualties.
Here is the latest:
Overnight strikes kill at least 21
One Israeli strike hit a house Tuesday in the northwestern side of Gaza City, killing at least 12 people, according to the Shifa Hospital, which received the casualties.
The dead included six children and two women, according to the Health Ministry's casualty list.
Another strike hit an apartment in the Tal al-Hawa area in northern Gaza, killing at least six people. Among the dead were three children and two women, including one who was pregnant. Eight others were wounded, the ministry said.
A third strike hit a tent in the Naser neighborhood in Gaza City late Tuesday and killed three children, Shifa Hospital said.
The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the strikes. It blames Hamas for civilian casualties because the militants operate from populated areas.
Human rights groups and charities demand more Gaza aid
In the letter issued Wednesday by 109 human rights and charity groups, they warned of a dire situation pushing more people toward starvation. They said they were watching their own colleagues, as well as the Palestinians they serve, 'waste away.'
The letter slammed Israel for what it said were restrictions on aid into the war-ravaged territory. It lamented 'massacres' at food distribution points, which have seen chaos and violence in recent weeks as desperation has risen.
'The government of Israel's restrictions, delays, and fragmentation under its total siege have created chaos, starvation, and death,' the letter said.
The letter called for aid to be scaled up as well as for a ceasefire. `
Israel says that it has allowed the entry of thousands of trucks since May and blames aid groups for not consistently delivering goods.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
'I'm slowly losing my daughter' says Gazan mother as girl starves
STORY: At a hospital in Gaza City, Nasma Ayad fears time is running out for her starving eight-year-old daughter Jana to avoid the fate of her sister, who died last month. Jana has difficulty moving and speaking and urgently needs medical evacuation, Ayad says... ...as Israel comes under mounting international pressure over the devastation of Gaza since the start of the war and growing starvation among its 2.2 million inhabitants. 'My daughter bit by bit will have vision complications. Even her legs, she can't even move her legs to go to the toilet. Bit by bit, I feel I'm slowly losing my daughter, day after day - the things she suffers from are multiplying." Jana's sister Joury died on July 20. The child had kidney problems exacerbated by malnutrition, her mother said. :: June 22, 2024 Jana received treatment for malnutrition last year at a clinic in Deir al-Balah after showing signs of weakness and delayed growth. She has relapsed because of struggling healthcare services and the scarcity of food, Ayad says. Health officials added Jana and Joury to a list of patients who were in need of evacuation last September. Those evacuations never transpired. It's too late for Joury, but Ayad still holds out some hope for Jana. 'Until now, my daughter's referral has been on hold because of the siege, the closure of the borders and the circumstances we are living in. I am calling for the urgent referral of Jana as soon as possible for treatment outside the country.' Gazan health authorities say more than 150 people have now died from hunger-related causes, among them at least 90 children. Most died in the past few weeks. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Gaza food crisis is ‘worst-case scenario,' say experts
The worst-case scenario of famine is playing out in the Gaza Strip, the leading international authority on food crisis said in an alert Tuesday as aid workers urge immediate action to avoid thousands of preventable deaths. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC, issued the alert but stopped short of a formal famine declaration. The warning comes amid international outrage over images of emaciated children and increased reports of death due to starvation in Gaza. The crisis follows months of Israel's tightening of humanitarian aid deliveries in the Strip amid its war against Hamas for the Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attack. On Monday, President Trump said there was 'real starvation' in Gaza, signaling a break with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who had said there was no starvation in Gaza. The president said the U.S would look into setting up 'food centers' in Gaza. But the administration is drawing scrutiny and criticism for its support of the American-founded Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which has handled distribution of food in the Strip for months and is criticized for contributing to chaotic, dangerous and undignified aid deliveries with people killed and injured searching for food. Amid international pressure and France's declaration it will recognize an independent Palestinian state last week, the Israeli government announced over the weekend it would carry out tactical pauses in fighting to allow for aid distribution. Jerusalem said it opened up additional corridors for humanitarian assistance and carried out and granted air drops of aid. But humanitarian workers in the Strip say this is far short of the response needed to prevent thousands or potentially tens of thousands of people from dying. 'Air drops are just not a solution. They're a spectacle. They're theatrics,' Bushra Khalidi of Oxfam said during a briefing of humanitarian workers organized Tuesday by the nongovernmental organization Save the Children. 'You can't feed starving children by tossing energy bars from the sky. People have already been injured by falling palettes. They've died by falling palettes, and the chaos around these drops only adds to the suffering.' The Gaza Health Ministry is reporting that 147 people, including 88 children, have died from malnutrition and starvation since October 2023, part of the more than 60,000 people killed since the start of the war. Hamas killed approximately 1,200 people and took 251 hostage in its 2023 attack on Israel. While the health ministry does not distinguish Hamas militants in the figures, the numbers are widely accepted by the United Nations and other international organizations. Israel estimates it has killed 20,000 Palestinian militants. The IPC alert said malnutrition has been rising rapidly in the first half of July and has reached the famine threshold in Gaza City. More than 20,000 children have been admitted for treatment for acute malnutrition between April and mid-July, with more than 3,000 severely malnourished, the report said. 'We have many children now in our child protection services saying that they wish to die. In heaven, in paradise, there is food, there is water,' Rachael Cummings, humanitarian director for Save the Children International in Gaza, said in the briefing. 'Yesterday, in the clinic, one of the things that struck me, not only was the sort of visual impact of seeing so many people extremely thin, it was nearly silent … because children cry, but they're so exhausted, they're so sick, they're no longer able to cry. And that, I think for me, was really one of the most significant things I've ever seen in my career.' Tarek Loubani, a Canadian doctor working in Gaza, said the malnutrition numbers are extremely conservative and that death due to malnutrition is only classified when there is no other comorbidity. 