logo
At least 35 Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes across Gaza

At least 35 Palestinians killed in Israeli strikes across Gaza

Yahoo01-05-2025

At least 35 Palestinians were killed and more than 100 others were injured on Wednesday as Israel continues to strike Gaza.
Airstrikes targeting residences in the centre of the enclave killed at least 12 people, including children, as reported by Palestinian hospital personnel, who received the deceased.
The early morning attacks targeted three residences in the Nuseirat refugee camp. The casualties included three children, two of whom were brothers, with their remains arriving in fragments, according to the morgue staff.
Israel has been conducting daily strikes on homes, shelters and public spaces since it moved to resume fighting on 18 March. The blockade has deprived the more than 2 million Gazans of all imports, including essential food and medical supplies, for nearly two months.
The United Nations has reported that food reserves have been depleted, and humanitarian organizations indicate that thousands of Palestinian children are suffering from malnutrition.
Israel asserts that the blockade is intended to compel Hamas to release hostages taken on 7 October, 2023. Nevertheless, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights cautioned this week that using starvation as a military strategy against civilians constitutes a war crime.
The humanitarian office of the United Nations reports critical shortages of food, water, and medical supplies as healthcare services deteriorate and charitable kitchens cease operations.
The agency, known as OCHA, announced on Wednesday that it will distribute its final sixty emergency shelter kits in the coming days, which do not include tents.
The UN Population Fund has indicated that it has exhausted all of its shelter materials, hygiene products, and menstrual hygiene kits.
OCHA further noted that only seven hospitals and four field hospitals continue to offer obstetric and newborn care for families in Gaza, where over 2 million individuals reside.
Meanwhile, hospitals are observing a significant increase in cases of malnourished pregnant and breastfeeding women, with a majority of newborns now being birthed underweight.
Scores of Palestinians gathered at charity kitchens in Deir al-Balah and Nuseirat to get their only meal for the day as food across the territory runs out. On Wednesday, one kitchen served pasta in a thin tomato sauce, another served just lentils.
Crowds of people pushed against each other and yelled as they held their pots and containers up high in the air in a desperate attempt to not leave empty-handed.
'There is starvation. There is no food or thing to drink," said Wafaa, a woman displaced in Nuseirat with eight family members, who gave only her first name. "It would be a significant crisis if the charity kitchens close.'
Abu Hamza Fawaz, who works with the charity kitchen in Deir al-Balah, said that the kitchen will close in a few days due to the lack of food and fuel.
Ahmed Yassin who works with another charity kitchen in Nuseirat, said that a significant number of small charity kitchens closed a while ago and people had to rely on the main communal kitchens.
The war began when Hamas militants attacked southern Israel on 7 October 2023, killing around 1,200 people, most of them civilians. Hamas took 251 people as hostages, and is currently holding 59, of whom 24 are believed to be alive.
A subsequent Israeli offensive has to date killed more than 52,400 Palestinians, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry whose figure does not distinguish between fighters and civilians. According to the Israeli military's latest figures, 850 of its soldiers have died since the start of the war.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UN reports uptick in preventable diseases in Gaza due to Israeli blockade
UN reports uptick in preventable diseases in Gaza due to Israeli blockade

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

UN reports uptick in preventable diseases in Gaza due to Israeli blockade

The United Nations humanitarian agency (OCHA) has warned that preventable diseases in Gaza are on the rise and killing civilians due to the lack of desperately needed medicine and clean water. OCHA in a statement on Thursday said that in the past two weeks, 'more than 19,000 cases of acute watery diarrhoea have been recorded, alongside over 200 cases each of acute jaundice syndrome and bloody diarrhoea '. 'These outbreaks are directly linked to the lack of clean water and sanitation in Gaza, underscoring the urgent need for fuel, medical supplies, and water, sanitation and hygiene items to prevent further collapse of the public health system,' the agency added. Israel's blockade on fuel entry into Gaza has paralysed the territory's desalination plants and water system. The Israeli military has destroyed much of Gaza, displaced nearly the entire population of the territory and placed a suffocating siege on the enclave. Besides the dire humanitarian conditions, the Israeli military continues to kill dozens of Palestinians in Gaza daily. Leading rights groups and UN experts have described the Israeli campaign as a genocide. OCHA said on Thursday that more than 20 people were killed and about 70 others were injured after a strike on Deir el-Balah, central Gaza. Medical sources told Al Jazeera Arabic that Israeli attacks killed at least 71 people across Gaza on Israel's war on Gaza began in October 2023, at least 56,259 people have been killed, and 132,458 others have been wounded, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. After a more than two-month blockade of essential goods entering Gaza, the Israeli government announced it was allowing aid to re-enter the enclave in May. However, due to Israeli restrictions, the amount of aid entering has been minimal, with aid agencies referring to it as a 'drop in the ocean'. Much of the aid allowed in has been through the United States and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which has been condemned by aid agencies as a 'weaponisation' of humanitarian goods. On Wednesday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his Defence Minister Israel Katz said in a video message that the army was being asked to draft a new plan to deliver aid to Gaza after unverified footage showed masked men on top of aid trucks in northern Gaza. While Israel has claimed the men were Hamas members, Palestinian clan leaders with no affiliation with the group said the masked men were protecting the truck from being looted. Multiple UN officials have refuted Israel's claims that Hamas steals humanitarian aid. Last month, Israeli officials acknowledged arming criminal gangs linked to looting the assistance in order to rival Hamas.

