UN food agency says Israeli tanks and snipers opened fire on a crowd seeking aid in Gaza
DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — The U.N. food agency accused Israel of using tanks, snipers and other weapons to fire on a crowd of Palestinians seeking food aid, in what the territory's Health Ministry said was one of the deadliest days for aid-seekers in over 21 months of war.
The World Food Program in a statement Sunday condemned the violence that erupted in northern Gaza as Palestinians tried to reach a convoy of trucks carrying food. The Health Ministry in Gaza said at least 80 people were killed in the incident. The Israeli military has said it fired warning shots 'to remove an immediate threat,' but has questioned the death toll reported by the Palestinians.
The accusation by a major aid agency that has had generally good working relations with Israel builds on descriptions by witnesses and others, who also said Israel opened fire on the crowd.
The bloodshed surrounding aid access highlights the increasingly precarious situation for people in Gaza who have been desperately seeking out food and other assistance, as the war that has roiled the region shows no signs of ending. Israel and Hamas are still engaged in ceasefire talks, but there appears to be no breakthrough and it's not clear whether any truce would bring the war to a lasting halt.
As the talks proceed, the death toll in the war-ravaged territory has climbed to more than 59,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. Its count doesn't distinguish between militants and civilians but the ministry says more than half of the dead are women and children. The ministry is part of the Hamas government, but the U.N. and other international organizations see it as the most reliable source of data on casualties.
Israel has meanwhile widened its evacuation orders for the territory to include an area that has been somewhat less hard-hit than others, indicating a new battleground may be opening up and squeezing Palestinians into ever tinier stretches of Gaza.
WFP condemns violence at food distribution points
In northern Gaza on Sunday, the Health Ministry, witnesses and a U.N. official said Israeli forces opened fire toward crowds who tried to get food from a 25-truck convoy that had entered the hard-hit area.
The WFP statement, which said the crowd surrounding its convoy 'came under fire from Israeli tanks, snipers and other gunfire,' backs up those claims. The statement did not specify a death toll, saying only the incident resulted in the loss of 'countless lives.'
After Sunday's incident, a photographer cooperating with The Associated Press counted 31 bodies at Shifa Hospital in Gaza City and 20 others in the courtyard of Sheikh Radwan clinic.
'These people were simply trying to access food to feed themselves and their families on the brink of starvation,' it said, adding that the incident occurred despite assurances from Israeli authorities that aid delivery would improve. Part of those assurances, it said, was that armed forces would not be present nor engage along aid routes.
'Shootings near humanitarian missions, convoys and food distributions must stop immediately.'
The Israeli military declined to comment on the WFP claims. Military spokesperson Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani posted on X Sunday that soldiers were told 'do not engage, do not shoot,' and shared a video of troops near a crowd of Palestinians gathering around a truck as one soldier yells repeatedly, '
Israel has not allowed international media to enter Gaza throughout the war, and the competing claims could not be independently verified.
Sunday's incident comes as Palestinian access to aid in the territory has been greatly diminished, and seeking that aid has become perilous. A U.S.- and Israeli-backed aid system that has wrested some aid delivery from traditional providers like the U.N. has been wracked by violence and chaos as Palestinians heading toward its aid distribution sides have come under fire. The group, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, has said that the majority of the reported violence has not occurred at its sites.
Violence rages on in Gaza
Gaza health officials said Monday at least 13 people, including two women and five children, were killed in Israeli strikes since the previous night.
At least two people were killed Monday morning when crowds of Palestinians waiting for aid trucks were shot at in the area of Netzarim corridor in central Gaza, according to Dr. Mohamed Abu Selmiyah, director of Shifa Hospital where the dead were taken. He said Israeli forces had opened fire.
An Israeli strike overnight hit a tent in the Muwasi area of Khan Younis, killing at least five people, according to the Health Ministry. The dead include two parents, two of their children and a relative, it said.
Other strikes hit tents in the Muwasi area and a residential building in Gaza City, according to health officials.
The Israeli military had no immediate comment on the strikes. It blames Hamas for civilian casualties because the group operates from populated areas.
Gaza's Health Ministry meanwhile said Israeli forces detained Dr. Marwan al-Hams, acting director of the strip's field hospitals and the ministry's spokesman. The Israeli military had no immediate comment.
Hamas triggered the war when militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing around 1,200 people and taking 251 others hostage. Fifty remain in Gaza, but fewer than half are thought to be alive.
Israel again struck rebels in Yemen
The fighting in Gaza has triggered conflicts elsewhere in region, including between Israel and the Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen, who have fired missiles and drones at Israel in what they say is in solidarity with Palestinians.
The Israeli military said it struck the Hodeidah port in Yemen on Monday morning, saying that the Houthis were rebuilding the port infrastructure. Israel said the Houthis used the port to receive weapons from Iran and launch missiles towards Israel. The Israeli military said it targeted the parts of the port used by the Houthis and accused the Houthis of using civilian infrastructure for militant purposes.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said that the targets included areas of the port that Israel had destroyed in previous strikes. 'The Houthis will pay heavy prices for launching missiles towards the state of Israel,' Katz said. Israel last struck Hodeidah port two weeks ago.
___
Magdy reported from Cairo and Lidman from Jerusalem.
___
Follow AP's war coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war
Solve the daily Crossword

