
Last hospital in northern Gaza out of service after evacuation
The last working hospital in northern Gaza is no longer functional according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) - a day after staff reported Israeli troops had surrounded the site.
The WHO said Al-Awda Hospital went out of service on Thursday, and patients and health workers evacuated the same evening for fear of their safety.
It said that the hospital's closure is "severing a critical lifeline for the people" in northern Gaza, and pleaded "for the hospital's protection and staff and patients' safety".
Israeli authorities issued evacuation orders last week for large parts of northern Gaza ahead of offensives against Hamas, although the army did not order the hospital itself to evacuate.
Dr Rami al Ashrafi told the Associated Press on Thursday that Al-Awda Hospital had been encircled by Israeli troops and had come under fire in recent days.
0:21
Gaza situation 'worst since war began' - UN
It comes as the United Nations said on Friday that the humanitarian situation in Gaza is the worst since the war between Israel and Hamas began in October 2023 - despite a resumption in aid deliveries.
Spokesperson Stephane Dujarric told reporters in New York that while "any aid that gets into the hands of people who need it is good," the deliveries have so far had "very, very little impact".
He added: "The catastrophic situation in Gaza is the worst since the war began."
The UN and other international aid groups have refused to work with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) - supported by Israel and the US - as they claim it is not neutral and forces the displacement of Palestinians by its distribution of aid.
0:32
As of Friday, GHF said that it has managed to distribute more than 2.1 million meals. Israel's UN ambassador Danny Danon said this week it would allow aid deliveries from both GHF and the UN's operations.
Meanwhile, Hamas said it was still reviewing a US-proposed ceasefire a day after the White House said Israel accepted the offer.
US President Donald Trump said in Washington that both sides were "very close to an agreement on Gaza, and we'll let you know about it during the day or maybe tomorrow".
The proposal reportedly calls for a 60-day pause in fighting, and the release of nine living hostages and half of the known hostages who have died, over the course of a week.
Israel and Hamas would then continue talks to bring the remaining hostages home, but Israel would retain the right to resume military action in Gaza if talks were to break down.
According to Reuters, some 28 Israeli hostages - alive and dead - would be returned in the first week of the ceasefire, in exchange for 125 Palestinian prisoners sentenced for life and the remains of 180 dead.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
11 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Israel accused of firing on crowds approaching aid hubs
The US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) has denied claims that scores of Palestinians were killed on their way to collect aid on Sunday. GHF, in charge of distributing aid in the Strip, said that 'our aid was again distributed today without incident' adding that it was 'aware of rumours being actively fomented by Hamas suggesting deaths and injuries'. Officials at a Red Cross field hospital in Gaza said 21 Palestinians were killed, with witnesses claiming the IDF fired from tanks at civilians about a kilometre from a distribution site. Medics and witnesses said that Palestinian crowds headed to Israeli-guarded buffer zones around the Rafah and Netzarim distribution stations were fired on by tanks or drones, according to Bloomberg News. Some Palestinians blamed a lack of clarity about when and how to safely approach the GHF sites from active combat zones. The IDF said it was reviewing the incident, saying it was 'unaware of injuries caused by IDF fire within the humanitarian aid distribution site'. Hamas has called on civilians in Gaza not to collect aid from the new distribution sites, which are run by GHF and private American contractors. Critics say the aid centres are also being used to screen Palestinians and collect facial recognition data. The terror group also announced last week that it executed four people accused of looting aid. On Saturday, the World Food Programme said that 77 trucks with humanitarian aid 'were stopped along the way, with food taken mainly by hungry people trying to feed their families '. The GHF, registered in Switzerland, was established with Israeli backing to find a way to distribute aid that couldn't be taken by Hamas. Israel says it is essential to prevent the terror group from hoarding or reselling the aid. The non-profit organisation, which began distribution last week, got off to a rocky start amid delays and scenes of chaos as Palestinians crowded aid stations. Leading humanitarian aid groups, including the UN, have refused to work with the GHF to distribute aid, claiming the US-backed NGO lacks neutrality and doesn't live up to their standards. While some Palestinians expressed concern over biometric and other checks Israel said it would employ, Israeli officials said it will allow screening of recipients to exclude anyone found to be connected with Hamas. Israeli media shared CCTV footage from the GHF's distribution site in Rafah at the alleged time of the shootings. No shooting is seen on the footage where hundreds of Palestinians are gathered to collect aid. The incident did, however, allegedly take place about a kilometre from the site. Meanwhile, the GHF said that over 4.7 million meals were distributed to Palestinians over the past week, including 887,000 on Sunday morning. Israel's Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories said on Saturday that 579 trucks carrying humanitarian aid – including flour, food, medical equipment, and pharmaceutical drugs – entered Gaza over the past week. The UN accused Israel of failing to provide safe routes for them in order to pick up and distribute aid. 'We and our partners could collect just over 200 of them, limited by insecurity and restricted access,' said Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for Antonio Guterres, the UN secretary-general. 'If we're not able to pick up those goods, I can tell you one thing, it is not for lack of trying.' Danny Danon, Israel's ambassador to the UN, said that his country had provided 'safe routes' for the distribution and that more than 400 trucks with aid were waiting to be picked up by the UN on the Gazan side of the border. 'But the UN did not show up. Put your ego aside, pick up the aid and do your job,' Mr Danon said.


