
Gazans still dying as world's attention turns elsewhere, UNRWA's Philippe Lazzarini says
The head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) on Monday lamented the rising death toll in Gaza as dozens more people were killed while trying to collect aid, saying "tragedies go on unabated while attention shifts elsewhere".
The Gaza Health Ministry said another 38 people were killed by Israeli fire while trying to collect food from centres run by the controversial US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
The latest in the near-daily shootings at GHF sites since it started operations three weeks ago raises the death toll to 338, with another 2,831 injured, it said.
The ministry said they were among 68 people killed since Sunday, as Israel continues to launch deadly strikes across the Palestinian enclave in its war against the militant group Hamas.
"Scores of people have been killed and injured in the past days including starving people trying to get some food from a lethal distribution system," UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini said in a post on X.
"Restrictions on bringing in aid from the UN, including UNRWA, continue despite an abundance of assistance ready to be moved into Gaza. In addition, severe shortages of fuel are now hampering the delivery of critical services, especially health and water."
The ministry said most of latest deaths occurred near one of the GHF's aid sites in Rafah. Two witnesses told the Associated Press that Israeli forces opened fire around 4am on crowds gathered at a roundabout hundreds of metres from the centre.
There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military, which secures the areas around GHF sites. In previous incidents it has claimed troops fired warning shots at "suspects" approaching their positions.
Israel allowed the GHF to start operations in late May after imposing a nearly three-month blockade of all aid into Gaza. It said the new system, which has been condemned by the UN and international aid groups, is intended to stop supplies falling into the hands of Hamas.
UN rights chief Volker Turk said on Monday that Israel had "weaponised" food in Gaza and repeated a call for investigations into deadly attacks near the GHF sites.
"Israel's means and methods of warfare are inflicting horrifying, unconscionable suffering on Palestinians in Gaza," he told the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.
"Disturbing, dehumanising rhetoric from senior Israeli government officials is reminiscent of the gravest of crimes," he said.
The limited amounts of aid being distributed to a population of more than two million at only four GHF sites has done little to alleviate desperate levels of hunger. More than 2,700 children under five face acute malnutrition, UNRWA said on Monday, while people are reportedly fainting on the streets from hunger.
The Gaza Health Ministry said the latest killings raised the Palestinian death toll from Israel's military offensive to 55,432, most of them women and children, with 128,923 injured.
The war began on October 7, 2023 when Hamas and other militant groups from Gaza attacked southern Israel, killing about 1,200 people and talking about 250 hostage.
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Middle East Eye
4 hours ago
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Meet the American military veterans fasting for Gaza
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So when Veterans for Peace and Friends of Sabeel North America decided to launch a fast for Gaza outside the US Mission at the United Nations in New York City on 22 May, Metzler immediately got involved. She told Middle East Eye that fasting felt like the "next logical step" but really "a moral obligation to be standing up against the human rights violations tantamount to a genocide, if not actually a genocide happening in Gaza". New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Metzler joins 745 people, including three veterans from the Vietnam War, who have been fasting for the past 20 days across the US, in protest against the ongoing war in Gaza, where over 55,000 Palestinians have been killed. Veterans have either restricted their diet to 250 calories per day, less than a can of fava beans, in line with what Oxfam described in April as the abysmal average daily food intake of Palestinians in Gaza due to the military siege on the enclave. Others who have joined the fast have followed the rules of the Islamic month of Ramadan, in which proponents steer clear of both food and water from dawn to dusk. They say they are calling for the resumption of humanitarian aid under the authority of the United Nations, and for the US to halt its arms sales to Israel. Joy Metzler with a poster showing Palestinian children who have been killed in Israel's war on Gaza (Veterans for Peace/Supplied) Advocacy and outreach With a core team of around seven standing outside the US Mission to the UN in New York City for the past 20 days, Veterans for Peace, which was founded in 1985 in response to the global nuclear arms race and US military interventions in Central America, have also been conducting outreach with several governments stationed at the UN. Last week, a team from the group met with the Danish envoy to urge them to exert pressure on Maersk, the Danish shipping and logistics company that ships military cargo to Israel. Protesters at NYC vigil hope Aaron Bushnell's death inspires moral reckoning on Gaza Read More » Though they weren't able to convince the Danes to alter course on Maersk, organisers say that being at the UN has provided an opportunity to make envoys feel at the very least uncomfortable. Phil Tottenham, a Marine Corps veteran and a member of Veterans for Peace, told MEE he regularly sent updates to comrades around the world who were also fasting - in Hong Kong, Ireland and Germany, among other places - about the latest developments in New York as well as their interactions with ambassadors around the UN. It helped build a sense of community and shared responsibility. "I am here fasting because it was a thought that occurred to me about wanting to do something more. "Prior to Aaron Bush self-immolating, I had had the thought of that, but didn't have the courage to go through the pain of what he went through. "And so that's why I'm here fasting in New York City," Tottenham, 47, said. Tottenham added that as the descendant of a colonial settler who participated in the ethnic cleansing of indigenous people in Tejos and Mexico, it was a personal matter to him to stand up for the Palestinian people. 