Tag: Gaza

  • Gaza and the cost of silence

    Gaza and the cost of silence

    sir: As we enjoy our meals and sleep, a child in Gaza dies of hunger, starved to death by the West’s darling—Israel, the only nation allowed to carry out genocide live on TV.

    For nearly two years, Israel has waged a genocidal campaign in the Gaza Strip, a tiny piece of land on the Mediterranean that has been under blockade for decades and whose population largely consists of refugees from historic Palestine, displaced when the Jewish state was created.

    Beyond the human toll of more than 50,000 people killed—nearly 70 per cent women and children, according to the United Nations—the devastation has been catastrophic. Cities in Gaza have been reduced to rubble, with key infrastructure and necessities of life—schools, universities, hospitals, desalination plants, farmlands, companies, bakeries, and even mosques—systematically destroyed by Israeli forces. The beautiful and ancient city of Rafah no longer exists; likewise, Beit Hanoun and large parts of Khan Younis and Gaza City have been deliberately wiped out by Israel in an attempt to ethnically cleanse Gaza.

    As if the monstrous crimes of the last two years weren’t enough, Israel is now baiting and killing hungry people at so-called aid distribution sites, which observers have termed killing fields, mirroring dystopian scenes from Squid Game and The Hunger Games.

    In all of this, the world has failed to act to stop the carnage. While the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu is a regular guest in Washington, the United States has sanctioned the International Criminal Court and is arresting students protesting the genocide. European countries continue to support Israel, despite the ongoing crimes against humanity it is perpetrating. Arab and Islamic countries seem powerless to help.

    Tragically, many have become accustomed to seeing images of death and destruction from Gaza, which has numbed them to the suffering of the Palestinian people. Mustafa Elmasri, a renowned psychologist from Gaza, rightly said before he passed away that “genocide has been normalized, reduced to a banal daily nuisance, like city noise people try to live with because they feel powerless to change it.”

    Read Also: Ex-Israeli security chiefs urge end to Gaza war

    As the bloodthirsty Israeli government plans a final solution to entirely wipe out Gaza and displace its people, greater intervention is needed to put an end to the genocide. Palestinians don’t need theatrical aid drops or empty pledges of recognition. They have endured starvation, bombings, and forced displacement. They need real action to stop the violence. They need the borders to be opened, food and medicine to flow in, and their homes to be rebuilt. They also need justice—Israeli leaders must be held accountable, just as Nazi leaders were before them.

    It’s time to break the silence. We can’t just watch as innocent people are killed, as children are starved to death, and health workers are kidnapped and tortured in dungeons. We must demand that governments take action to stop the genocide. The world has a responsibility to protect the people of Gaza. Elmasri may not be here to witness it, but let’s stand up for humanity and demand justice for the Palestinian people. Genocide must never be normalized. We are human beings, bound by compassion, not beasts driven by savagery.

    • Labaran Yusuf, Jos, Plateau State
  • Time to stop the carnage in Gaza

    Time to stop the carnage in Gaza

    In some years to come, our grandchildren or great grandchildren may ask us what position we held when Israel seemed to have been granted a licence by the whole world or a critical part of it, to slaughter defenceless children, women and elderly people in Gaza against the Geneva protocol on interstate conflict with regards to the protection of unarmed women, the elderly and children. 

    Some argue that Israel is taking these military actions in retaliation against the Hamas administration in Gaza because of its failure to prevent terrorists from there going to Israel to slaughter some Jews and carrying other Israeli Jews into captivity during a religious celebration.

    The world, including our government, condemned this terrorist attack against civilians but at the same time has not condemned the one-sided war since then against the Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank of the River Jordan which in terms of numbers would soon reach a hundred thousand souls. This disproportionate retaliation war has spread to Lebanon where the Israeli military might has dealt a deadly blow against Hezbollah forces for their support for the Palestinians. The same has happened to the Houthis in Yemen and the newly created army of Syria after the collapse of the Alawite terrorist dynasty of Bashar al Assad. The culmination of the unrestrained military promenade of Israel in the Middle East was the recent attack and victory of Israel over Iran in the 12-day war in which the USA joined Israel in the apparent obliteration of Iranian nuclear assets.

