logo
At least 21 people killed in stampede, suffocation at GHF site in Gaza

At least 21 people killed in stampede, suffocation at GHF site in Gaza

Al Jazeera16-07-2025
At least 21 Palestinians have been killed in the latest carnage at the GHF aid distribution centre in southern Gaza, with most of the victims reported to have died in a stampede.
Gaza's Ministry of Health has disputed the allegation from the controversial United States- and Israel-backed organisation that armed agitators were responsible for the incident on Wednesday morning at the site in Khan Younis.
In an earlier statement, the GHF had said 19 victims were trampled and another was stabbed 'amid a chaotic and dangerous surge'.
Without providing any evidence, it said the stampede had been provoked by 'elements within the crowd – armed and affiliated with Hamas'.
The statement also claimed that GHF staff saw multiple weapons in the crowd and that one of its US contractors was threatened with a gun.
However, Palestinian authorities and witnesses have vehemently contested the GHF's version of events.
Gaza's Health Ministry released a statement saying 21 Palestinians had been killed at the GHF site on Wednesday. It noted that 15 of the victims died as a result of a stampede and suffocation after tear gas was fired at crowds of aid seekers.
'️For the first time, deaths have been recorded due to suffocation and the intense stampede of citizens at aid distribution centres,' the ministry added.
Speaking from Gaza City on Wednesday, Al Jazeera's correspondent Hani Mahmoud said a witness had confirmed that tear gas was fired on the crowd, 'causing mayhem and chaos', which led to a stampede.
Meanwhile, a medical source at Nasser Hospital told the AFP news agency that the desperate and starving victims had been trying to receive food, but the main gate to the distribution centre had been closed.
'The Israeli occupation forces and the centre's private security personnel opened fire on them, resulting in a large number of deaths and injuries,' they said.
Since the GHF started operating in the enclave in late May, at least 875 people have been killed trying to get food, according to the United Nations, which said on Tuesday that 674 of these deaths had occurred 'in the vicinity of GHF sites'.
Speaking last week, UN rights office spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani said most of the casualties had suffered 'gunshot injuries'.
Both the Israeli army and GHF contractors have been accused of carrying out the killings.
The UN has described the GHF sites as 'death traps', calling them 'inherently unsafe' and a breach of humanitarian impartiality standards.
Amjad Shawa, director of the Palestinian NGOs Network, said on Wednesday that the GHF was guilty of gross mismanagement.
'People who flock in their thousands (to GHF sites) are hungry and exhausted, and they get squeezed into narrow places, amid shortages of aid and the absence of organisation and discipline by the GHF,' he said.
The latest deaths near aid distribution centres came as an Israeli attack on a camp of displaced people in al-Mawasi killed nine people.
In total, at least 43 Palestinians, including 21 people who were seeking aid, have been killed since dawn on Wednesday, according to medical sources.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Video: Israel bombs Gaza clinic as blood banks run dry
Video: Israel bombs Gaza clinic as blood banks run dry

Al Jazeera

time8 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

Video: Israel bombs Gaza clinic as blood banks run dry

Israel bombs Gaza clinic as blood banks run dry NewsFeed Gaza's health system is in a state of collapse as Israel continues its attacks on medical facilities. A strike on Tuesday hit a UN clinic in Gaza city. The nearby Al Shifa Hospital reported a severe shortage of blood as many people in Gaza are too malnourished to make donations. Video Duration 00 minutes 44 seconds 00:44 Video Duration 00 minutes 43 seconds 00:43 Video Duration 01 minutes 12 seconds 01:12 Video Duration 01 minutes 54 seconds 01:54 Video Duration 01 minutes 55 seconds 01:55 Video Duration 02 minutes 38 seconds 02:38 Video Duration 02 minutes 08 seconds 02:08

At least 20 Palestinians killed after aid truck overturns in central Gaza
At least 20 Palestinians killed after aid truck overturns in central Gaza

