Killing of aid workers surges to record high during Gaza war, UN says
In 2024, 383 aid workers were killed, nearly half of them in Gaza and the occupied Palestinian territories, the U.N. said on Tuesday, citing a database.
"Attacks on this scale, with zero accountability, are a shameful indictment of international inaction and apathy," said Tom Fletcher, U.N. Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs in a statement.
So far this year, 265 aid workers have been killed, according to provisional data from the Aid Worker Security Database, a U.S-funded platform that compiles reports on major security incidents affecting aid workers.
Of those, 173 were in Gaza in Israel's near two-year offensive against Hamas militants, launched after the deadly Oct. 7, 2023 cross-border attacks by Hamas-led militants, the provisional data showed.
This year, 36 aid workers have so far been killed in Sudan and three in Ukraine, the database showed.
In one incident in Gaza that drew international condemnation, 15 emergency and aid workers were killed by Israeli fire in three separate shootings in March, before being buried in a shallow grave.
Israel's military said in April that the incidents resulted from an "operational misunderstanding" and a "breach of orders". There had been "several professional failures" and a commander would be dismissed, it said.
Aid workers enjoy protection under international humanitarian law but experts cite few precedents for such cases going to trial, with concerns about ensuring future access for aid groups and difficulty proving intent cited as impediments.
"It is catastrophic, and the trend is going in right the opposite direction of what it should," said Jens Laerke, U.N. humanitarian office spokesperson.
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Boston Globe
an hour ago
- Boston Globe
With moves on West Bank and Gaza City, Israel defies global outcry
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The looming assault aims to prevent Hamas — which led the deadly Oct. 7, 2023, onslaught on southern Israel that started the war — from regrouping and planning future attacks, an Israeli military official, who requested anonymity in line with military protocol, told journalists at a briefing Wednesday. Advertisement About 1,200 people were killed and around 250 others kidnapped during the 2023 assault. After nearly two years of Israel's retaliatory war against Hamas, the Gaza Strip has been largely leveled and parts of it have been brought to the brink of famine. More than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between combatants and civilians. For Netanyahu, 'it doesn't matter if these steps — the war in Gaza and the quasi-annexation in the West Bank — would damage Israel's relations with the Arab world,' said Michael Milshtein, an Israeli analyst and former military intelligence officer. He said both developments also showed that Netanyahu believes he can continue to depend on American support, even as Arab and European nations sharply condemn Israel's actions. World leaders quickly condemned the announcements on Gaza City. 'The military offensive in Gaza that Israel is preparing can only lead to disaster for both peoples and risks plunging the entire region into a cycle of permanent war,' President Emmanuel Macron of France said on social media. France is among a growing number of countries that, frustrated with Israel's war in Gaza, have declared in recent months that they will recognize a Palestinian state at the annual UN General Assembly in September. While the United States has for years endorsed a so-called two-state solution, it has blocked recent efforts to recognize full Palestinian statehood under current conditions. Advertisement Prospects for a functional Palestinian state have been dim for years, and its boundaries have never been clear. Netanyahu has not publicly shared his position on the new ceasefire proposal, which Hamas has accepted and was announced this week by Qatari and Egyptian mediators. But a statement that his office released Wednesday night seemed to signal that the military operation was soon to begin. Smotrich has led a pressure campaign by hard-liners who have threatened to quit Netanyahu's coalition, and potentially bring down his government, if the proposed ceasefire deal was pursued. Orit Strock, a minister in Netanyahu's government and a member of the far-right Religious Zionism party, warned the prime minister in a radio interview about accepting a deal that did not defeat Hamas and put 'the value of returning the hostages above the national interest.' 'This will push the country into a horrible abyss,' Strock told Army Radio. 'So it is very possible that we will say we will not be prepared to lend our hand to the government.' 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Israeli authorities have advanced plans for more than 20,000 housing units as of late July, already the highest tally in years, according to Peace Now, an Israeli settlement watchdog. That has been accompanied by a campaign of brazen attacks by Jewish extremists on Palestinian communities. On Wednesday, Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi cited a 'completely inhumane reality that the Israeli aggression has created in Gaza.' He also accused Israel of taking 'illegal measures that continue to undermine the two-state solution and kill all prospects for peace in the region.' The Israeli military official said the new operation will also expand humanitarian aid in southern Gaza, where displaced people are being told to move. That will include opening new aid distribution sites, ensuring there is no fighting near them and opening new routes for trucks to safely bring in more supplies. This article originally appeared in


Washington Post
2 hours ago
- Washington Post
Trump says he has ‘solved' 7 conflicts. Here's what to know about them.