    With all these wars, Israel has definitely become the supreme military power in the Middle East. Turkey is the only power that is capable of challenging it in the wider area extending to Turkey. Turkey of course has its own problems with its minorities of Kurds, Circassians, Arabs and Jews which put together constitute about 27% of the entire population. Possible Turkey’s military confrontation with Israel is obviated by Turkish membership of NATO of which America is  the dominant power and America ‘s protection of Israel’s interest is solid and this will not allow the USA to allow Turkey to be involved in any anti-Israeli confrontation in the wider Middle East. This overwhelming power of Israel therefore remains unchallenged unless an Islamic revolution sweeping through the Middle East and extending to Turkey were to occur to change the current power configuration in the entire region. This possibility should hopefully constrain the current wild power Judaic hegemonic considerations in Israel to be careful about how it throws its weight around in its merciless treatment of the Palestinians in their home country.

    Right now Israel is enjoying the support of Europe and the USA because of their victimisation in the hands of the German NAZI during the Second World War and their historic victimisation in continental Europe spreading from the Atlantic to the Urals. The question may be asked in future whether the Arabs were the ones who unleashed genocide on the Jews and why the Palestinians were being made to bear the brunt of retaliatory destruction caused on them by the Jews using American and European weapons. When this time comes, each and every one of influence in the world will be asked our roles either as individuals or as governments.

    As far as I know, Africa has not taken a position despite the fact that for years, the Organisation of African Unity (the African Union) accepted the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) as an observer. The only African state that has taken a position on this issue is the Republic of South Africa which took a courageous step of taking Israel to the World Court of Justice on the charge of committing war crimes and actions that could lead to genocide over the starvation of the Gaza Palestinians.   The UN has described the so called feeding of the starving Palestinians by the American/Israeli Gaza humanitarian organisation as “drip feeding “of millions of people in Gaza encircled by Israeli military. These are people surrounded by Israeli troops preventing the world body  from taking food to the starving population of Gaza while the rest of the world lay prostrate begging Israel to permit them access to the starving  Palestinians.  

    Read Also: Stranded Nigerian miners in CAR arrive Embassy

    Israel has expelled virtually all agencies of the UN including the WHO involved in humanitarian activities in Palestine, while in the meantime, the Israeli military has turned into killing fields, the various depots jointly established by the Israeli – American Gaza humanitarian organisation into killing spots where starving Palestinians are shot as sport on the grounds of rowdy behaviour in tens, hundreds and thousands. The situation has been criticised by global  organisations and governments especially in Europe, Latin America, Africa and some parts of Asia while America that has the power to make Israel change its murderous policies in Israel has remained unconcerned. 

    Britain and America bear moral responsibility for the existence of Israel in the land of Palestine. It was Britain as administrator of ancient Palestine that in 1917 during the First World War promised the land by the Lord Balfour declaration that Palestine would be given to the Jews as their eternal homeland and in 1948, it was the American government that first recognised the Israeli state against the interest of Palestine. It seems now both Israel and the USA are following a policy of starvation as weapons of war. What is most disgusting in the situation is the weak response of the entire Arab world and the organisation of Islamic countries including Nigeria. What is morally wrong to us Christians would or should be wrong to our Muslim brothers. I don’t believe that because we are a plural country, our foreign policy should not be guided by moral principles. For most of my involvement in our foreign policy at the global stage, we have always supported the Palestinian cause even though not all the Arabs and the Iranians have supported the African struggle for independence and against the apartheid regime. This did not make us withdraw support for the Palestinian cause. So what has changed? Have we lost our moral compass? I am aware of our current economic weakness but poverty is not an incurable disease; it only compels us to work hard. It should not muffle our voice against moral injustice as in the Palestinian case. I am a Christian and a practising and believing Christian but this does not make me deaf to the wailing of suffering Muslim humanity in Palestine and I don’t see why our government should remain silent in the face of the tyranny of the Israelis against the Palestinians. We should not wait until France, Britain join the other European countries like Ireland, the Nordic countries, and a host of other countries recognise Palestine before we do what is right.

  • UK’s Starmer holds urgent Cabinet meeting on Gaza peace pathway

    UK’s Starmer holds urgent Cabinet meeting on Gaza peace pathway

    British Prime Minister Keir Starmer will convene an urgent Cabinet meeting on Tuesday as he seeks to set out a pathway to peace in Gaza.

