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Israeli strikes kill at least 34 people in Gaza, a day after aid restrictions are eased

Israeli strikes kill at least 34 people in Gaza, a day after aid restrictions are eased

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip: Israeli strikes killed at least 34 Palestinians in multiple locations across Gaza on Monday, local health officials said, a day after Israel eased aid restrictions in the face of a worsening humanitarian crisis in the territory.
Israel announced Sunday that the military would pause operations in Gaza City, Deir al-Balah and Muwasi for 10 hours a day until further notice to allow for the improved flow of aid to Palestinians in Gaza, where concern over hunger has grown, and designate secure routes for aid delivery.
Israel said it would continue military operations alongside the new humanitarian measures. The Israeli military had no immediate comment about the latest strikes, which occurred outside the time frame for the pause Israel declared would be held between 10 a.m. and 8 p.m.
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Reality of Gaza hunger games explained as starvation kills scores
Reality of Gaza hunger games explained as starvation kills scores

India Today

time12 hours ago

  • India Today

Reality of Gaza hunger games explained as starvation kills scores

Gaza is in the grip of famine. Children reach hospitals wasting away before the eyes of their parents, bodies thinning to near invisibility, like figures evaporating into the air. Tiny ribs protrude, limbs dangle helplessly, faces once full of life now blank and hollow as hunger settles in. At the same time, a video has emerged of 24-year-old Israeli hostage Evyatar David, hollow-eyed and frail, forced to dig what he said was his own grave. These parallel images expose a war where hunger seems to have been July, starvation claimed more than 60 lives, including children under 5, while hundreds were shot at as they rushed toward food trucks in search of the next morsel. Parents are braving bullets to get some food for their starving Israel has stated that Hamas, which steals aid supplies, is to blame for the mass starvation. Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu said, "Hamas monsters starve the hostages like the Nazis starved the Jews. Hamas doesn't want a deal. They want to break us."In Gaza, the hunger crisis drives people to hospitals in search of relief, yet even the doctors treating them are themselves fighting to survive. Journalists have spoken about famine eating into their colleagues reporting from Gaza."There is no one in Gaza now outside the scope of famine, not even myself," Dr Ahmed al-Farra told The New York Times, who is the head of the paediatric ward at Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza. "I am speaking to you as a health official, but I, too, am searching for flour to feed my family."ONE-THIRD OF GAZA POPULATION STARVING FOR DAYS: UN BODYThe World Food Program, an arm of the United Nations, stated this week that the hunger crisis in Gaza had reached "new and astonishing levels of desperation, with a third of the population not eating for multiple days in a row".All through the war, UN agencies and independent aid groups have charged that Israel is letting far too little food into Gaza, warning that famine looms over its two million in turn, has insisted that sufficient supplies are entering, accusing Hamas of diverting aid and faulting international groups for poor is a war beyond bombs and bullets. Even journalists reporting on the war find their bodies testifying to the extremities of sides have embraced one of the oldest cruelties in war: starvation. From Caesar at Alesia to the Mongols at Baghdad, from mediaeval sieges to the blockades of the World Wars, armies have long used hunger to break their STARVATION NOW BECOMING THE NEW NORMAL FOR GAZA?Today, starvation is slowly becoming World Health Organisation has confirmed 74 deaths from malnutrition in 2025, with 63 of them in July alone, including at least 24 children under in Gaza's remaining hospitals say most patients arrive skeletal, unresponsive, often too weak to be saved. UNICEF and