logo
Gaza rescue official, journalist killed as Israel seizes 77 per cent of the strip

Gaza rescue official, journalist killed as Israel seizes 77 per cent of the strip

SBS Australia25-05-2025

Colonel Ashraf Abu Nar, the director of Civil Defence Operations in Gaza, and his wife, were killed in an Israeli attack on Nuseirat refugee camp. Source: Getty / Anadolu Israeli airstrikes in Khan Younis, Jabalia, and Nuseirat reportedly killed at least 30 people on Sunday.
Hassan Abu Warda, a journalist, and Ashraf Abu Nar, a senior rescue service official, were killed along with family.
Israel's ground invasion of Gaza has seized 77 per cent of the strip, according to the Gaza media office. Israeli military strikes killed at least 30 Palestinians across the Gaza Strip on Sunday, including a senior rescue service official and a journalist, local health authorities said. The latest deaths in the Israeli campaign resulted from separate Israeli strikes in Khan Younis in the south, Jabalia in the north and Nuseirat in the central Gaza Strip, medics said. In Jabalia, they said local journalist Hassan Majdi Abu Warda and several family members were killed by an airstrike that hit his house earlier on Sunday. Another airstrike in Nuseirat killed Ashraf Abu Nar, a senior official in the territory's civil emergency service, and his wife in their house, medics added.
The Gaza government media office said that Abu Warda's death raised the number of Palestinian journalists killed in Gaza since October 2023 to 220. In a statement, the Gaza media office said Israeli forces were in control of 77 per cent of the Gaza Strip, either through ground forces or evacuation orders and bombardments that keep residents away from their homes. Israel's military said in a statement that chief of staff Eyal Zamir visited troops in Khan Younis on Sunday, telling them that "this is not an endless war" and that Hamas has lost most of its assets, including its command and control. "We will deploy every tool at our disposal to bring the hostages home, dismantle Hamas and dismantle its rule," Zamir was cited as saying.
Later on Sunday, the International Committee of the Red Cross said in a statement that two of its staff - Ibrahim Eid and Ahmad Abu Hilal — had been killed in a strike on a house in Khan Younis on Saturday. "Their killing points to the intolerable civilian death toll in Gaza. The ICRC reiterates its urgent call for a ceasefire and for the respect and protection of civilians, including medical, humanitarian relief, and civil defence personnel," the ICRC statement added. The armed wing of Hamas and the Islamic Jihad said in separate statements on Sunday that fighters carried out several ambushes and attacks using bombs and anti-tank rockets against Israeli forces operating in several areas across Gaza.
On Friday, the Israeli military said it had conducted more strikes in Gaza overnight, hitting 75 targets including weapons storage facilities and rocket launchers. The conflict has killed more than 53,900 Palestinians, according to Gaza health authorities, and devastated the coastal strip. Aid groups say signs of severe malnutrition are widespread. Israel launched the assault on Gaza after the Hamas militant cross-border attack on October 7, 2023, which killed 1,200 people by Israeli tallies with 251 hostages abducted into Gaza.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Three killed, dozens injured after Israeli forces open fire near Gaza aid site, medics say
Three killed, dozens injured after Israeli forces open fire near Gaza aid site, medics say

SBS Australia

timean hour ago

  • SBS Australia

Three killed, dozens injured after Israeli forces open fire near Gaza aid site, medics say

At least three Palestinians were reportedly killed and dozens wounded by Israeli fire near an aid site in Gaza. The Israeli military said it fired warning shots to deter suspects approaching troops but denied shooting civilians. The alleged shooting is part of a series of deadly incidents near distribution sites. Israeli fire killed at least three Palestinians and wounded dozens of others near an aid distribution site operated by the US-based Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, local health authorities said. The alleged shooting reportedly occurred at the same location in southern Gaza where witnesses say Israeli forces fired on crowds of aid-seekers a day earlier. The Israeli military said it was aware of reports of casualties and the incident was being thoroughly looked into. It said in a statement that troops had fired warning shots "to prevent several suspects approaching them" about 1 km away from the aid distribution site. The GHF, a private group sponsored by the United States and endorsed by Israel, claimed there had been no fatalities or injuries at its distribution site or the surrounding area. The latest incident in a series of reported shootings of civilians seeking food aid has underscored the volatile system of aid delivery into Gaza, following the easing last month of an almost three-month Israeli blockade. On Sunday, Palestinian and international officials said at least 31 people were killed and dozens wounded near the same site, one of four operated by the GHF in Rafah. At Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, relatives of Hussam Wafi, a 37-year-old father-of-six, who was killed near the aid site on Sunday, arrived to pay their last respects before burial. Wafi's brother Ali said the victims were driven by hunger. 'The US and Israel, what do they tell us? Go and get your food and water, and the aid. When the aid arrives, they hit us. Is this fair?" Wafi told Reuters. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said on Monday he was appalled by reports of Palestinians killed and injured while seeking aid in Gaza on Sunday, and called for an independent investigation. The Israeli military denied firing at people gathering to collect aid, and the GHF said Sunday's distribution was carried out without incident, describing reports of deaths as fabricated by Hamas. The GHF said Monday's deliveries raised the number of meals it has distributed since it began operations to nearly six million. The United Nations has said most of Gaza's 2 million population is at risk of famine after an 11-week Israeli blockade on aid entering the strip. The GHF launched its first distribution sites last week and said it would launch more. Its aid plan, which bypasses traditional aid groups, has come under fierce criticism from the UN and the organisation's own former executive director, who all claim the GHF does not follow humanitarian principles. The Palestinian NGOs Network urged a boycott of what it called the "US-Israeli aid mechanism" in protest over the killings on Sunday.