    Starmer will call senior ministers in during the summer recess for the meeting on Gaza on Tuesday afternoon, the PA news agency understands.

    The prime minister shared plans he is working on with France and Germany to “bring about a lasting peace” with U.S. President Donald Trump when they met in Scotland, Downing Street said.

    And he planned to share details with Arab states and other key allies in the coming days.

    Starmer was facing mounting calls to recognise Palestinian statehood immediately.

    The prime minister’s official spokesman said: “This week, the Prime Minister is focused on a pathway to peace to ensure immediate relief for those on the ground, and a sustainable route to a two-state solution.

    “We are clear that the recognition of the Palestinian state is a matter of when, not if.

    “But it must be one of the steps on the path to a two-state solution as part of a wider plan that delivers lasting security for both Palestinians and Israelis.”

    Amid international alarm over starvation in Gaza, Israel announced at the weekend that it would suspend fighting in three areas for 10 hours day and open secure routes for aid delivery.

    The UK confirmed it was taking part in airdrops of aid into the territory.

    Aid agencies have welcomed the new measures but said they were not enough to counter the rising hunger in the Palestinian territory.

    Starmer said that the British public was “revolted” at the scenes of desperation in Gaza as he appeared alongside Trump at his Turnberry golf course on Monday.

    “It’s a humanitarian crisis, it’s an absolute catastrophe.

    “Nobody wants to see that. I think people in Britain are revolted at seeing what they’re seeing on their screens, so we’ve got to get to that ceasefire.”

    The U.S. president hinted at sticking points in U.S.-led negotiations over a peace deal, saying Palestinian militant group Hamas had become “very difficult to deal with” in recent weeks.

    He said this was because they only held a small remaining number of Israeli hostages.

    Read Also: Ukraine: As Starmer and Macron Rekindle Hope

    Starmer has likened the plan he is working on with France and Germany to the coalition of the willing, the international effort to support Ukraine towards a lasting peace.

    The prime minister’s official spokesman said the plan would build “on the collaboration to date that paves the way to a long-term solution on security in the region.”

    Starmer is meanwhile facing calls from a growing number of members of parliament (MPs) to recognise a Palestinian state immediately.

    More than 250 cross-party MPs have now signed a letter calling for ministers to take the step, up from 221 on Friday.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Gaza’s final act: Handful of dust, skyful of death

    Gaza’s final act: Handful of dust, skyful of death

    • By Syed Zubair Ahmed

    US President Donald Trump recently announced that Israel had agreed for a 60-day ceasefire in Gaza, though on “necessary conditions”. He has also vowed to secure the release of the remaining Israeli hostages still held in Gaza, describing their freedom as a cornerstone of any agreement.

    This two-month ceasefire may perhaps be the first sigh of relief in months for the two million civilians trapped in the narrow, battered Gaza Strip. They have been under relentless siege since October 2023, when Hamas operatives stormed across the Israeli border and killed more than 1,200 people.

    A Collective Sigh of Relief

    The ceasefire will be a reprieve for medics like Dr Taher Almadhoun, a young physician I first interviewed on Zoom back in 2021 during another punishing round of bombardment. Even then, he had just lost his two brothers but kept working, tending to the wounded with a composure that almost seemed borrowed from someone else – someone not living in a city under fire.

    I tried reaching him months ago, partly out of concern, partly to reassure myself that he hadn’t been added to Gaza’s long list of casualties. For a long time, there was no answer. But silence in Gaza is never just silence. It is the hush of collapsed buildings, the severed phone lines, the dreadful uncertainty of whether someone is alive or gone.

    When his reply finally came, it was a message steeped in both exhaustion and stubborn resolve. He told me he was now married to a dentist, that they had a baby barely a year old — a child who has never known anything but displacement. The house they built together over years of borrowed money and hope had been crushed into a mound of concrete, indistinguishable from all the other ruins.

    Since the war began, they have drifted from one temporary shelter to another: crowded classrooms, tents on bare earth, the broken shells of relatives’ homes. By day, he and his wife return to the wards to care for the endless influx of the wounded. By night, they try to sleep under tarpaulins, listening to the growl of drones that never really leaves the sky.

    Almadhoun had ambitions to study advanced medicine abroad, to build something stable out of the wreckage. Now, those dreams have been replaced by simpler wishes: to see the dawn, to keep his child alive one more day. In Gaza, waking up to your child’s face has become a rare joy not that many have been robbed of. 

