logo
Israeli strikes kill at least 52 in Gaza as Netanyahu vows to intensify attacks

Israeli strikes kill at least 52 in Gaza as Netanyahu vows to intensify attacks

Al Arabiya27-05-2025

At least 52 people were killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza, rescuers in the territory said on Monday, as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to bring back all hostages, 'living and dead.'
Netanyahu's remarks came amid confusion about the fate of a proposed 70-day ceasefire that was to see the release of 10 Israeli hostages alongside more Palestinian prisoners.
Israel has in recent weeks intensified its offensive in the Gaza Strip, drawing international condemnation as little aid trickles in following a monthslong blockade that has caused severe food and medical shortages.
'If we don't achieve it today, we will achieve it tomorrow, and if not tomorrow, then the day after tomorrow. We are not giving up,' Netanyahu said of freeing the captives.
'We intend to bring them all back, the living and the dead,' he added without mentioning a possible truce.
Hamas militants took 251 hostages during the October 2023 Hamas attack on Israel, 57 of whom remain in Gaza including 34 who the Israeli military says are dead.
Hamas said Monday it had accepted a new ceasefire proposal by US envoy Steve Witkoff, presented by mediators, but a spokesman for Witkoff later denied the Palestinian group had accepted.
'What I have seen from Hamas is disappointing and completely unacceptable,' the US envoy told the US news outlet Axios.
In Gaza, an early-morning Israeli strike on the Fahmi Al-Jarjawi school, where displaced people were sheltering, killed 'at least 33, with dozens injured, mostly children,' civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal said Monday.
The Israeli military alleged it had 'struck key terrorists who were operating within a Hamas and Islamic Jihad command and control center embedded' in the area, adding that 'numerous steps were taken to mitigate the risk of harming civilians.'
Another Israeli strike killed at least 19 people in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip, Bassal said.
European and Arab leaders meeting in Spain over the weekend called for an end to Israel's 'inhumane' and 'senseless' war, while humanitarian groups said the trickle of aid Israel was allowing in was not nearly enough.
'Open wound'
Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares called Sunday for an arms embargo on Israel.
He also pressed for humanitarian aid to enter Gaza 'massively, without conditions and without limits, and not controlled by Israel,' describing the territory as humanity's 'open wound.'
In Germany, Chancellor Friedrich Merz voiced unusually strong criticism of Israel, saying: 'I no longer understand what the Israeli army is now doing in the Gaza Strip, with what goal.'
The impact on Gazan civilians 'can no longer be justified,' he added.
Nevertheless, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said Berlin would continue selling weapons to Israel.
The Israeli military said Monday that over 'the past 48 hours, the (air force) struck over 200 targets throughout the Gaza Strip.'
It also said it had detected three projectiles launched from Gaza toward Israel, as the country prepared to celebrate Jerusalem Day, an annual event marking its capture of the city's eastern sector in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.
'Two projectiles fell in the Gaza Strip and one additional projectile was intercepted,' it said.
'Situation is devastating'
Israel last week partially eased its aid blockade on Gaza that had exacerbated widespread shortages of food and medicine.
COGAT, the Israeli defense ministry body that coordinates civilian affairs in the Palestinian territories, said that '170 trucks... carrying humanitarian aid including food, medical equipment, and pharmaceutical drugs were transferred' into Gaza on Monday.
A top World Health Organization official deplored Monday that none of the agency's trucks with medical aid had been allowed to enter the Gaza Strip since Israel ended its blockade.
For more than 11 weeks, 'there has been no WHO trucks entering into Gaza for medical care support,' the WHO's Eastern Mediterranean regional director Hanan Balkhy said, adding that 'the situation is devastating.'
Also on Monday, the controversial US-backed group Gaza Humanitarian Foundation said it had begun distributing food aid in the territory.
'More trucks with aid will be delivered tomorrow, with the flow of aid increasing each day,' it said in a statement.
While Israel has restricted aid reaching Gaza, the war has made growing food next to impossible, with the UN saying on Monday just five percent of Gaza's farmland was now useable.
The health ministry in Gaza said on Monday that at least 3,822 people had been killed by Israel in the territory since Israel ended the ceasefire on March 18, taking the war's overall toll to 53,977, mostly women and children.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Red Cross chief declares Gaza ‘worse than hell on earth'
Red Cross chief declares Gaza ‘worse than hell on earth'

Arab News

timean hour ago

  • Arab News

Red Cross chief declares Gaza ‘worse than hell on earth'