Save the Children report that cases of acute malnutrition in children have surged than 5,000 children were admitted for treatment in the first two weeks of July, nearly matching the total for the whole of even those who try to find food often never late May and late July, UN officials confirmed over 1,050 Palestinians were killed while trying to collect aid, 766 at Gaza Humanitarian Foundation sites and 288 near UN or partner described tanks, drones, and snipers opening fire on hungry crowds before dawn, turning food lines into killing grounds. As starvation increases in Gaza, UN officials say over 1,000 Palestinians have been killed since May while trying to collect food. (Image: AP) ISRAELIS AT 'DEATH'S DOOR' AND 'CAN'T LIVE OR BREATHE'On the other hand, families of Israelis held hostage by Hamas speak of the same weapon used against their loved of freed hostages say many lost as much as 15 kilos during captivity, surviving on scraps of bread or videos showed men like Evyatar David and Rom Braslavski visibly emaciated, begging for food and water, describing deliberate David, a 24-year-old Israeli, was kidnapped during the October 7 Nova music festival attack and has since been held in Gaza by Hamas recent videos released by Hamas, he appears emaciated, ribs visible, describing days without food and surviving on little more than beans and one point, he is shown digging what he called his own grave, marking starvation on a wall calendar as his body wastes hostage, Rom Braslavski's family, also allowed the publication of one such video released by the Palestinian Islamic it, he appears in tears, saying he is "suffering with pain that doesn't look good", and that he can no longer stand or walk."I don't have any more food or water. Before, they would give me a little bit, (but) today, there is nothing," he said, describing how he ate "three crumbs of falafel" that day, and a day earlier "barely a plate of rice"."I can't sleep, I can't live, you have to stop what you're doing here," he pleaded. "I am at death's door, and I'm sure that all the other [hostages] are in the same mental state," he INTERNATIONAL FOOD AID REALLY REACHING GAZA?International aid agencies now say Gaza needs at least 62,000 metric tonnes of dry and canned food each month, around one kilogram per person per day, just to meet minimum requirements. Yet what has been delivered falls far short, they officials, however, have alternated between denying mass starvation, blaming Hamas distribution failures, and pointing to chaotic food drops by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation as proof food was study even claimed that after adjusting for losses, each Gazan had access to an average of 3,000 calories a day with sufficient protein and fat, even exceeding WHO minimum requirements, except for these figures collapse against the reality on the ground. Gaza spent March and April under total siege, with no food allowed May, Netanyahu agreed to restart shipments after international pressure over a "starvation crisis". Yet the quantities that trickled through were only enough to slow famine, not prevent UN's own data shows that just a few weeks of expanded food shipments during a ceasefire in January and February briefly pulled Gaza back from the brink. But as the flow dried again in May and June, starvation surged back with a is the way out? No one can here is not an accident of war. It's a chosen weapon, a cruelty refined over time. It echoes the Stanford Prison Experiment, where ordinary people, placed in positions of unchecked authority, quickly abandoned empathy and inflicted suffering as if it were more people died from hunger in the Palestinian territory, bringing the total deaths to 175, Reuters reported on July 3, quoting the Gaza health report came even as celebrated Israeli writer David Grossman was shocked at the situation and termed it "genocide" by has become that experiment on a vast, merciless stage: food withheld, bodies wasted, humans stripped away. And the longer it endures, the easier it becomes to forget that those reduced to shadows are human beings at all. Who is to blame? Everyone. Even those who are accomplices with their silence.- EndsMust Watch