UN chief calls for probe into deaths near Gaza aid site
UN chief calls for probe into deaths near Gaza aid site

News.com.au

time4 hours ago

  • News.com.au

UN chief calls for probe into deaths near Gaza aid site

UN chief Antonio Guterres called Monday for an independent investigation into the killing and wounding of scores of Palestinians near a US-backed aid centre in Gaza the day before. Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli gunfire killed at least 31 people and wounded 176 near the aid distribution site in the southern city of Rafah on Sunday, with medics at nearby hospitals also reporting a deluge of gunshot wound victims. The Israeli military denied firing at people "while they were near or within" the site. But a military source acknowledged "warning shots were fired towards several suspects" overnight about a kilometre away. "I am appalled by the reports of Palestinians killed and injured while seeking aid in Gaza yesterday. It is unacceptable that Palestinians are risking their lives for food," Guterres said in a statement, without assigning blame for the deaths. "I call for an immediate and independent investigation into these events and for perpetrators to be held accountable." The Israeli government has worked with the group running the site, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), to introduce a new mechanism for distributing aid in Gaza that has bypassed the longstanding UN-led system. The UN has declined to work with the group out of concerns about its neutrality. - 'Bullets were chasing people' - One 33-year-old who was present on Sunday told AFP it was "around 5 or 5:30 am, before sunrise" when the gunfire broke out at a spot known as the Al-Alam roundabout, where a crowd had gathered from the wee hours of the morning to wait before heading to the GHF centre about a kilometre away. "Of course it was the Israeli army who shot live bullets," said the witness, who declined to be named for fear of Israeli reprisals. "Thousands of people were waiting at Al-Alam roundabout... but the army fired and everyone ran away. There was fear and chaos. I saw with my own eyes martyrs and wounded in the area." Another witness elsewhere in the crowd, 35-year-old Mohammed Abu Deqqa, said "at first, we thought they were warning shots". "But it didn't take long before the shooting intensified. I began to see people lying on the ground, covered in blood. That was around 5:30 am," he said. "People started running, but many couldn't escape. The bullets were chasing people even as they tried to flee." AFP photos taken around 5:40 am showed civilians loading bodies onto donkey carts shortly after sunrise. Gaza civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal said teams of rescuers arrived around 6:00 am and began assisting with the dead and wounded, though civilians and other paramedics had already taken some to Nasser hospital and a Red Cross field hospital. - 'Warning shots were fired' - The military on Sunday said an initial inquiry indicated its troops "did not fire at civilians while they were near or within the humanitarian aid distribution site", and urged "media to be cautious with information published" by Hamas. But according to an Israeli military source, "warning shots were fired towards several suspects who advanced towards the troops" overnight. The incident took place "approximately one kilometre away" from the GHF distribution centre, outside of operating hours, the source said. Army spokesman Effie Defrin said Sunday that "Hamas is doing its best, its utmost, to stop us from" distributing aid, and vowed to "investigate each one of those allegations" against Israeli troops. A GHF spokesperson also accused Hamas of circulating "fake reports", saying: "All aid was distributed today without incident." In a video message from Nasser hospital later Sunday morning, visiting British surgeon Victoria Rose described a scene of "absolute carnage", saying "all the bays are full, and they're all gunshot wounds". The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said that its field hospital in Rafah received 179 people, including 21 pronounced dead on arrival. The ICRC reported that all the wounded "said they had been trying to reach an aid distribution site", adding that "the majority suffered gunshot or shrapnel wounds". - 'Intense force' - GHF said that as of Monday, it had distributed more than 5.8 million meals' worth of food from its centres. Israel has come under increasing international pressure to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza following a more than two-month blockade on aid that was only recently eased. The UN has warned the entire population is at risk of famine, and has also reported recent incidents of aid being looted, including by armed individuals. Talks aimed at reaching a ceasefire have so far failed to produce a breakthrough. Civil defence spokesman Bassal said 14 people were killed on Monday in an Israeli strike on a house in Jabalia, in the north. The Israeli military also issued an evacuation order for several western parts of Khan Yunis in the south, warning residents it would "operate with intense force" there. The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza says at least 4,201 people have been killed in the territory since Israel resumed its offensive on March 18, taking the war's overall toll to 54,470, mostly civilians. Hamas's 2023 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, also mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.