    Yet, Almadhoun’s story is not unique. It reflects the quiet ordeal of thousands of medics and nurses whose working lives have become a theatre of impossible choices. Each hour demands decisions that would unmake most people: whom to comfort with the last vial of morphine, which child to prioritise when there are no supplies left.

    Life And Death

    For them, a ceasefire would mean more than a pause in fighting. It would mean a chance, however fleeting, to remember what it feels like simply to live without fear. To call what’s happening in Gaza a humanitarian crisis is an understatement. To call it a catastrophe feels somehow woefully inadequate. What is happening is a long, withering disintegration of a people’s collective spirit – the slow unravelling of human dignity.

    This is a place where the living and the dead are neighbours. The poet TS Eliot wrote in The Waste Land, “I will show you fear in a handful of dust.” But in Gaza, fear comes in a bag of flour, in the flicker of a drone overhead, in the empty shelves of a pharmacy

    Since October 2023, some 65,000 souls have been lost – an arithmetic of horror that defies comprehension. But numbers alone cannot capture the personal hell of every mother, every child, every old man whose life has been reduced to a daily ritual of hunger, grief and dread.

    Food Aid or Killing Fields?

    Across Gaza, aid convoys arrive bearing food that is barely sufficient to keep people from starvation. Even this aid has become a source of terror: distribution sites have turned into killing fields. Witnesses recount how tanks, drones and machine guns have targeted civilians lining up for flour or lentils. According to local reports and the Hamas-run health authorities, at least 600 Palestinians have been killed and over 4,000 injured simply while waiting for rations.

    Yet, no matter which side of politics one occupies, there is a truth that transcends the noise of blame: these people are exhausted, starving and broken. A journalist on the ground described Gaza as “a dead city, a dying city”. This is no hyperbole. Two million inhabitants, half of them children, live without running water, without electricity, without medicine. The few remaining hospitals are overwhelmed beyond any reasonable capacity. Doctors and nurses work shifts so long they barely remain conscious, tending to patients whose bodies have been ravaged by wounds, infection, or chronic illness left untreated for months.

    It is here, amid the overcrowded corridors and the makeshift morgues, that the words of WB Yeats in The Second Coming feel like a prophecy:

    “Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,

    The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere

    The ceremony of innocence is drowned.”

    There is a sense in Gaza that the ceremony of innocence was drowned long ago. When a widow named Umm Raed al-Nuaizi asked, “Why are our children’s lives seen as so cheap?”, she voiced a question that has no satisfactory answer – only the echo of silence from a world that has become accustomed to atrocity. Her son was shot and left in intensive care while trying to collect flour. In any other place, the deliberate targeting of civilians would be an unthinkable scandal. Here, it has become an almost unremarkable event

    The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, an entity supported by American and Israeli authorities, has been described by some UN officials as a “death trap”. The UN has condemned the system as grotesquely inadequate, yet it remains the only conduit for food to a population at risk of famine. The paradox is chilling: the desperate act of collecting a sack of flour can end in a funeral.

    Dead Men Walking

    Beyond the headlines, there is a quieter agony. Patients with diabetes or heart disease now slip away in dimly lit rooms, unable to access the simplest treatments. For them, life has become what Eliot called “the hollow men”: a grey half-existence where the body remains, but the spirit has fled.

    “We are the hollow men

    We are the stuffed men

    Leaning together

    Headpiece filled with straw. Alas!”

    If Gaza is a wasteland, it is one constructed by human hands. It’s a place where hope has withered in the sun, and where each dawn brings no promise of relief.

    And yet the horror does not only belong to those who are dying. Those who survive must reckon with what survival even means. A child who grows up amid such relentless trauma carries invisible wounds that no treaty can heal. Even if the guns fall silent, what future can there be for a generation that has known nothing but siege, bombardment and bereavement?

    A Cemetary Of The Living

    When you walk through the debris of Gaza, the landscape resembles something out of Dante – rings of hell composed of collapsed buildings, scorched cars and shattered lives. Some aid workers describe the place as “a cemetery of the living.”

