
UAE aid convoy enters Gaza carrying 1,039 tonnes as part of Operation Chivalrous Knight 3
5 June 2025 13:50
GAZA (WAM) The United Arab Emirates has announced the entry of a new humanitarian aid convoy into Gaza as part of Operation Chivalrous Knight 3, continuing its efforts to support displaced Palestinians and alleviate the worsening humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip.The convoy included trucks carrying 1,039 tonnes of food supplies and flour, addressing urgent needs for approximately 1.3 million beneficiaries.This latest delivery is part of the UAE's ongoing support for the people of Gaza, who are enduring dire humanitarian conditions amid severe shortages of essential food items. Operation Chivalrous Knight 3 ensures the continuous and wide-scale flow of aid through all available channels.Despite humanitarian challenges, the UAE continues to deliver food assistance to Gaza. Through the operation, it has been supporting 31 bakeries to help ensure the steady supply of bread and basic foodstuffs for displaced families facing deepening hardship.
Operation Chivalrous Knight 3 reaffirmed that the sustained delivery of UAE aid to Gaza, under the current difficult circumstances, reflects the UAE's longstanding and unwavering commitment to supporting the Palestinian people.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Middle East Eye
an hour ago
- Middle East Eye
Ex-CIA officer running Gaza aid security advised Boston Consulting Group
Former CIA paramilitary officer Phil Reilly, who heads a private military company that is guarding Israel's newly set up food distribution sites in Gaza, was a senior advisor at the US consultancy that is the latest partner to withdraw from the controversial aid project. The Boston Consulting Group admitted last week that it was involved in developing the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), but has since halted its involvement and distanced itself as 110 Palestinians have been killed and 583 wounded trying to access aid during GHF's 10 days of operations, according to government sources. But Reilly's role with BCG, which ended only six months ago, raises questions about whether the consultancy was also involved in developing the security side of the aid operation. Questions about the firm's role come as BCG announced on Thursday that it had fired two partners for 'unauthorised work' in relation to GHF. BCG said the partners 'failed to disclose the full nature of the work during the client acceptance process' and carried out subsequent unauthorised work in violation of company policies and protocols. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters The firm said the subsequent work had "lacked visible multi-lateral support" and that it has engaged outside counsel to investigate its involvement in the project. 'We deeply regret that in this situation we did not live up to our standards. We are committed to taking all necessary steps to address the issues identified in the ongoing investigation,' the company said. MEE asked BCG on Friday whether the firm was involved in the security operations to support GHF, what role it had played with the foundation and who had asked the firm to get involved initially. BCG directed MEE to its statement from Thursday which did not answer the questions. Consulting on Gaza A 29-year veteran of the CIA, Reilly served as a senior advisor at BCG for eight years starting in January 2017, just as US President Donald Trump's first term started, according to his LinkedIn account. It was early last year, while still holding his advisory role, that Reilly reportedly first began discussing Gaza aid with Israeli civilians in early 2024. Later in 2024, he worked on a study for Orbis, another US consultancy, which reportedly outlined a plan to outsource food aid delivery to private companies and foundations, the NYT reported. Reilly's advisory role with BCG ended in December, a month after Safe Reach Solutions (SRS), the private military company now operating in Gaza, was registered in Wyoming, a known US tax haven. Mercenary firm set to oversee Gaza aid for Israel goes on LinkedIn hiring spree Read More » Public records show that SRS's registered agent, as first reported by All-Source Intelligence, is the Wyoming-based wealth management fund, Two Oceans Trust LLC. But the public records fail to reveal many more details about SRS, including its funders. It was reported this week that McNally Capital, a Chicago-based private equity firm, has an "economic interest" in SRS, although the scale of the interest remains unclear. The lack of clarity about funding is also true of GHF which is registered with scant few other details in Delaware, another notorious US tax haven. SRS is understood to be the main company currently securing the food distribution sites that are part of Israeli and American moves to take control of aid distribution in the enclave, which have been beset by controversy. The UN and international aid agencies have sounded the alarm for weeks over concerns that the plans which have unfolded at pace failed to meet humanitarian principles and would encourage forced displacement of Palestinians. Hours before GHF was to start distributing aid in Gaza late last month, executive director Jake Wood resigned over concerns that it was impossible for the organisation to operate independently or adhere to strict humanitarian principles. Wood was replaced this week by Johnnie Moore, an evangelical leader who has advised Trump on interfaith issues. Moore has denied reports that Palestinians were killed and injured while seeking aid at GHF's sites in Gaza and said he was demanding results "with Silicon Valley precision".


