
Gaza teenager with complex PTSD highlights war's impact on children

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The National
7 minutes ago
- The National
Number of aid workers killed reaches all-time high, says UN, with nearly half of them in Gaza and West Bank
Killings of aid workers rose nearly a third to almost 400 last year, the deadliest year since records began in 1997, with the war in Gaza continuing to drive high death rates, UN data showed on Tuesday. Last year, 383 aid workers were killed, nearly half of them in the occupied Palestinian territories, according to the UN's Aid Worker Security Database, a US-funded platform that tracks major security incidents affecting humanitarian staff. Of those killed in the Palestinian territories, 173 were killed in Gaza amid Israeli army operations, the data showed. 'This is more than a statistical spike. It is a stain – the normalisation of violence against this community. Each attack on a colleague is an attack on all of us, and we do not accept it,' said Tom Fletcher, UN under secretary general for humanitarian affairs. 'As a humanitarian movement, we demand the protection of civilians and aid workers and we demand that perpetrators are held to account. Humanitarians will not retreat, despite these dangers.' The first eight months of this year showed no sign of a reversal of the disturbing trend: 265 aid workers have been killed as of mid-August, according to the Database. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres noted that humanitarian workers are the lifeline for more than 300 million people caught in conflict or disaster. But he said that funding is drying up and those who provide humanitarian aid are increasingly under attack. The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement said 18 of its staff and volunteers have been killed so far this year 'while carrying out their life-saving work'. ' The rules of war are clear: humanitarian personnel must be respected and protected. Every attack is a grave betrayal of humanity, and the rules designed to protect them and the communities they serve. Each killing sends a dangerous message that their lives were expendable. They were not,' said Mirjana Spoljaric, president of the International Committee of the Red Cross. Meanwhile the UN's World Health Organisation said 1,121 health workers and patients have been killed and hundreds injured in attacks across 16 territories, with the most deaths were in Sudan. 'Each attack inflicts lasting harm, deprives entire communities of life-saving care when they need it the most, endangers health care providers, and weakens already strained health systems,' the WHO said. World Humanitarian Day marks the day in 2003 when UN rights chief Sergio Vieira de Mello and 21 other humanitarians were killed in the bombing of the UN headquarters in Baghdad.

Middle East Eye
2 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
Israel kills 60 Palestinians in 24 hours, many remain under rubble
Israel has killed at least 60 Palestinians in Gaza and wounded 343 others in the past 24 hours, the Ministry of Health in Gaza has said. Many victims of Israel's latest attacks remain under rubble, and ambulance and Civil Defence teams have been barred from reaching them, the ministry said. The toll includes 31 aid seekers, 197 of whom were wounded in Israeli attacks. Overall death toll from Israeli attacks since the start of the war has crossed 62,064, while 156,573 others have been wounded, the enclave's ministry said. The ministry added that since the start of the Israeli assault, 1,996 Palestinian aid seekers have been killed and more than 14,898 others have been wounded. The ministry also reported three deaths in 24 hours due to the Israeli-imposed starvation, bringing the total to 266, including 112 children.


Middle East Eye
7 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
Gaza genocide: Airdropped aid package kills Palestinian man
An airdropped aid package has killed an elderly Palestinian man in the so-called humanitarian zone in southern Gaza. Saber al-Zamili, 75, was inside a tent when the package fell directly on him on Sunday, according to his family. He was preparing to head to the mosque for his daily prayers, his son Wael al-Zamili told Middle East Eye. His daughter Sarah al-Zamili said his body was retrieved from beneath the package with severe injuries. "His entire body was broken," she said through tears, adding that they rushed him to the Kuwaiti Hospital in Rafah. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters He was later transferred to Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, where he was pronounced dead. "This is not a safe method of distributing aid - not the airdrops, not the American aid deliveries, nor the trucks," she told MEE, referring to the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which employs a militarised distribution mechanism. "This is cruelty against the Palestinian people. What they are doing to us is unjust… This is not a way to feed the Palestinian people; it's a method of humiliation and oppression." Palestinians mourn 75-year-old Saber al-Zamili, who was killed during a relief airdrop operation in al-Mawasi, southern Gaza (MEE/Ahmed Aziz) She stressed that proper aid distribution should be carried out through coordinated and secure efforts by recognised humanitarian organisations. "None of what is being done is helping the Palestinian people. It is only deepening our suffering," she said. 'Dying from starvation is more honourable than dying like this.' Endangering civilians International organisations have repeatedly warned that airdropped aid can endanger civilians. Despite this, the Israeli military announced in late July it would resume aerial deliveries to Gaza, in coordination with several regional and European countries. Rights groups and humanitarian experts have criticised the method. They say it puts lives at risk, offers insufficient aid and lacks fair distribution. Airdrops have also triggered deadly stampedes, as desperate crowds rush towards falling crates. Rania al-Abed, a witness to the chaos, told MEE the current system, including GHF-run sites, is unorganised and chaotic. War on Gaza: Why air-dropping aid on Gaza is doing more harm than good Read More » She described scenes of overcrowding and panic at every aid drop. 'More than once, I've taken martyrs to the hospital,' she said. 'I'm not going for food or water, just to remove the dead… What kind of life is this?' Abed said she no longer seeks aid for herself. Instead, she focuses on helping others, and carrying the dead away from aid sites. One of them was her own father. She found him by chance, killed at a distribution point. A bullet from Israeli shelling had struck his chest. 'How long must we live like this? How long must we suffer?' she asked. 'I swear to God, we are exhausted. I've lost my father, my mother, I've lost everything. I have nothing left. I'm only doing this for God.' She said aid sites have become firing zones. Israeli forces shoot into crowds, even when there is clear distance between them and civilians. 'It's injustice,' she said. Israeli forces have killed nearly 2,000 Palestinians queueing up for food at GHF distribution sites since May, according to the health ministry. At least 23 have died from airdropped aid and 124 more wounded. Overall, Israeli forces have killed more than 62,000 and wounded over 156,000 since the genocide in Gaza began in October 2023.