The Guardian
43 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Gaza doctor who lost nine children in Israeli airstrike dies from wounds in same attack
A Palestinian father who had lost nine of his 10 children in an Israeli airstrike has died from wounds sustained in the same attack, local health officials said on Sunday. Hamdi al-Najjar, 40, a doctor at Nasser hospital, was critically injured when Israeli forces bombed the family house in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis on May 23, killing nine of his children. He had just returned home after accompanying his wife Alaa, a paediatrician at the Nasser medical complex, to work when the building was struck. He had initially survived alongside his son Adam, 11, who is still in hospital. Even by the terrible standards of the Gaza conflict, their deaths had shocked the international community. Footage shared by the director of Gaza's health ministry and verified by the Guardian showed the burnt, dismembered bodies of Najjar's children being pulled from the rubble of their house near a petrol station as flames still engulfed what remained of the family's home. His wife Alaa had received the bodies while she was still at work. Sources at the Nasser hospital who transferred the children's bodies one by one to the morgue said their mother was not able to identify them, so bad were the burns. Doctors told the Guardian her husband was suffering from severe injuries – brain damage and fractures caused by shrapnel, along with shrapnel wounds and fractures in the chest. He was placed on a ventilator and fitted with medical tubes. On Sunday, they said, he passed away from the severe wounds sustained in the attack. Following an appeal issued by Adam's uncle, Ali al-Najjar, 50, and reported by the Italian newspaper La Repubblica, Italy's foreign minister, Antonio Tajani, said the country was ready to receive Adam for medical care and was working to arrange his evacuation on 11 June. Italy had expressed a willingness to evacuate both the father and mother as well, but due to Najjar's critical condition, transferring him out of Gaza was deemed too dangerous. His wife had agreed for their son, Adam, to be taken to Italy with an aunt and three cousins, but said she would remain by her husband's side. After Najjar's death, sources within the Italian foreign ministry have indicated that his wife may now also be evacuated to Italy.


NBC News
an hour ago
- NBC News
Dozens feared killed after Israeli tank fires on crowd waiting for aid in Gaza, witnesses say
The Israeli military said it was 'unaware of injuries caused by IDF fire within the humanitarian aid distribution site,' adding that 'the matter is still under review.' The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which began distributing aid in the enclave last week as part of a new U.S. and Israel-backed plan, said that it delivered 16 trucks of food 'without incident,' and denied reports of 'deaths, mass injuries and chaos' at its distribution sites. GHF was tasked with distributing aid in Gaza after Israel earlier this month lifted an almost three-month-long blockade barring the entry of food, medicine and other vital supplies following warnings of rising starvation in the enclave. But its first week in operations has been marred by controversy and chaos. Last week, thousands of hungry Palestinians flooded one of their distribution centers and Israeli soldiers fired live rounds into the air to disperse crowds. The GHF rejected statements by Gaza's Hamas-run government media office that three Palestinians were killed, 46 others injured and seven people were missing after the incident. The foundation said that no one was killed while trying to access its distribution site. GHF's former executive director, Jake Wood, also quit the organization ahead of its operations in Gaza, saying it was impossible to implement the plan while also adhering to the 'humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence,' according to a statement published by Reuters. The United Nations, which has refused to participate in the plan, has condemned the GHF initiative as a 'distraction' that undermines a long-standing humanitarian framework in Gaza. The U.N. says the effort poses a threat to the independence of aid operations, while simultaneously displacing Palestinians en masse to Gaza's south. Israel has maintained that a new aid distribution system was necessary, alleging that Hamas was diverting supplies. Israel launched its offensive in Gaza following the Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023, terror attacks, in which some 1,200 people were killed and around 250 taken hostage, marking a major escalation in a decadeslong conflict. Since then, more than 54,000 people, including thousands of children, have been killed in Gaza, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry in the enclave, which has been run by Hamas since 2007.