
Gaza live: Israel hits out at UK, France and Canada after Hamas comments
While warehouses run by the UN agency for Palestinian refugees sit empty in Gaza, the opposite is true across the border.
Louise Wateridge, a senior aid worker at UNRWA, says there's enough medical care in the warehouse she's at in Jordan to keep all the agency's nine health centres and 38 medical points in Gaza functioning.
Addressing a briefing on the situation in Gaza from Amman, she says there's enough food piled up that can feed 200,000 people for a month, with enough hygiene kits for 200,000 families and learning supplies for 375,000 children.
"The situation is absurd," she says. "It's appalling, and to be quite frank, it's unforgivable.
"All of these supplies that are around me are literally three hours away from the Gaza Strip. They could be there this afternoon."
Benjamin Netanyahu agreed to allow a limited amount of aid into Gaza yesterday after an 11-week blockade in response to global concern at reports of famine.
Five trucks of aid entered into Gaza yesterday, but the UN's humanitarian chief described this as a "drop in the ocean" and totally inadequate for the population's needs (see 9.27am post).
"There is absolutely no time to waste," Wateridge adds. "It has been 11 weeks of siege on the Gaza Strip.
"It's a deficit. Anything we provide now is trying to undo damage that's already done. For many, it is too late."
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NBC News
2 hours ago
- NBC News
36 Palestinians killed trying to obtain desperately needed aid in Gaza, officials say
DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip — Palestinians desperately trying to access aid in Gaza came under fire again Tuesday, killing 36 people and wounding 207, the Palestinian Health Ministry said. Experts and humanitarian aid workers say Israel's blockade and 20-month military campaign have pushed Gaza to the brink of famine. At least 163 people have been killed and 1,495 wounded in a number of shootings near aid sites run by the Israeli and U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which are in military zones that are off-limits to independent media. The Israeli military has acknowledged firing warning shots on previous occasions at people who it says approached its forces in a suspicious manner. The foundation says there has been no violence in or around the distribution points themselves. But it has warned people to stay on designated access routes and it paused delivery last week while it held talks with the military on improving safety. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday that there is 'meaningful progress' on a possible ceasefire deal that would also return some of the 55 hostages still being held in Gaza, but said it was 'too early to hope.' Foreign Minister Gideon Saar also mentioned Tuesday that there was progress in ceasefire negotiations. Netanyahu was meeting with the Israeli negotiating team and the defense minister Tuesday evening to discuss next steps. In southern Gaza, at least eight people were killed while trying to obtain aid around Rafah, according to Nasser Hospital. In northern Gaza, two men and a child were killed and at least 130 were wounded on Tuesday, according to Nader Garghoun, a spokesperson for al-Awda Hospital, which received the casualties. He said most were being treated for gunshot wounds. Witnesses told The Associated Press that Israeli forces opened fire around 2 a.m. (7 p.m. Monday ET), several hundred yards from the aid site in central Gaza. Crowds of Palestinians seeking desperately needed food often head to the sites hours before dawn, hoping to beat the crowds. The Israeli military said it fired warning shots at people it referred to as suspects. It said they had advanced toward its troops hundreds of yards from the aid site prior to its opening hours. Mohammed Abu Hussein, a resident of the nearby built-up Bureij refugee camp, said Israeli drones and tanks opened fire, and that he saw five people wounded by gunshots. Abed Haniyah, another witness, said Israeli forces opened fire 'indiscriminately' as thousands of people were attempting to reach the food site. 'What happens every day is humiliation,' he said. 'Every day, people are killed just trying to get food for their children.' Additionally, three Palestinian medics were killed in an Israeli strike Tuesday in Gaza City, according to the health ministry. The medics from the health ministry's emergency service were responding to an Israeli attack on a house in Jaffa street in Gaza City when a second strike hit the building, the ministry said. The Israeli military did not comment on the strike, but said over the past day the air force has hit dozens of targets belonging to Hamas' military infrastructure, including rocket launchers. Israel and the United States say they set up the new food distribution system to prevent Hamas from stealing humanitarian aid and using it to finance militant activities. The United Nations, which runs a long-standing system capable of delivering aid to all parts of Gaza, says there is no evidence of any systematic diversion. U.N. agencies and major aid groups have refused to cooperate with the new system, saying it violates humanitarian principles by allowing Israel to decide who receives aid and by forcing Palestinians to relocate to just three currently operational sites. The other two distribution sites are in the now mostly uninhabited southern city of Rafah, which Israel has transformed into a military zone. Israeli forces maintain an outer perimeter around all three hubs, and Palestinians must pass close to them to reach the distribution points. Hamas started the war with its terrorist attack on southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, when Palestinian militants killed around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took 251 others hostage. They still hold 55 hostages, fewer than half of them alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire agreements or other deals. Israel's military campaign has killed nearly 55,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. It says women and children make up most of the dead, but doesn't distinguish between civilians and combatants. Israel says it has killed more than 20,000 militants, without providing evidence.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Israeli strikes kill 35 in Gaza, many near an aid site, medics say