Middle East Eye
an hour ago
- Middle East Eye
Israeli strikes kill dozens of Palestinians on Eid day
As millions of Muslims celebrated Eid al-Adha on Friday, Israeli air strikes killed at least 34 Palestinians across the Gaza Strip, according to media reports. Among the dead were children and at least eight people shot by Israeli soldiers while attempting to collect aid at a US-run distribution centre in Rafah, the Gaza-based government media office said. The strikes came while severe hunger continues to threaten Gaza's 2.2 million residents, with aid distribution centres established by the US and Israel-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) remaining closed for a third consecutive day. Despite the closures, the GHF told Reuters via email that it delivered essential supplies on Friday, contradicting an earlier Facebook post stating that distribution points were not operating. The suspension of the GHF's aid distribution system comes after more than 100 Palestinians were gunned down near its sites over eight days. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Earlier this week, eyewitnesses and local officials told Middle East Eye that Israeli troops opened fire directly on civilians, with many of the fatalities receiving gunshot wounds to their head or chest. Meanwhile, Israeli army's Arabic-speaking spokesperson Avichay Adraee said in a post on X that the area near distribution centers was a "closed military zone" and movement there was not permitted outside the period between 6am and 6pm. Rising journalist death toll Meanwhile, the number of journalists who have been killed in Gaza since 7 October has risen to 226 following the death of journalist Ahmed Qaljah, the media office reported. Israel has already lost the Gaza war. It just doesn't know it yet Read More » Qaljah, who worked for Al-Arabiya TV, succumbed to wounds sustained during Israeli attacks targeting a group of media workers in Gaza City's al-Ahli Arab hospital's courtyard on Thursday. The Israeli attack killed three other reporters, including correspondent Suleiman Hajjaj and photographer Ismail Badah, who both worked for Palestine Today TV, alongside photographer Samir al-Rifai, who worked for the Shams News Agency. Reporters told MEE that Israeli warplanes targeted the hospital's courtyards as journalists were covering the events on the ground. The media office condemned the Israeli "targeting, killing, and assassination of Palestinian journalists" in the "strongest terms". In a statement, the office called on international journalism bodies and organisations to condemn the Israeli assault and take action to protect media personnel amid the ongoing war in Gaza. Israeli soldiers ambushed Meanwhile, Hamas reportedly killed and wounded Israeli soldiers in a number of ambushes in Khan Younis and northern Gaza on Friday. The Israeli military admitted to the death of four soldiers and wounding of five others in a Khan Younis explosion that caused a building to collapse on Israei troops. The killed soldiers were members of elite units. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said it was a 'sad and difficult day'. There was no immediate comment from Hamas. The Friday ambushes are the latest in a series of Hamas attacks targeting Israeli troops in Gaza in recent days. At least eight soldiers have been killed in less than a week. Amid the fighting, Adraee announced more expulsion orders for civilians in north Gaza to head west, threatening to attack the areas and describing it as a "dangerous combat zones".