'What we've seen every other time is that the numbers are about 10 percent of the reality, and probably that's what we're looking at here in terms of malnutrition and starvation,' said Loubani, who is also the medical director for the Glia Project, which provides medical supplies to impoverished locations. Loubani also pointed out that malnutrition is another devastating hardship on top of scarce resources for patients. Families donating blood for relatives wounded in bombings or shootings have difficulty replenishing their own blood supply because 'there's no iron, there's no nutritious food.' Loubani said he has lost about 44 pounds living and working in Gaza because there is so little food to eat for medical and aid workers. He said a handful of rice was his recent meal. 'In terms of the physicians and health care workers I work with, they are suffering. Their families are suffering. Everybody here is suffering,' he said. The IPC report said the sufficient delivery of humanitarian assistance can only be possible with a ceasefire, and that would require scaling up the flow of goods, restoring basic services and ensuring safe, unimpeded access to life-saving assistance. Trump's special envoy for peace missions left talks with Hamas last week blaming the U.S.-designated terrorist group as being the obstacle to a deal. He said the administration will consider 'alternative options to bring the hostages home and try to create a more stable environment for the people of Gaza.' Hamas holds about 20 living hostages it kidnapped from Israel on Oct. 7 and about 30 bodies. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword


Boston Globe
3 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Israeli fire again kills Gaza aid-seekers as US envoy meets with hostages' families
Advertisement But the United Nations, partners and Palestinians say far too little aid is coming in, with months of supplies piled up outside Gaza waiting for Israeli approval. Trucks that enter are mostly stripped of supplies by desperate people and criminal groups before reaching warehouses for distribution. Experts this week said a 'worst-case scenario of famine' was occurring. On Saturday, Gaza's health ministry said seven Palestinians had died of malnutrition-related causes over the past 24 hours, including a child. Aid is 'far from sufficient,' Germany's government said via spokesman Stefan Kornelius. The U.N. has said 500 to 600 trucks of aid are needed daily. Families of the 50 hostages still in Gaza fear they are going hungry too, and blame Hamas, after the militants released images of an emaciated hostage, Evyatar David. Advertisement Near the northernmost GHF distribution site near the Netzarim corridor, Yahia Youssef, who had come to seek aid, described a grimly familiar scene. After helping carry three people wounded by gunshots, he said he saw others on the ground, bleeding. 'It's the same daily episode,' Youssef said. Health workers said at least eight people were killed. Israel's military said it fired warning shots at a gathering approaching its forces. At least two people were killed in the Shakoush area hundreds of meters (yards) from where the GHF operates in the southernmost city of Rafah, witnesses said. Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis received two bodies and many injured. Witness Mohamed Abu Taha said Israeli troops opened fire toward the crowds. He saw three people — two men and a woman — shot as he fled. Israel's military said it was not aware of any fire by its forces in the area. The GHF said nothing happened near its sites. GHF says its armed contractors have only used pepper spray or fired warning shots to prevent deadly crowding. Israel 's military on Friday said it was working to make the routes under its control safer. The GHF — backed by millions of dollars in U.S. support — launched in May as Israel sought an alternative to the U.N.-run system, which had safely delivered aid for much of the war but was accused by Israel of allowing Hamas to siphon off supplies. Israel has not offered evidence for that claim and the U.N. has denied it. From May 27 to July 31, 859 people were killed near GHF sites, according to a U.N. report Thursday. Hundreds more have been killed along the routes of U.N.-led food convoys. Hamas-led police once guarded those convoys, but Israeli fire targeted the officers. Advertisement Israel and GHF have claimed the toll has been exaggerated. Airdrops by a Jordan-led coalition — Israel, the UAE, Egypt, France, and Germany — are another approach, though experts say the strategy remains deeply inadequate and even dangerous for people on the ground. 'Let's go back to what works & let us do our job,' Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees, wrote on social media, calling for more and safer truck deliveries. Nasser Hospital said it received five bodies after two Israeli strikes on tents sheltering displaced people in Gaza's south. The health ministry's ambulance and emergency service said a strike hit a house between the towns of Zawaida and Deir al-Balah, killing two parents and their three children. Another strike hit a tent in Khan Younis, killing a mother and her daughter. Israel's top general Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir warned that 'combat will continue without rest' if hostages aren't freed. U.S. President Donald Trump's special envoy, Steve Witkoff, met with hostages' families Saturday, a week after quitting ceasefire talks, blaming Hamas' intransigence. 'I didn't hear anything new from him. I heard that there was pressure from the Americans to end this operation, but we didn't hear anything practical,' said Michel Illouz, father of Israeli hostage Guy Illouz. He said he asked Witkoff to set a time frame but got 'no answers.' Protesters called on Israel's government to make a deal to end the war, imploring them to 'stop this nightmare and bring them out of the tunnels.' Advertisement In part of Gaza City, displaced people who managed to return home found rubble-strewn neighborhoods. Most Palestinians in Gaza are crowded into ever-shrinking areas considered safe. 'I don't know what to do. Destruction, destruction,' said Mohamed Qeiqa, who stood amid collapsed concrete slabs and pointed out a former five-story building. 'Where will people settle?' The war began when Hamas attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing around 1,200 people, mostly civilians. Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed more than 60,400 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which doesn't distinguish between militants and civilians but says women and children make up over half the dead. The ministry operates under the Hamas government. The U.N. and other international organizations see it as the most reliable source of data on casualties. The ministry says 93 children have died from malnutrition-related causes in Gaza since the war began. It said 76 adults have died of malnutrition-related causes since late June, when it started counting adult deaths.