Amid President Donald Trump's push to secure a peace deal in Ukraine, he has taken frequent opportunity to claim success in efforts to end other conflicts around the world. In recent days, he repeated claims to have ended six, and on Tuesday, the list grew to seven: He appeared to have been missing one. Some of the conflicts in question, such as the 12-day exchange after Israel attacked Iran, loomed large for the American public. Some were more obscure, if they could be considered conflicts at all. In some, his role was clear. In others, it remains contested, or analysts warned that lasting peace could be elusive. He has long emphasized his role as a dealmaker. He has said he wants to be remembered for building peace — and to receive a Nobel Peace Prize. In recent remarks, he said that he was solving roughly one war per month. 'I've solved seven wars,' Trump said during an appearance Tuesday on 'Fox & Friends.' If 'I can get to heaven, this will be one of the reasons,' he added later, referring to his push to end the war in Ukraine. In confirmation of the figure the president has cited, the White House said Tuesday that Trump has solved seven conflicts, so many that even White House reporters can't keep them straight. Here's a list of the conflicts that Trump has said he has solved and where they stand now. The ethnic Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave long administered by Armenia within the internationally recognized borders of Azerbaijan, was forced to flee en masse in September 2023 as Azerbaijani forces took the territory by force. After four decades of conflict, the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a deal that included a peace framework meant to settle the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, at the White House earlier this month. 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'What I can say at this point is that there were renewed efforts by Serbia to endanger peace,' said Vjosa Osmani, the president of Kosovo, who credited Trump with preventing the outbreak of war but said she couldn't reveal additional information because the specifics were 'classified.' The president of Serbia, Aleksandar Vucic, has denied any plans for an attack. The White House says it has resolved tensions between Egypt and Ethiopia over a long-standing dam dispute, but in this case there is no apparent agreement. Egypt and Ethiopia have been at odds for years over water rights and the massive Grand Ethiopian Renaissance hydroelectric dam in Ethiopia on the Blue Nile, a major Nile tributary upriver from Egypt. Cairo fears the dam, the construction of which began 14 years ago, could rob Egypt of its share of Nile waters. Trump attempted to mediate the dispute during his first term, but negotiations stalled. It's unclear to what extent talks have restarted under Trump's second term, but tensions between the two counties appear to have eased, which analysts say is due in part to heavy rainfall. Egypt is primarily concerned with how Ethiopia will operate the dam during times of drought. The embassies of Egypt and Ethiopia in Washington did not respond immediately to queries about the status of the dispute or Trump's role in mediating it. After 10 days of conflict between two nuclear armed powers, India and Pakistan agreed to a ceasefire May 10. Trump said he headed off the escalatory tit-for-tat. Pakistan praised Trump as a peacemaker. But India denied a U.S. role, a stance that appears to have contributed to the fading friendship between Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. In a tense call on June 17 after Trump left a world leaders' summit early and canceled his in-person meeting with Modi, the Indian premier told Trump that India 'does not and will never accept mediation,' according to an Indian readout. Trump took offense at being denied credit and imposed a punishing 50 percent tariff on India in August, amid a trade dispute in part over India's Russian oil imports. On July 24, Thailand launched airstrikes on Cambodia, escalating a skirmish between the two countries, which share a disputed 508-mile border and a decades-old enmity. As Cambodia retaliated with artillery and the casualty count rose, tens of thousands of civilians on both sides of the border fled. Two days later, Trump stepped in. 'We happen to be, by coincidence, currently dealing on Trade with both Countries, but do not want to make any Deal, with either Country, if they are fighting — And I have told them so!' Trump posted on Truth Social. The threat appeared to work. On July 28, Trump said a ceasefire had been reached and instructed his trade teams to restart negotiations. 'I have now ended many Wars in just six months — I am proud to be the President of PEACE!' he posted. After 12 days of fighting between Iran and Israel in June that began with an Israeli attack on Iran — a conflict that included U.S. strikes on sites key to Iran's nuclear program — the Trump administration pushed for a ceasefire, which has held. 'We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don't know what the f--- they're doing,' Trump told reporters when attacks launched by both sides threatened the ceasefire in its infancy. In the run-up to the conflict, Trump had been pushing for a renewed nuclear deal with Iran. Cat Zakrzewski contributed to this report.


Fox News
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Gabbard to nix DNI roles that push ‘partisan policies,' saving taxpayers $700M annually
Fox News senior White House correspondent Jacqui Heinrich reports on the latest Russia-Ukraine conflict, the Department of National Intelligence's job cuts and more on 'Special Report.'