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Gaza aid centres close and ‘are considered combat zones' after Israel fire killed 27

Gaza aid centres close and ‘are considered combat zones' after Israel fire killed 27

News244 days ago

Aid centres in Gaza will be closed on Wednesday.
The Israeli military is investigating the deaths of 27 people at an aid centre.
The UN Security Council will vote on a resolution calling for a ceasefire and humanitarian access to Gaza.
Aid centres in hunger-wracked Gaza will temporarily close on Wednesday, a controversial US-backed agency said, with the Israeli army warning roads leading to distribution stations 'are considered combat zones'.
Twenty-seven people were killed in southern Gaza on Tuesday when Israeli troops opened fire near one of the centres operated by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).
Israel recently eased its blockade of the Palestinian enclave, but the UN has said the entire population remains at risk of famine.
The UN Security Council will vote Wednesday on a resolution calling for a ceasefire and humanitarian access to Gaza, a measure expected to be vetoed by the US.
The GHF said its 'distribution centres will be closed for renovation, reorganisation and efficiency improvement work' on Wednesday and would resume operations on Thursday.
READ | Israel kills at least 27 Palestinians near Gaza aid site in third day of chaos
The Israeli army, which confirmed the temporary closure, warned against travelling 'on roads leading to the distribution centres, which are considered combat zones'.
The GHF, officially a private effort with opaque funding, began operations a week ago but the UN and major aid groups have refused to cooperate with it over concerns it was designed to cater to Israeli military objectives.
AFP
Following Tuesday's deadly incident near one of GHF's centres, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres decried the killing of Palestinians seeking food aid as 'unacceptable'.
Israeli authorities and the GHF - which uses contracted US security - have denied allegations that the Israeli army shot at civilians rushing to pick up aid packages at GHF sites.
The Israeli army has said the incident is under investigation.
At a hospital in southern Gaza, family members of Reem al-Akhras, who was killed in the shooting at Rafah's Al-Alam roundabout near GHF's facility, were beside themselves with grief.
'She went to bring us some food, and this is what happened to her,' her son Zain Zidan said, his face streaked with tears.
Akhras's husband, Mohamed Zidan, said 'every day unarmed people' were being killed.
This is not humanitarian aid - it's a trap.
Mohamed Zidan
The Israeli military maintains that its forces do not prevent Gazans from collecting aid.
Army spokesperson Effie Defrin said the Israeli soldiers had fired toward suspects who 'were approaching in a way that endangered' the troops, adding that the 'incident is being investigated'.
UN human rights chief Volker Turk called such attacks against civilians 'unconscionable' and said they 'constitute a grave breach of international law and a war crime'.
The International Committee of the Red Cross meanwhile said Gazans face an 'unprecedented scale and frequency of recent mass casualty incidents'.
Eyad Baba/AFP
The US said on Tuesday that a US-backed relief effort in Gaza was succeeding in distributing meals but acknowledged the potential for improvement after the reports of shootings near the GHF centre.
A boat organised by an international activist coalition was meanwhile sailing toward Gaza, aiming to deliver aid.
The boat from the Freedom Flotilla Coalition departed Sicily Sunday carrying a dozen people, including environmental activist Greta Thunberg, along with fruit juices, milk, tinned food and protein bars.
'Together, we can open a people's sea corridor to Gaza,' the coalition said.
But Israel's military said on Tuesday it was ready to 'protect' the country's maritime space.
Saeed Jaras/Middle East Images via AFP
When asked about the Freedom Flotilla vessel, army spokesperson Defrin said 'for this case as well, we are prepared', declining to go into detail.
Israel has stepped up its offensive in what it says is a renewed push to defeat the Palestinian group Hamas, whose October 2023 attack sparked the war.
The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said at least 4 240 people have been killed since Israel resumed its offensive on 18 March, taking the war's overall toll to 54 510, mostly civilians.
Hamas' 2023 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1 218 people, also mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.
Apart from the aid centre incident, the civil defence agency reported 19 killed on Tuesday.
The army said three of its soldiers had been killed in northern Gaza, bringing the number of Israeli troops killed in the territory since the start of the war to 424.

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