    There are also dozens of Israeli hostages held by Hamas, their condition unknown, their families living in paralysing uncertainty. In this tragedy, there are no simple villains or saints –  only layers upon layers of pain and desperation. A mother in Rafah wonders each night if a drone’s crosshairs are pointed at her roof. A father in Khan Younis calculates whether to risk fetching food or stay hidden in the ruins. A boy with pneumonia gasps for breath in a hospital with no oxygen tanks. Each day begins and ends with the same question: Will we survive until tomorrow?

    When we were children learning about the Holocaust, we often asked ourselves how modern, democratic Europe — so proud of its civilisation — could stand by while millions of Jews were starved, humiliated and systematically erased. That chapter became not only a wound in history but a profound, unshakable shame that Europe still carries like a hidden scar.

    And now, in our own lifetime, we are witnessing another terrible spectacle: a whole population being pushed beyond the brink – killed, maimed, starved and humiliated in plain view of the world. Gaza’s people were already half broken from years of siege, air strikes and the slow suffocation of their daily lives. What is unfolding today feels less like a sudden catastrophe and more like the cruel final act of a long, deliberate process of subjugation.

    The Death Of The Human Soul

    History will judge these months not by the language of press releases or sound bytes but by the testimony of the dispossessed. Their suffering, like the ‘blood-dimmed tide’, has swept away any illusions that this is simply a conflict over territory or ideology. This is a catastrophe of the human soul.

    It is impossible to read the accounts from Gaza without feeling that something essential is being lost. Not merely infrastructure or lives, but the moral compass that makes civilisation possible. When food becomes a pretext for slaughter, when medicine becomes a bargaining chip, when children become targets, we cross a line that should never have been crossed.

    “Between the idea

    And the reality

    Between the motion

    And the act

    Falls the Shadow.”

    That shadow now lies across Gaza, suffocating every possibility of normal life. Even if the siege were lifted tomorrow, the wounds of the spirit would remain. What jobs would there be in this dead city? What homes are left to return to? What peace can there be when so many ghosts will forever haunt the survivors?

    A Flicker of Hope?

    Yet amid this devastation, there is still a flicker of resilience, as fragile as a candle in the wind – the wasteland is breeding lilacs out of the dead land in an otherwise lifeless world. The people of Gaza have not relinquished their humanity, even as the world’s attention drifts elsewhere. In the ruins, volunteers share water, strangers shelter the newly displaced, and doctors save lives despite knowing that each day may be their last.

    This resilience is not victory, nor does it erase the horror. But it is a reminder that even in the most desolate wasteland, something sacred endures – the simple, unyielding conviction that life matters.

    In the end, no matter what justification is offered, Gaza remains a place that should haunt the conscience of anyone who dares to look honestly. For all the rhetoric of policy and security, there is a deeper question that will linger long after the last shot is fired: what have we become, that we can watch such suffering and call it ‘collateral’?

    ·           This article was first published under the headline ‘Gaza’s Final Act: A Handful Of Dust, A Skyful Of Death’ in www.ndtv.com

  • Israel responds to WHO accusations over attacks on Gaza facilities

    Israel responds to WHO accusations over attacks on Gaza facilities

    Israel’s military on Tuesday responded to accusations by the World Health Organisation (WHO) that its forces attacked the UN agency’s facilities in central Gaza and detained staff members.

    The military said soldiers came under fire in the city of Deir al-Balah on Monday and returned fire in the direction the shots originated.

    However, the military did not specify whether the gunfire came from WHO premises in Deir al-Balah.

    The WHO said that a staff accommodation facility was attacked on Monday and that a central warehouse had been damaged in a separate incident on Sunday.

    According to a report by Israeli news outlet Ynet, citing a military spokesperson, the army is aware of claims that a residential complex housing WHO employees was struck.

    The report added that, according to the military, no agency staffs were injured.

    The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) publicly confirmed that several individuals were detained in Deir al-Balah on suspicion of “involvement in terrorism.’’

    It did not clarify whether those detained were WHO employees or their relatives, as the UN agency has claimed.

    Most of those detained were released following on-site questioning, the army said.

    The IDF did not comment on one individual who, according to the WHO, remained in custody.

    In a statement on Monday, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said male WHO staff and their male relatives had been handcuffed, stripped, searched at gunpoint, and interrogated on site.

    Responding to the claim, the Israeli military stated on Tuesday that at times during field questioning.

