logo
France offers to help make Gaza food distribution safer

France offers to help make Gaza food distribution safer

PARIS: France 'stands ready, Europe as well, to contribute to the safety of food distribution' in the Palestinian territory of Gaza, Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said Saturday.
His comments came as criticism grew over mounting civilian deaths at Israeli-backed food distribution centres in the territory.
Such an initiative, he added, would also deal with Israeli concerns that armed groups such as Hamas were getting hold of the aid.
Barrot expressed anger over 'the 500 people who have lost their life in food distribution' in Gaza in recent weeks.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyanu on Friday denounced as a 'blood libel' a report in left-leaning daily Haaretz alleging that military commanders had ordered soldiers to fire at Palestinians seeking humanitarian aid in Gaza
Aid group Doctors Without Borders (MSF) on Friday denounced the Israel- and US-backed food distribution effort in Gaza as 'slaughter masquerading as humanitarian aid'.
And UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Friday that hungry people in Gaza seeking food must not face a 'death sentence'.
The health ministry in Gaza, a territory controlled by Hamas, says that since late May, more than 500 people have been killed near aid centres while seeking scarce supplies.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Forces eliminate two Indian-backed terrorists in Balochistan
Forces eliminate two Indian-backed terrorists in Balochistan

Business Recorder

time4 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

Forces eliminate two Indian-backed terrorists in Balochistan

RAWALPINDI: Two Indian-sponsored terrorists were killed and two others arrested in an operation by security forces in Balochistan, the military's media wing said on Sunday. The intelligence-based operation was conducted in Duki district after reports of the presence of terrorists affiliated with 'Fitna-e-Hindustan' (a terror proxy backed by India), according to Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR). ISPR stated that the hideout of the terrorists was effectively targeted. In the ensuing gun battle, two Indian-backed militants were killed, and two were taken into custody. Weapons, ammunition, and explosive materials were also recovered from the slain terrorists, who were reportedly involved in multiple terrorist activities. The military spokesperson affirmed that security forces remain committed to eradicating Indian-sponsored terrorism from the country, and vowed that such terrorists and their facilitators will be brought to justice. Yesterday, as many as 13 Pakistani soldiers embraced martyrdom in a suicide.

Turkish spy chief talks Gaza truce with senior Hamas leader
Turkish spy chief talks Gaza truce with senior Hamas leader

Business Recorder

time4 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

Turkish spy chief talks Gaza truce with senior Hamas leader

ISTANBUL: Turkish intelligence chief Ibrahim Kalin met senior Hamas leaders on Sunday for talks on Gaza's humanitarian tragedy and efforts to reach a ceasefire, state news agency Anadolu reported. Kalin held talks with Mohammad Darwish, head of the political council of Hamas that rules Gaza, and his delegation at an undisclosed location, Anadolu said, citing security sources. They discussed the humanitarian tragedy in Gaza and Turkey's efforts to end the war and 'ensure the immediate passage of aid' to the territory. They also spoke of 'the need to reach a consensus among Palestinian groups during this critical period... (and) the steps to be taken to achieve a permanent ceasefire in Gaza,' the sources said. The meeting came after US President Donald Trump voiced optimism about a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, saying Friday it could happen 'within the next week'. Mediators have engaged in months of negotiations aimed at ending 20 months of war in Gaza, where Israel stopped all food entering over two months ago, leading to warnings of famine. It has since allowed a resumption of food deliveries through the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation involving US security contractors, with Israeli troops at the periphery.

Education in freefall
Education in freefall

Business Recorder

time5 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

Education in freefall

EDITORIAL: With nearly two-thirds of Pakistan's 240 million people under the age of 30, the country stands at a critical crossroads. This vast youth bulge could either serve as a powerful engine for economic growth and innovation or, if inadequately harnessed — as is presently the case — morph into a crisis of widespread under-education, joblessness and mounting pressure on the nation's socioeconomic and political fabric. The way things stand, it increasingly appears that we are on course for the latter. According to a statement issued by Save the Children on June 19, the outgoing fiscal year saw expenditure on education between July 2024 and March 2025 plunge by a shocking 29 percent. This is despite the prime minister's much-publicised declaration of an 'education emergency' in May last year, which now appears to be little more than a hollow slogan against the reality of deepening neglect. Despite numerous education sector reports detailing how a paucity of funds has led to a plethora of issues, ranging from schools lacking essential infrastructure, an alarmingly low student-teacher ratio, the overall substandard quality of instruction and a massive 26 million out-of-school children — around 38 percent of Pakistan's school-age population — this has clearly done little to compel federal and provincial governments to treat this area with the urgency, policy attention and budgetary outlays it deserves. Since 2018, successive governments have consistently deprioritised education, slashing its share of GDP from two percent in 2018 to just 0.8 percent this year, far below the four to six percent recommended by the UN-backed Incheon Declaration. The sharp decline in spending also belies the government's own pledge made last year to raise education funding to four percent of GDP by 2029. Far from inching anywhere close to that target, the first fiscal year since the promise has instead seen a further drop in allocations, exposing a glaring lack of seriousness and political will to follow through on the most basic of educational commitments. As Save the Children warns, the harshest impact of this will fall on children in Pakistan's poorest areas, where already daunting barriers to education have now grown even more insurmountable. The latest Pakistan Education Statistics report, compiled by the Pakistan Institute of Education, explains how access to education is shaped — and often denied — by regional, gender and socioeconomic disparities. A striking example is that of Balochistan, where 75 percent of girls remain out of school, a single statistic that perfectly encapsulates the intersection of both regional and gender-based inequalities. Taking the example of our most deprived province further, only 21 percent of its schools have electricity connections, just 28 percent have access to drinking water, 43 percent have toilets and less than half — 48 percent — are enclosed by a boundary wall. This dismal state of infrastructure stems directly from chronic underfunding, which also significantly hampers enrolment efforts, as parents are understandably reluctant to send their children — especially girls — to schools that lack the most rudimentary of facilities. Dedicated, uninterrupted funding streams for education are also essential to ensure that schooling remains insulated, as far as possible, from climate-fuelled emergencies, like heatwaves and floods, which have too often in recent times led to prolonged school closures, disrupting learning for millions of children. Most crucially, the growing number of out-of-school children also increases the likelihood of early marriages and child labour, making it even more difficult to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty. It stands to reason then that breaking down the systemic barriers holding back access to education requires more than meaningless rhetoric; it demands urgent, sustained funding and genuine political will across all provinces. Inaction will end up condemning yet another generation to the margins. Copyright Business Recorder, 2025

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store