CAIRO, June 11 (Reuters) - Israeli military strikes killed at least 35 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday, most of them at an aid site operated by the U.S-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation in central Gaza, local health officials said. Medical officials at Shifa and Al-Quds Hospitals said at least 25 people were killed as they approached the aid site near the former settlement of Netzarim, and dozens were wounded. Ten other people were killed in other Israeli military strikes in Khan Younis in the south of the enclave, they added. The Israeli military had no immediate comment. On Tuesday, when Gaza health officials said 17 people were killed near another GHF aid site in Rafah in southern Gaza, the army said it fired warning shots to distance "suspects" who were approaching the troops and posed a threat. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Tuesday there had been "significant progress" in efforts to secure the release of the remaining hostages in Gaza, but that it was "too soon" to raise hopes that a deal would be reached. Despite efforts by the United States, Egypt, and Qatar to restore a ceasefire in Gaza, neither Israel nor Hamas has shown willingness to back down on core demands, with each side blaming the other for the failure to reach a deal. Two Hamas sources told Reuters they did not know about any new ceasefire offers. The war erupted after Hamas-led militants took 251 hostages and killed 1,200 people, most of them civilians, in an October 7, 2023, attack, Israel's single deadliest day. Israel's military campaign has since killed nearly 55,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to health authorities in Gaza, and flattened much of the coastal enclave.


Sky News
12 hours ago
- Sky News
Dozens more killed near food distribution centre in Gaza, claims Hamas-run health ministry
Why you can trust Sky News At least 36 people were killed and 208 wounded when Israeli forces fired towards crowds near a food distribution centre in Gaza on Tuesday morning, according to the Hamas-run territory's health ministry. Footage supplied to Sky News shows people shouting and screaming as they flee explosions in the distance. Dead and wounded people can be seen being carried away from the scene while thick smoke billows into the air. The incident is the latest in a series of reports of Palestinians being killed by Israeli gunfire near one of the distribution centres operated by a new organisation which is permitted by the IDF to hand out aid in the territory. One man seen in the footage says: "We want to live, we want to eat. We have children and wives. We want to live in our homes. Three years of war, bodies ripped apart, all this, for some flour." Humanitarian aid workers and experts have warned Israel's blockade of Gaza and its military campaign has pushed the besieged enclave to the brink of famine. Around 160 people have been killed in shootings near aid sites run by the new Israel and US-backed organisation, the health ministry has said. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which runs the sites, said there has been no violence in or around the distribution centres themselves. However, it has warned people to stay on designated access routes and paused delivery last week while it held talks with Israel's military on improving safety. Israel's military said in a statement its forces fired warning shots at suspects who were advancing and posed a threat to troops "despite warnings that the area is an active combat zone". It said it was aware of reports several people had been injured but its initial inquiry suggests the number "does not align with the information held" by the Israeli military. "The warning shots were fired hundreds of metres from the aid distribution site, prior to its opening hours and toward the suspects who posed a threat to the troops," it said, adding that the details are under review. The government media office of Hamas said: "In a new crime added to the bloody record of the 'Israeli' occupation, the number of victims of the 'Israeli-American aid distribution centres' since Tuesday morning rose to 36 martyrs and more than 208 injuries, bringing the total number of victims of the 'Israeli-American aid distribution centres' to 163 martyrs and 1,495 injuries, all of whom are starving civilians seeking a living under siege and starvation." Israeli government ministers sanctioned It comes as the UK government sanctioned two Israeli government ministers due to their "repeated incitements of violence against Palestinian civilians", the Foreign Office said. The UK imposed sanctions on Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich alongside Australia, Canada, New Zealand and Norway. They are being sanctioned in their personal capacities and are now subject to a freeze on UK assets and director disqualifications, and banned from entering the country. The sanctions were criticised by US secretary of state Marco Rubio who said on X: "These sanctions do not advance US-led efforts to achieve a ceasefire, bring all hostages home, and end the war." 1:28 Earlier in the day Greta Thunberg accused Israel of committing "an illegal act" after the Gaza-bound aid boat she was on was seized by the country's military and she was deported to France.