Palestine pulled
Palestine pulled

ABC News

time12 hours ago

  • ABC News

Palestine pulled

And now to the chorus of international condemnation of Israel last week to which our freshly re-elected prime minister lent his voice: ANTHONY ALBANESE: Well, Israel's actions are completely unacceptable. It is outrageous that there be a blockade of food and supplies to people who are in need in Gaza. - ABC, 26 May 2025 Anthony Albanese accused the Netanyahu government of choking off food and vital supplies to a war-ravaged people whose desperation and hunger were on full display last week: FERGAL KEANE: An agony that cannot be denied. DOCTOR: This is [inaudible], he is 5 years old. FERGAL KEANE: Today a British doctor captured these images in the pediatric ward at Nasser hospital … DOCTOR: Skin and bone. REPORTER: There was abundant aid that could have helped them. But nearly three months of Israeli blockade kept it out of Gaza … - BBC News, 26 May 2025 Pictures like these which have hardened opinion even further against the government of Israel and prompted diplomatic protests from across Europe, the UK and Canada. Last Monday the Prime Minister ratcheted up the rhetoric too: ANTHONY ALBANESE: People are starving and the idea that a democratic state withholds supply is an outrage. - ABC, 26 May 2025 The ABC carried those remarks in its news bulletins across the day before inviting Nasser Mashni, President of the Australian Palestine Advocacy Network, to come on air to respond. In the four minute interview which followed he pushed for a stronger response to the carnage on the ground: NASSER MASHNI: It's a rogue state. It's time to treat it that way. And that includes sanctions, includes recalling our ambassador, expelling the Israeli ambassador ... - ABC News Channel, 26 May 2025 Combining serious critiques with inflammatory invective which it should be said was met with inadequate challenge: NASSER MASHNI: … the space that Israel inhabited on October 6th has disappeared. The milk's been spilt. Israel never gets to go back to being that normal country again. - ABC News Channel, 26 May 2025 Within half an hour of the interview in which the ABC claims Mashni was factually wrong on one point, it was posted on iview and on the ABC website. But try and watch it now and this is what you find because within two hours of the video going up it was taken back down prompting accusations by the advocate that: '… This appears to be another instance of Palestinian voices being silenced.' - Crikey, 27 May 2025 So why was the video removed? Was it as a frenzied internet believed the result of pro-Israel lobbying? Or the intervention by a cowed ABC executive? None of the above. The video was pulled because it was originally designated to not run online in the first place. The original content was done as a live-to-air interview as part of broader coverage and was not intended to be published as a stand-alone clip. It was mistakenly uploaded and when that was noticed it was taken down. - Email, ABC Spokesperson, 28 May 2025 This clumsy error has inflamed already intense scrutiny on the public broadcaster's handling of the conflict. And it comes amid a new flashpoint with Benjamin Netanyahu desperate to cling to power having launched a new phase of the war and being accused of using a US-backed aid program as a bargaining chip while Hamas, which continues to hold dozens of hostages, and is accused by Israel of threatening those who assist. The result? Yet more bloodshed. And for those who resile from Nasser Mashni's criticisms of Netanyahu, they might consider them in light of these words from one of Israel's most steadfast defenders and a former prime minister: What we are doing in Gaza now is a war of devastation: indiscriminate, limitless, cruel and criminal killing of civilians … It is time to halt, before we are all banished from the family of nations and are summoned to the International Criminal Court for war crimes, with no good defense. Enough is enough. - Haaretz, 27 May 2025 And this is why deleting a pro-Palestinian voice from your website, even if it was posted by error, will inevitably be seen as censorship. Indeed, it's so very telling that the ABC received no complaints about the interview itself but more than a hundred about the decision to remove it. We see no reason why the interview cannot be reposted online perhaps with an editor's note to address any errors or shortcomings and allow audiences to make up their own minds.

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