The lethal risk of seeking food in Gaza
The lethal risk of seeking food in Gaza

Boston Globe

time20 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

The lethal risk of seeking food in Gaza

Advertisement Jens Laerke, a spokesperson for the U.N. agency for coordination of humanitarian affairs, described the new aid distribution hubs as 'death traps' for Palestinians. 'Gaza is the hungriest place on earth,' he said Wednesday. 'When we are able to bring anything in, it's getting plundered immediately by the population. That's the level of desperation.' The new aid system, run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, has just a few operational hubs, primarily in the south. It was put into place after Israel blocked aid deliveries to Gaza for nearly three months from March to May. Restrictions on the entry of aid were partially lifted May 19. It was part of an effort to try to replace an aid operation led by the United Nations with hundreds of distribution points. The United Nations and other international aid organizations have criticized the new system, saying the aid it delivers falls far short of needs and that it forces people to walk for miles in dangerous conditions for a chance to find food. They accuse Israel of turning aid into a weapon. Advertisement Witnesses on a number of occasions have reported that Israeli troops opened fire on the approaches to the new aid hubs. The Israeli military has said repeatedly that its forces have fired 'warning shots' when people approached its forces in what it described as a threatening manner. Israeli officials have said the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation sites were needed to allow for the delivery of aid without Hamas benefiting. They say that in the past, Hamas has taken control of much of the food and other aid reaching the territory, keeping some for its own people, selling some on the black market and restricting supplies for ordinary Palestinians. France on Tuesday condemned what it said was Israeli gunfire at civilians gathered around an aid distribution point in Gaza, saying it had left dozens of dead and wounded. The International Committee of the Red Cross said it had treated people who had been shot Tuesday near a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation site in the southern city of Rafah. The Red Cross said that its field hospital in Rafah, which is near the aid hub, received 149 patients after that incident, including 16 who were declared dead on arrival and three others who died from their wounds. It was not possible to verify the figures independently. The Israeli military said it was 'not aware of the incident in question at the Rafah aid distribution site.' Advertisement On Tuesday, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation said there were false allegations of attacks near its aid distribution sites, asserting that the international media had been mistakenly linking violence near U.N. convoys with its operations. Since the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation started distributing aid in mid-May, the Red Cross said its field hospital in Rafah has activated 'mass casualty procedures' 20 times. (BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM.) 'We condemn with maximum strength the fact that for one month now, people are being injured and killed every day while trying to get urgently needed food in a war zone,' Christian Cardon, the chief spokesperson of the Red Cross, said Thursday. (END OPTIONAL TRIM.) In a separate statement Monday, the chief of the Israeli military's southern command defended the importance of continuing the war in Gaza, which was launched to crush Hamas after it led the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel. 'We cannot tolerate Hamas here,' said the commander, Maj. Gen. Yaniv Asor. 'We will not end this war until the threat has been eliminated.' In recent months, ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas have repeatedly failed to produce a breakthrough. A key sticking point is the permanence of a ceasefire. Hamas has insisted on a lasting end to the war in Gaza. But Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel has rejected that demand, saying Hamas' military and governing capabilities must first be dismantled. On Wednesday, Israeli officials signaled they wanted to change the procedures for trucks affiliated with the United Nations and other international organizations to enter northern Gaza. Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz said Hamas was taking control of the aid entering northern Gaza and was stealing it from civilians. Advertisement The two Israeli leaders said they instructed the military to 'present within 48 hours an action plan to prevent Hamas from taking control of the aid.' The Israeli Defense Ministry body that oversees aid delivery to Gaza said that 71 trucks carrying food, flour, medicines and other supplies entered Gaza on Tuesday after steps had been taken to ensure that the aid does not fall into the hands of Hamas. While hunger remains widespread in Gaza, there were signs that food was becoming somewhat more available after a month of aid flows. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation has said it has distributed more than 800,000 boxes of food aid since it started operations, including nearly 40,000 Thursday. World Central Kitchen, the charity set up by celebrity chef José Andrés, said this week that it had resumed operations in Gaza after a seven-week pause. The United Nations said that Gaza still faced catastrophic hunger and more than 20 months with insufficient supplies has added up to a cumulative deficit. 'Families in Gaza are risking their lives to access food, with nearly daily mass casualties reported as people attempt to reach supplies,' the U.N. humanitarian agency said in a report Thursday. 'Most families survive on just one nutritiously poor meal per day, while adults routinely skip meals to prioritize children, the elderly, and the ill amid deepening hunger and desperation.' (STORY CAN END HERE. OPTIONAL MATERIAL FOLLOWS.) Ahmad Samier Kafina, from Nuseirat in central Gaza, said he had risked going three times to an aid distribution point in central Gaza because his extended family relied on him to find food. Kafina said that each time, he had left the place where the family was living around midnight and walked for 45 minutes toward the site, often in the company of neighbors and relatives because it felt safer in a group. Only once had he managed to secure even a small quantity of food, but he said that he faced gunfire. Advertisement 'I saw death there,' he said. He said he feared a stampede and had seen people in the crowds using sharp implements to steal food from those who had secured it. Despite the risks, he said, he had no choice. 'We have no other source of food.' This article originally appeared in