Al Jazeera

time11 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

At least 20 Palestinians killed after aid truck overturns in central Gaza

At least 20 Palestinians have been killed and many injured after a truck carrying humanitarian aid overturned onto a crowd of people in central Gaza, according to the Government Media Office in the enclave. The incident occurred on Wednesday as large numbers of Palestinians gathered in central Gaza in search of food and basic supplies, amid an increasingly dire humanitarian crisis. Local officials quoted by the official Palestinian news agency Wafa said the vehicle overturned after Israeli forces directed it down what they described as an 'unsafe road'. Gaza Civil Defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal said that 20 people were killed and dozens were wounded in the incident while hundreds of civilians were waiting for aid, the AFP news agency reported. 'Despite the recent limited allowance of a few aid trucks, the occupation deliberately obstructs the safe passage and distribution of this aid,' the Gaza Government Media Office said in a statement. 'It forces drivers to navigate routes overcrowded with starving civilians who have been waiting for weeks for the most basic necessities. This often results in desperate crowds swarming the trucks and forcibly seizing their contents.' The incident comes as humanitarian organisations warn of famine and disease spreading across the enclave, while deaths from starvation and malnutrition continue to rise. At least three people died from malnutrition on Wednesday, medical sources told Al Jazeera. A source at al-Shifa Hospital in northern Gaza confirmed that Hiba Yasser Abu Naji, a child, died from malnutrition. An infant also died from malnutrition, according to the source. An adult from Jabalia was also reported to have died as a result of malnutrition. On Monday, the Israeli military permitted 95 aid trucks to enter Gaza – a figure far below the 600 trucks a day needed to meet basic requirements, according to UNRWA. The current daily average is 85 trucks. Meanwhile, Palestinians approaching aid distribution sites run by the notorious GHF have frequently come under Israeli fire since the organisation launched operations in late May. Such shootings have become near-daily occurrences near its sites in central and southern Gaza. Jens Laerke, a spokesperson for OCHA, said that while some aid was entering the enclave, 'there should be hundreds and hundreds of trucks entering Gaza every day for months or years to come. 'People are dying every day. This is a crisis on the brink of famine,' he said, adding that tonnes of life-saving aid remain stuck at border crossings due to bureaucratic delays and a lack of safe access. Elsewhere in Gaza, several Palestinians were killed in Israeli attacks across the enclave. Al-Awda Hospital reported that five people – including a woman and two children – were killed, and others wounded, in an Israeli raid on a house north of the Nuseirat refugee camp. Four more people were killed in an Israeli raid on two homes in the Shujayea neighbourhood of Gaza City.

Israel kills an average 28 children daily in Gaza: UN
Israel kills an average 28 children daily in Gaza: UN

Qatar Tribune

timea day ago

  • Qatar Tribune

Israel kills an average 28 children daily in Gaza: UN

Agencies Gaza Approximately 28 children are being killed daily in Gaza due to the ongoing Israeli bombardment and its restrictions on the delivery of direly needed humanitarian assistance, according to the United Nations. 'Death by bombardments. Death by malnutrition and starvation. Death by lack of aid and vital services,' the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) said in a post on X on Tuesday. 'In Gaza, an average of 28 children a day – the size of a classroom – have been killed.' The agency stressed that children in Gaza are in urgent need of food, clean water, medicine and protection, adding: 'More than anything, they need a ceasefire, NOW.' Israel has killed more than 18,000 children – one child every hour – since the start of its genocidal war on Gaza. At least 60,933 Palestinians have been killed and 150,027 others wounded since October 7, 2023, when Hamas attacked southern Israel. In the last 24 hours, at least eight Palestinians, including one child, have starved to death in Gaza. A total of 188 people, including 94 starving children, have died as Israel continues to block aid and kill aid seekers. 'For those who survive, childhood has been replaced by a daily struggle for the basics of life,' said Al Jazeera's Aksel Zaimovic. Kadim Khufu Basim, a displaced Palestinian child, said he is forced to support a family of six people because his father is injured and receiving treatment in Egypt. 'I love playing football. But now I sell ********s. My childhood is gone. Since the war began, we have no childhood left,' Basim told Al Jazeera. Under international law, children like Basim are supposed to be spared the effects of war. 'But in Gaza, these children have suffered the most under Israel's military campaign. Schools deliberately targeted, water facilities destroyed, food supplies systematically blocked. And the fundamental rights of childhood … education, play, proper nutrition … have been weaponised against an entire generation,' said Zaimovic. 'A graveyard for children' Israel's war on Gaza is also leaving its psychological scars on children. The hair and skin of Lana, a 10-year-old displaced child, turned white almost overnight after a bombing near her shelter triggered what doctors call trauma-induced depigmentation. Lana has become withdrawn, often only talking to her doll, as other children bully her for her appearance. 'She talks to her doll and says, 'Do you want to play with me, or will you be like the other kids?' Her mental health is severely damaged,' Mai Jalal al-Sharif, Lana's mother, told Al Jazeera. 'Gaza is a graveyard for children today and for their dreams,' Ahmad Alhendawi, regional director of the NGO Save the Children, told Al Jazeera. 'This is an inescapable living nightmare for every child in Gaza … This is a generation that is growing up thinking that the world has abandoned them, that the world has turned its back on them.' Israel has closed Gaza's crossings since March 2, only allowing 86 trucks of aid into the besieged enclave daily, a figure equal to just 14 percent of the minimum 600 trucks needed each day to meet the basic needs of the population, according to data from Gaza's Government Media Office. The lack of aid has led to an unprecedented famine in Gaza. UN experts and more than 150 humanitarian organisations have called for a permanent ceasefire, to allow for aid deliveries and the psychological recovery of what they've dubbed a 'lost generation'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store