LONDON: The situation in Gaza has become 'worse than hell on earth,' the president of the International Committee of the Red Cross has said. 'Humanity is failing in Gaza,' Mirjana Spoljaric told the BBC in an interview broadcast on Wednesday. 'We cannot continue to watch what is happening.' The ICRC, a global organization assisting people affected by conflict, has about 300 staff in Gaza. It runs a field hospital in Rafah that was swamped with casualties in recent days after witnesses described Israeli troops opening fire on crowds trying to access food aid. Spoljaric said that the situation in the territory was 'surpassing any acceptable legal, moral and humane standard.' 'The fact that we are watching a people being entirely stripped of its human dignity should really shock our collective conscience.' "The fact that we are watching people being entirely stripped of their human dignity should really shock our collective conscience." Mirjana Spoljaric, ICRC President, shared with @BowenBBC about the dire situation for civilians in Gaza and made a call for leaders to act now — ICRC (@ICRC) June 4, 2025 She called on world leaders to do more to bring the conflict to an end because the consequences would haunt them and 'reach their doorsteps.' Israel's devastating military campaign in Gaza has killed more than 54,000 people since October 2023, mostly women and children. The offensive was launched after a Hamas-led attack on Israel killed 1,200 people and seized dozens of hostages. Spoljaric said that while every state had a right to defend itself, there could be 'no excuse for depriving children from their access to food, health and security.' She added: 'There are rules in the conduct of hostilities that every party to every conflict has to respect.' International condemnation of Israel has increased in recent weeks after its military pushed to take full control of Gaza after severing all food and aid supplies to the territory's population. Late last month, some aid deliveries resumed after Israel set up a new aid system that bypassed the UN and is now run by a newly formed US organization. Operations at the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation's three aid delivery sites were paused on Wednesday after dozens of Palestinians were killed by gunfire near one of the sites.

‘This is the Final Solution': Norman Finkelstein clashes with Israeli general over Gaza
‘This is the Final Solution': Norman Finkelstein clashes with Israeli general over Gaza

Al Arabiya

timean hour ago

  • Al Arabiya

‘This is the Final Solution': Norman Finkelstein clashes with Israeli general over Gaza

To die of hunger... or die trying to get food? The UN has described the new aid delivery regime in Gaza as a 'death trap.' Over consecutive days - civilians have been killed waiting for food aid. Israel, with the backing of the US, is delivering aid through a private company - bypassing traditional humanitarian groups. For days, Gazans have reported being shot at as they scramble to access the limited supplies. Israel denies firing at innocent civilians. It's the latest escalation in a seemingly endless humanitarian crisis. And it could just be the last straw for some of Israel's supporters. Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert - who we'll hear from shortly - now believes Israel is committing war crimes. The senseless deaths are adding to already mounting pressure on Israel... There's a distinct change in some of the language we're hearing - even from Tel Aviv's staunchest allies. The rhetoric - and public opinion - is certainly starting to change. On Counterpoints we'll ask: If Israel is weaponizing food and if that was always part of its war plan? Will this force the US to renew a push for peace? And if we can expect more Israeli allies to speak out?

Irish University to Cut Links with Israel Over Gaza War
Irish University to Cut Links with Israel Over Gaza War

Asharq Al-Awsat

timean hour ago

  • Asharq Al-Awsat

Irish University to Cut Links with Israel Over Gaza War

Ireland's prestigious Trinity College Dublin said on Wednesday that it would cut all links with Israel in protest at "ongoing violations of international and humanitarian law". The university's board informed students by email on Wednesday that it had accepted the recommendations of a taskforce to sever "institutional links with the State of Israel, Israeli universities and companies headquartered in Israel". The recommendations would be "enacted for the duration of the ongoing violations of international and humanitarian law", said the email sent by the board's chairman Paul Farrell, and seen by AFP. The taskforce was set up after part of the university's campus in central Dublin was blockaded by students for five days last year in protest at Israel's actions in Gaza. Among the taskforce's recommendations approved by the board were pledges to divest "from all companies headquartered in Israel" and to "enter into no future supply contracts with Israeli firms" and "no new commercial relationships with Israeli entities". The university also said that it would "enter into no further mobility agreements with Israeli universities". Trinity has two current Erasmus+ exchange agreements with Israeli universities: Bar Ilan University, an agreement that ends in July 2026, and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, which ends in July 2025, the university told AFP in an email. The board also said that the university "should not submit for approval or agree to participate in any new institutional research agreements involving Israeli participation". It "should seek to align itself with like-minded universities and bodies in an effort to influence EU policy concerning Israel's participation in such collaborations," it added. Ireland has been among the most outspoken critics of Israel's response to the October 7, 2023 attacks on southern Israel by Hamas that sparked the war in Gaza. Polls since the start of the war have shown overwhelming pro-Palestinian sympathy in Ireland. In May 2024, Dublin joined several other European countries in recognizing Palestine as a "sovereign and independent state". It then joined South Africa in bringing a case before the International Court of Justice in the Hague accusing Israel of committing genocide in Gaza -- charges angrily denied by Israeli leaders. In December, Israel's Foreign Minister Gideon Saar ordered the closure of the country's embassy in Dublin, blaming Ireland's "extreme anti-Israel policies".

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store