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The veterans' effort to conduct a mass fast is part of a global outpouring of solidarity for Palestinians. 'Watching hundreds of people maimed, burned, and killed every day just tears at my insides - too much like when I nursed hundreds of wounded from our war in Vietnam," Mike Ferner, former national director of Veterans For Peace, said when the fast was launched in late May. "Our taxes help Israel provide full health care to all its citizens while millions of Americans go without it, and we spend billions killing people. This madness will only stop when enough Americans demand it stops," Ferner added. Last week, a flotilla filled with activists, including Greta Thunberg, carrying aid to Gaza, was intercepted by Israeli forces. Members of the crew were held for hours in an Israeli prison, and reportedly subjected to abuse before they were deported. This week, thousands of people from around the world have descended on Cairo to embark on the Global March to Gaza. 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Middle East Eye
6 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
More than 330 Palestinians killed by Israel since start of US-backed lethal aid scheme
Israeli attacks on Palestinians seeking aid in the Gaza Strip have killed at least 338 civilians, according to Palestinian health officials. In the most recent series of assaults on civilians at aid delivery points, at least 20 Palestinians were killed and more than 200 left wounded around dawn on Monday. The besieged enclave's population is grappling with starvation, as a result of an Israeli blockade on essential food and water supplies entering the territory. Israel and its allies in Washington have only allowed the controversial US-run Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) to distribute essential supplies to Palestinians. However, ki of those seeking aid by Israeli soldiers and GHF-aligned mercenaries have been a daily occurrence. You can read more here.


The National
7 hours ago
- The National
Gazans still dying as world's attention turns elsewhere, UNRWA's Philippe Lazzarini says
The head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) on Monday lamented the rising death toll in Gaza as dozens more people were killed while trying to collect aid, saying "tragedies go on unabated while attention shifts elsewhere". The Gaza Health Ministry said another 38 people were killed by Israeli fire while trying to collect food from centres run by the controversial US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. The latest in the near-daily shootings at GHF sites since it started operations three weeks ago raises the death toll to 338, with another 2,831 injured, it said. The ministry said they were among 68 people killed since Sunday, as Israel continues to launch deadly strikes across the Palestinian enclave in its war against the militant group Hamas. "Scores of people have been killed and injured in the past days including starving people trying to get some food from a lethal distribution system," UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini said in a post on X. "Restrictions on bringing in aid from the UN, including UNRWA, continue despite an abundance of assistance ready to be moved into Gaza. In addition, severe shortages of fuel are now hampering the delivery of critical services, especially health and water." The ministry said most of latest deaths occurred near one of the GHF's aid sites in Rafah. Two witnesses told the Associated Press that Israeli forces opened fire around 4am on crowds gathered at a roundabout hundreds of metres from the centre. There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military, which secures the areas around GHF sites. In previous incidents it has claimed troops fired warning shots at "suspects" approaching their positions. Israel allowed the GHF to start operations in late May after imposing a nearly three-month blockade of all aid into Gaza. It said the new system, which has been condemned by the UN and international aid groups, is intended to stop supplies falling into the hands of Hamas. UN rights chief Volker Turk said on Monday that Israel had "weaponised" food in Gaza and repeated a call for investigations into deadly attacks near the GHF sites. "Israel's means and methods of warfare are inflicting horrifying, unconscionable suffering on Palestinians in Gaza," he told the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. "Disturbing, dehumanising rhetoric from senior Israeli government officials is reminiscent of the gravest of crimes," he said. The limited amounts of aid being distributed to a population of more than two million at only four GHF sites has done little to alleviate desperate levels of hunger. More than 2,700 children under five face acute malnutrition, UNRWA said on Monday, while people are reportedly fainting on the streets from hunger. The Gaza Health Ministry said the latest killings raised the Palestinian death toll from Israel's military offensive to 55,432, most of them women and children, with 128,923 injured. The war began on October 7, 2023 when Hamas and other militant groups from Gaza attacked southern Israel, killing about 1,200 people and talking about 250 hostage.