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

a day ago
Death toll rises in Gaza as Hamas signals progress in ceasefire talks
At least 60 people are dead and more than 340 others were treated for injuries related to the Israeli military action across Gaza in the past 24 hours, the Gaza Health Ministry said Tuesday.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Marco Rubio Halts Gaza Visa Program Following Loomer's Explosive Revelations
The U.S. State Department, led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, has announced an immediate halt to Palestinian visas after conservative activist Laura Loomer posted videos on X showing Gazans arriving at U.S. airports. Over the weekend, Loomer shared clips from an organization called 'HEAL PALESTINE,' showing Palestinians entering the U.S. through the group's medical program. She argued the arrivals posed a national security risk, claiming Muslim-majority countries should take care of Gazans instead. 'Heal Palestine is more than welcome to send the GAZANS to Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Jordan, or other Muslim countries for medical care. The issue is, these countries don't want them because they know the GAZANS have terrorist tendencies. Are we supposed to endanger American lives so we don't get called 'racist' by a Palestinian organization?' Loomer wrote in a post on X. Rubio confirmed the freeze during an interview on Face the Nation, saying, 'We are not going to be in partnership with groups that are friendly with Hamas. We're going to pause those visas … and we are going to pause this program and re-evaluate how those visas are being vetted and what relationship if any has there been by these organizations to the process of acquiring those visas.' Loomer later expressed frustration, writing on X: 'It should freak everyone out that it took a civilian blowing the whistle on GAZANS coming into our country with State Department-issued visas as opposed to a government employee or terrorism analyst at the CIA flagging this.' HEAL Palestine pushed back, stressing the initiative is a medical treatment program, not a refugee resettlement effort. 'Guided by human and American values, HEAL is committed to offering hope and healing to the few young lives we can reach,' the group said in a statement. Solve the daily Crossword


Forbes
a day ago
- Forbes
Humanitarian Workers Risk Their Lives To Protect Children In Gaza
In the middle of the brutal conflict in Gaza, humanitarian workers embarked on the mission of a lifetime: vaccinate 600,000 children against polio in an active war zone. A new documentary offers a stark portrait of conflict's toll on children's health — and a tribute to the courage of all humanitarian workers who put their lives on the line to save and protect children in crises. The ideal conditions for a major disease outbreak There's a reason the vast majority of polio cases occur in children living in fragile, conflict-affected and vulnerable countries. Overcrowded conditions and lack of access to safe water, sanitation and health care are the perfect conditions for the spread of deadly diseases. Children under 5 are particularly at risk. Since the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, over 80 percent of Gaza's health, water and sanitation infrastructure has been destroyed or damaged by Israeli military operations. The vast majority of the population, including over a million children, has been displaced, many families multiple times. In July 2024, Gaza's Ministry of Health and the World Health Organization (WHO) confirmed what public health experts had long feared: the highly contagious poliovirus had been identified in sewage samples collected by UNICEF in Khan Younis and Deir al Balah, putting displaced people living in close quarters without adequate water and sanitation at heightened risk of contracting the lifelong crippling disease. On Aug. 22, 2024, the first case of polio in the Gaza Strip in 25 years was confirmed. New documentary chronicles heroic efforts of humanitarian workers in Gaza A new half-hour documentary film, "Gaza's Silent Threat", follows Dr. Younis R. Awadallah, UNICEF's longtime top public health specialist in Gaza, and Fairuz Abuwarda, UNICEF Coordinator in Gaza, as they lead a high-stakes immunization campaign to protect vulnerable children from the spread of polio in September 2024. Learn more: Polio Vaccines Protect Children in Gaza Strip Watch the new documentary film: To eliminate polio, every child in every household must be vaccinated Delivering vaccines in an active war zone is one of the most complex and urgent challenges faced by humanitarian workers, demanding extraordinary skills, courage and resilience. Amid recurrent security threats, through logistical obstacles and with limited access to health services, humanitarian workers delivered for children across Gaza. Their courage underscores a vital truth: when humanitarian principles are upheld, and when workers are protected and granted safe, timely access, lives can be saved, even in the most fragile settings. Nowhere in Gaza is safe Today, that fragility has deepened. More than 18,000 children have been killed in Gaza since the start of the war. Child malnutrition has reached emergency levels; one in three people are going days without food. Only a trickle of aid bas been allowed into Gaza since May, after a total blockade that lasted nearly 11 weeks. Trucks filled with therapeutic food and other lifesaving supplies are lined up at border crossings, waiting permission to enter. Over 1,000 people have reportedly been killed while seeking food; aid convoys have come under attack. Humanitarian workers themselves are collapsing from hunger. Related: Pressing for More Access, UNICEF Delivers Urgently Needed Supplies to Gaza A call for principled action and international accountability "Gaza's Silent Threat" not only pays tribute to the courage of families and health workers striving to care for one another in devastating circumstances. It's also a powerful testament to the impact of war on children's health, reinforcing the urgent need for principled action and international accountability. "We need to remember that humanitarian pauses are not a ceasefire. We hope that the parties can agree on a ceasefire and the return of all remaining hostages by Hamas and other armed groups. This has gone on for far too long," said UNICEF Deputy Executive Director Ted Chaiban, who recently returned from a five-day mission to Gaza and Israel. "What is happening on the ground is inhumane. What children need — children from all communities — is a sustained ceasefire and a political way forward." Your support for UNICEF is more important than ever. Please donate.