Israeli forces kills 27 aid-seekers in Gaza as Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site
Israeli forces kills 27 aid-seekers in Gaza as Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site

Economic Times

timea day ago

  • Economic Times

Israeli forces kills 27 aid-seekers in Gaza as Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site

Synopsis In Gaza, Israeli forces killed at least twenty-three Palestinians seeking food. Hospital officials and witnesses reported the incident. Malnutrition-related deaths are also rising in the region. Elsewhere, Israeli minister Itamar Ben-Gvir prayed at a sensitive holy site in Jerusalem. The Palestinian Red Crescent reported that Israeli military attacked its headquarters in Khan Younis. AP Families of hostages protest, demanding the release from Hamas captivity in the Gaza Strip, at the plaza known as the hostages square in Tel Aviv, Israel, Saturday, Aug. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit) Israeli forces killed at least 23 Palestinians seeking food on Sunday in Gaza, according to hospital officials and witnesses, who described facing gunfire as hungry crowds surged around aid sites, as the malnutrition-related death toll also rose. Desperation has gripped the Palestinian territory of more than 2 million, which experts have warned is facing famine because of Israel's blockade and nearly two-year offensive. Yousef Abed, among the crowds en route to a distribution point, described coming under what he called indiscriminate fire, seeing at least three people bleeding on the ground. "I couldn't stop and help them because of the bullets," he said. Southern Gaza's Nasser Hospital said they received bodies from routes to the sites, including eight from Teina, about three kilometers (1.8 miles) away from a distribution site in Khan Younis, which is operated by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the private U.S.- and Israeli-backed contractor that took over aid distribution more than two months ago. The hospital received one body from Shakoush, hundreds of meters (yards) north of a GHF site in Rafah. Another nine aid-seekers were killed by troops near the Morag corridor, it said. Three Palestinian eyewitnesses, seeking food in Teina and Morag, told The Associated Press shootings occurred on the routes to distribution points, which are in military zones secured by Israeli forces. They said they saw soldiers open fire on hungry crowds advancing toward troops. Further north in central Gaza, hospital officials described a similar episode, with Israeli troops opening fire Sunday morning toward crowds of Palestinians trying to reach GHF's fourth and northernmost distribution point. "Troops were trying to prevent people from advancing. They opened fire and we fled. Some people were shot," said Hamza Matter, one of the aid seekers. At least five people were killed and 27 wounded near GHF's site close to Netzarim corridor, Awda Hospital said. Eyewitnesses seeking food have reported similar gunfire attacks in recent days near aid distribution sites, leaving dozens of Palestinians dead. The United Nations reported 859 people were killed near GHF sites from May 27 to July 31 and that hundreds more have been slain along the routes of U.N.-led food convoys. The GHF launched in May as Israel sought an alternative to the U.N.-run system, which had safely delivered aid for much of the war but was accused by Israel of allowing Hamas, which guarded convoys early in the war, to siphon supplies. Israel has not offered evidence of widespread theft. The U.N. has denied it. GHF says its armed contractors have only used pepper spray or fired warning shots to prevent deadly crowding. Israel's military has said it only fires warning shots as well. Both claimed the death tolls have been exaggerated Israel's military did immediately responded to questions about Sunday's reported fatalities. GHF's Media Office said there was no gunfire "near or at our sites." Meanwhile, the Gaza health ministry said six more Palestinian adults died of malnutrition-related causes over the past 24 hours. It said Sunday's casualties brought the death toll among Palestinian adults to 82 over the five weeks since the ministry started counting deaths among adults in late June. Malnutrition-related deaths are not included in the ministry's count of war casualties. Ninety-three children have also died of causes related to malnutrition since the war in Gaza started in 2023, the ministry said. Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site Israel's far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir prayed at Jerusalem's most sensitive holy site, a move swiftly condemned as a incitement by Palestinian leaders as well as Jordan and Saudi Arabia. At the hilltop compound in the Old City revered by Jews and Muslims, Ben Gvir called on Israel to annex the Gaza Strip and encourage Palestinians to leave. "This is the only way that we will return the hostages and win the war," he said. His visit on Sunday in honor of Tisha B'av, a day in which Jews mourn the destruction of two Jewish temples at the site, was the first in which a government minister openly prayed at the site. Under the status quo, Jews have been allowed to tour the site but are barred from praying, with Israeli police and troops providing security. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said afterward that Israel would not change the norms governing the holy site. Nabil Abu Rudeineh, spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, condemned Ben Gvir's visit. Ambassador Sufian Qudah, a spokesperson for Jordan's Foreign Ministry, condemned what he called "provocative incursions by the extremist minister" and implored Israel to prevent escalation. Ben Gvir's visit took place on Tisha B'av, a day in which Jews mourn the destruction of their temples. He condemned a video that Hamas released of 24-year-old hostage Evyatar David showing him emaciated in a dimly lit tunnel in Gaza. Hamas and Islamic Jihad, the second-largest militant group in Gaza, triggered outrage when they released separate videos of individual hostages this week. Israeli media hasn't broadcast the videos, calling them propaganda, but Netanyahu met with the hostage families on Saturday, pledging further efforts to return them to Israel. Red Crescent Facility Shelled The Palestinian Red Crescent said the Israeli military attacked its headquarters in the southern city of Khan Younis early Sunday, killing a staffer and wounding three others. The overnight strike wrecked the organization's multi-story building, leaving its offices full of broken concrete and blood, with gaping holes in the walls and floors, according to video released by the organization. Red Crescent said the military shelled its Khan Younis facility three times between around 1 a.m. local time. Elsewhere in Khan Younis, an Israeli strike hit a school sheltering displaced people, killing at least two, Nasser hospital said. Israel's military did not immediately respond to questions about either strike. The war began when Hamas attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing about 1,200 people, and abducting another 251. They are still holding 50 captives, around 20 believed to be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefires or other deals. Israel's retaliatory military offensive has killed more than 60,400 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. The ministry, which doesn't distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count, is staffed by medical professionals. The United Nations and other independent experts view its figures as the most reliable count of casualties. Israel has disputed its figures, but hasn't provided its own account of casualties.

Israeli forces kills 27 aid-seekers in Gaza as Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site
Israeli forces kills 27 aid-seekers in Gaza as Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site

Time of India

timea day ago

  • Time of India

Israeli forces kills 27 aid-seekers in Gaza as Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site