Middle East Eye
2 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
French woman files complaint against Israel over killing of grandchildren in Gaza
A grandmother has filed a complaint for murder and genocide against Israeli authorities, accusing them of responsibility for killing her two Palestinian-French grandchildren in Gaza. Israeli forces killed six-year-old Abderrahim Abudaher and nine-year-old Janna Abudaher in northern Gaza on 24 October 2023. Their maternal grandmother, Jacqueline Rivault - a French national living in France - filed the complaint on Friday in Paris alongside the Ligue des Droits de l'Homme (LDH). The filing, submitted to the crimes against humanity unit of the Paris judicial court, accuses Israeli authorities of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide. This is the first complaint brought before the French courts based on the passive personality principle - that is, based on the victims' French nationality - to address the issue of responsibility for these crimes, the LDH said. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters This civil action complaint seeks the appointment of an investigating judge. The victims' French nationality could trigger the direct jurisdiction of the French courts and lead them to rule on these accusations of "genocide". "This complaint aims to contribute to preventing and prosecuting those responsible, whether soldiers or politicians, for the ongoing genocide in the Gaza Strip, which indiscriminately affects the entire civilian population of the enclave," the LDH said. According to the 43-page complaint, which has been shared with Middle East Eye, the "extreme violence" and "regular bombardments" by the Israeli army on Gaza after 7 October led the family to take refuge in a house in the northern Gaza Strip, between Fallujah and Beit Lahia. There, the house was targeted by "two F16 missiles fired by the Israeli army," one of which hit "through the roof and the second directly into the bedroom where the family was staying". First Gaza genocide cases against French nationals filed in Paris Read More » Abderrahim died "instantly" and Janna shortly after being transferred to the hospital, according to the complaint. Their younger brother, Omar, was seriously wounded but still lives in Gaza, as does his mother, Yasmine Z. The complaint accuses the Israeli authorities of genocide because the bombing is presented as part of a plan to "eliminate the Palestinian population and subject them to conditions of existence likely to bring about the destruction of their group". Though it is filed against unknown persons, it specifically names Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, members of the Israeli government and the Israeli army. The complaint notes that the intention to eradicate the Palestinian people was evident from the statements made by political and military leaders, in particular Netanyahu. The aim of the complaint, explained Rivault's lawyer Arie Alimi, is to ensure the arrest of those responsible. "Those who were involved, in one way or another, in acts that could be classified as crimes against humanity or genocide, must know that upon leaving Israel's borders, they can be arrested anywhere," he said. Rivault's only daughter, Yasmine, had gone to Gaza to do humanitarian work. It was there that she met her husband. Her mother said the French government "should have evacuated the French nationals living in the Gaza Strip". The 'weapon' of criminal law The LDH said The complaint is intended to have a political impact and is one of many efforts aimed at bringing "these crimes" to an end as soon as possible. Its president, Nathalie Tehio, qualified criminal law as 'a weapon that allows us to try to stop this infernal mechanism of genocide that we are witnessing." The LDH is part of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), which was among the first groups to to declare that Israel was committing genocide, followed by Amnesty International a year later and Human Rights Watch. In January 2024, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) called on Israel to prevent any act of genocide. The Hind Rajab Foundation: Pursuing Israeli soldiers worldwide for Gaza war crimes Read More » Since then, a number of legal actions have been taken in connection with "genocide" accusations against Israel, for example in Switzerland, the Netherlands and Germany. In France, three complaints have been filed in recent months against French-Israeli nationals accused of genocide or complicity. Last December, the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), along with three Palestinian organisations, filed a complaint against French-Israeli soldier Yoel O. He is accused of posting a video on social media showing detained Palestinians in white jumpsuits, blindfolded and handcuffed - one of whom appears to show visible signs of torture. The man behind the camera can be heard insulting the detainees in French. No judicial investigation has been opened in France to date. On Friday, the French National Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor's Office opened a judicial investigation into French-Israelis suspected of involvement in blocking humanitarian aid to Gaza between January and May 2024. The probe includes charges of complicity in genocide, incitement to genocide, and complicity in crimes against humanity, AFP reported, citing a source close to the case. The investigation follows a complaint filed in November 2024 by the French Jewish Union for Peace (UJFP) and a French-Palestinian victim. The complaint accuses individuals of organising and participating in actions to block humanitarian aid to Gaza - specifically by physically obstructing aid trucks at Israeli-controlled border crossings. The civil action names figures reportedly with French nationality from two pro-Israel groups, Israel is Forever and Tzav-9.