Israeli attacks kill more than 30 people in Gaza, including 3 near aid site
Israeli attacks kill more than 30 people in Gaza, including 3 near aid site

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Israeli attacks kill more than 30 people in Gaza, including 3 near aid site

More than 30 people have been killed in Israeli attacks across the Gaza Strip, medical sources told Al Jazeera, as Israel's national security minister called for a 'complete halt' of humanitarian aid supplies to the Palestinian territory. Local health authorities said on Thursday that Israeli air attacks killed at least 15 people in two separate attacks in Gaza City, including nine people who were killed at a school housing displaced families in the city's Sheikh Radwan suburb. A separate strike killed nine people near a tent encampment in Khan Younis, in the south of the enclave. Hospital sources told Al Jazeera that nine people were killed and wounded in a drone attack on Deir el-Balah's market street, sending Wednesday's death toll from Israeli attacks above 30. The Palestinian Red Crescent Society reported that three people were killed and others injured by Israeli army fire while waiting for humanitarian aid near a distribution point at the Netzarim Corridor in central Gaza, the latest in a series of killings at aid distribution points set up by the controversial US- and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF). According to Gaza's Government Media Office, at least 549 Palestinians have been killed while attempting to get food from the sites since the GHF began operations on May 27. It said the attacks on those seeking aid have also caused 4,066 injuries, and that 39 civilians remained missing following the attacks. According to British charity Save the Children, more than half of the casualties in the attacks near distribution hubs were children. Of the 19 deadly incidents reported, the organisation found that children were among the casualties in 10 of them. 'No-one wants to get aid from these distribution points and who can blame them – it's a death sentence. People are terrified of being killed,' said Ahmad Alhendawi, Save the Children's regional director for the Middle East, North Africa and Eastern GHF has been criticised by the United Nations and international humanitarian organisations, which say it is inadequate to deliver humanitarian supplies to Gaza's population. The GHF took over aid operations in May, following mounting criticism against Israel's months-long total blockade on aid getting into the Strip. That had pushed most of the population to the brink of starvation. Since then, a trickle of aid has been allowed in, but the disastrous humanitarian situation has barely improved. On Thursday, National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir called for the Israeli government to reimpose its total blockade. 'The humanitarian aid currently entering Gaza is an absolute disgrace,' he said, adding that 'what is needed in Gaza is not a temporary halt to 'humanitarian' aid, but a complete stop.' Meanwhile, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees warned that families across Gaza are at risk of dying of thirst amid the collapse of water supply systems. UNRWA noted that only 40 percent of drinking water production facilities are still operating, and that 'Gaza is on the edge of a man-made drought. 'Extracting water from wells stopped due to fuel shortages, others located in dangerous areas that are difficult to access, pipelines are broken and leaking, and water tankers that often do not arrive,' the agency said. As Israel continues its assault on Gaza, Arab mediators, Egypt and Qatar, backed by the United States, reached out to the warring parties in a bid to hold new ceasefire talks, but no exact time was set for a new round, according to Hamas sources. Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who leads a coalition with far-right parties, insists that Hamas, which has ruled Gaza for nearly two decades, release all captives, relinquish any role and lay down its weapons to end the war. Hamas, in turn, has stated it would release the captives if Israel agrees to a permanent ceasefire and withdraws all its troops from Gaza. While it has conceded it would no longer govern Gaza, Hamas has refused to discuss disarmament.

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