Israeli forces killed at least 23 Palestinians seeking food on Sunday in Gaza , according to hospital officials and witnesses, who described facing gunfire as hungry crowds surged around aid sites, as the malnutrition-related death toll also rose. Desperation has gripped the Palestinian territory of more than 2 million, which experts have warned is facing famine because of Israel 's blockade and nearly two-year offensive. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Please select course: Select a Course Category healthcare Healthcare Others Operations Management CXO Management MBA Project Management MCA Digital Marketing Data Analytics Finance PGDM Technology Artificial Intelligence Design Thinking Leadership Public Policy Data Science others Data Science Degree Product Management Cybersecurity Skills you'll gain: Duration: 11 Months IIM Lucknow CERT-IIML Healthcare Management India Starts on undefined Get Details Yousef Abed, among the crowds en route to a distribution point, described coming under what he called indiscriminate fire, seeing at least three people bleeding on the ground. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like When the Camera Clicked at the Worst Possible Time Read More Undo "I couldn't stop and help them because of the bullets," he said. Southern Gaza's Nasser Hospital said they received bodies from routes to the sites, including eight from Teina, about three kilometers (1.8 miles) away from a distribution site in Khan Younis, which is operated by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the private U.S.- and Israeli-backed contractor that took over aid distribution more than two months ago. Live Events The hospital received one body from Shakoush, hundreds of meters (yards) north of a GHF site in Rafah. Another nine aid-seekers were killed by troops near the Morag corridor, it said. Three Palestinian eyewitnesses, seeking food in Teina and Morag, told The Associated Press shootings occurred on the routes to distribution points, which are in military zones secured by Israeli forces. They said they saw soldiers open fire on hungry crowds advancing toward troops. Further north in central Gaza, hospital officials described a similar episode, with Israeli troops opening fire Sunday morning toward crowds of Palestinians trying to reach GHF's fourth and northernmost distribution point. "Troops were trying to prevent people from advancing. They opened fire and we fled. Some people were shot," said Hamza Matter, one of the aid seekers. At least five people were killed and 27 wounded near GHF's site close to Netzarim corridor, Awda Hospital said. Eyewitnesses seeking food have reported similar gunfire attacks in recent days near aid distribution sites, leaving dozens of Palestinians dead. The United Nations reported 859 people were killed near GHF sites from May 27 to July 31 and that hundreds more have been slain along the routes of U.N.-led food convoys. The GHF launched in May as Israel sought an alternative to the U.N.-run system, which had safely delivered aid for much of the war but was accused by Israel of allowing Hamas, which guarded convoys early in the war, to siphon supplies. Israel has not offered evidence of widespread theft. The U.N. has denied it. GHF says its armed contractors have only used pepper spray or fired warning shots to prevent deadly crowding. Israel's military has said it only fires warning shots as well. Both claimed the death tolls have been exaggerated Israel's military did immediately responded to questions about Sunday's reported fatalities. GHF's Media Office said there was no gunfire "near or at our sites." Meanwhile, the Gaza health ministry said six more Palestinian adults died of malnutrition-related causes over the past 24 hours. It said Sunday's casualties brought the death toll among Palestinian adults to 82 over the five weeks since the ministry started counting deaths among adults in late June. Malnutrition-related deaths are not included in the ministry's count of war casualties. Ninety-three children have also died of causes related to malnutrition since the war in Gaza started in 2023, the ministry said. Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site Israel's far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir prayed at Jerusalem's most sensitive holy site, a move swiftly condemned as a incitement by Palestinian leaders as well as Jordan and Saudi Arabia. At the hilltop compound in the Old City revered by Jews and Muslims, Ben Gvir called on Israel to annex the Gaza Strip and encourage Palestinians to leave. "This is the only way that we will return the hostages and win the war," he said. His visit on Sunday in honor of Tisha B'av, a day in which Jews mourn the destruction of two Jewish temples at the site, was the first in which a government minister openly prayed at the site. Under the status quo, Jews have been allowed to tour the site but are barred from praying, with Israeli police and troops providing security. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said afterward that Israel would not change the norms governing the holy site. Nabil Abu Rudeineh, spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, condemned Ben Gvir's visit. Ambassador Sufian Qudah, a spokesperson for Jordan's Foreign Ministry, condemned what he called "provocative incursions by the extremist minister" and implored Israel to prevent escalation. Ben Gvir's visit took place on Tisha B'av, a day in which Jews mourn the destruction of their temples. He condemned a video that Hamas released of 24-year-old hostage Evyatar David showing him emaciated in a dimly lit tunnel in Gaza. Hamas and Islamic Jihad, the second-largest militant group in Gaza, triggered outrage when they released separate videos of individual hostages this week. Israeli media hasn't broadcast the videos, calling them propaganda, but Netanyahu met with the hostage families on Saturday, pledging further efforts to return them to Israel. Red Crescent Facility Shelled The Palestinian Red Crescent said the Israeli military attacked its headquarters in the southern city of Khan Younis early Sunday, killing a staffer and wounding three others. The overnight strike wrecked the organization's multi-story building, leaving its offices full of broken concrete and blood, with gaping holes in the walls and floors, according to video released by the organization. Red Crescent said the military shelled its Khan Younis facility three times between around 1 a.m. local time. Elsewhere in Khan Younis, an Israeli strike hit a school sheltering displaced people, killing at least two, Nasser hospital said. Israel's military did not immediately respond to questions about either strike. The war began when Hamas attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing about 1,200 people, and abducting another 251. They are still holding 50 captives, around 20 believed to be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefires or other deals. Israel's retaliatory military offensive has killed more than 60,400 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. The ministry, which doesn't distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count, is staffed by medical professionals. The United Nations and other independent experts view its figures as the most reliable count of casualties. Israel has disputed its figures, but hasn't provided its own account of casualties.

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