    Read Also: UK, France, 23 other nations condemn Israel over ‘inhumane killing’ of civilians

    “It is necessary for individuals suspected of terrorist activity to temporarily remove parts of their clothing in order to ensure that they are not concealing explosive belts or other weapons.’’

    Suspects were treated in accordance with international law, the military added.

    Ghebreyesus also said that women and children related to WHO staff had been forced to flee on foot amid the fighting.

    The Israeli military said it had warned civilians to leave the area prior to its operation and had been in contact with international organisations operating there.

    The IDF advanced this week into the south-west of Deir al-Balah as part of its operations against Hamas and other militant groups.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • Riot at Gaza aid site leaves 20 dead, GHF says

    Riot at Gaza aid site leaves 20 dead, GHF says

    Twenty people were killed during a riot at an aid distribution point in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday morning, according to the U.S.- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

    In a statement, the private foundation said that 19 of the victims were trampled to death, while one person was fatally stabbed.

    “We have credible reason to believe that elements within the crowd,  armed and affiliated with Hamas, deliberately fomented the unrest,” the GHF stated.

    According to the foundation, the incident occurred at a distribution center in the southern city of Khan Younis.

    GHF personnel claimed they observed firearms among those gathered. A U.S. staff member was allegedly threatened at gunpoint by an individual in the crowd.

    The foundation’s account has not been independently verified, and the Palestinian Islamist organization Hamas has not issued a comment.

    Read Also: 67 children die as Israel’s Gaza blockade enters 103rd day

    The GHF, which began operating at the end of May with backing from Israel and the U.S., currently oversees food distribution in the Gaza Strip following months of Israeli restrictions on aid deliveries.

    However, the foundation has come under sharp criticism from the United Nations and humanitarian organizations, who argue that it operates too few distribution points. This, they say, creates chaotic conditions that place civilians at serious risk.

    Fatal incidents near aid distribution sites have been reported repeatedly in recent weeks.

    While the Israeli military has often been accused of opening fire in previous cases, the latest incident has not been linked to military action.

    According to the UN, hundreds of people have died at or near GHF-run distribution centers since the foundation began operations.

    (dpa/NAN)

  • 67 children die as Israel’s Gaza blockade enters 103rd day

    67 children die as Israel’s Gaza blockade enters 103rd day

    At least 67 children have died of hunger in Gaza since Oct. 2023 as Israel’s total blockade of the territory enters its 103rd consecutive day, the Government Media Office in Gaza said in a statement on Saturday.

    The office warned that the number could rise dramatically, with more than 650,000 children aged under five now facing severe and life-threatening malnutrition in the coming weeks due to the continued denial of food, medicine, and fuel.

    “Starvation is now killing what bombs have not,” the office noted, describing the ongoing siege as one of the “most extreme forms of collective punishment in modern history.”

    The media office said “dozens of additional deaths had been recorded in just the past three days alone, as Israeli forces continue to block the entry of flour, infant formula, and vital nutritional and medical supplies.”

    It accused Israel of “deliberately pursuing a policy of mass starvation.”

    As of now, around 1.25 million people in Gaza are enduring catastrophic hunger, while 96 per cent of the population, including over one million children, suffer from acute food insecurity, the office said.

    It held Israel fully responsible for a “systematic and organised starvation campaign” and placed legal and moral blame on its international backers for their support or silence.

    “We are sounding the alarm: this is a mass death sentence unfolding before the eyes of the world,” the office said. 

    “Immediate international intervention is not optional, it’s a matter of life or death.”

    Similarly, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) also issued a warning on Saturday about dire health consequences in the Gaza Strip caused by the ongoing Israeli blockade.

    “No soap, no clean water. Children in Gaza can’t be bathed properly because of the ongoing siege,” said UNRWA in the statement.

    “This, coupled with overcrowded shelters and summer heat, can lead to dire health consequences,” it added, stressing that “the siege must be lifted.”

    “UNRWA must be allowed to resume delivering humanitarian aid, including hygiene items, into Gaza,” it added.

    Rejecting international calls for a ceasefire, the Israeli army has pursued a brutal offensive on the Gaza Strip since Oct. 7, 2023, killing nearly 57,900 Palestinians so far, most of them women and children.

    The relentless bombardment has destroyed the enclave and led to food shortages and the spread of diseases.

    Last November, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Gaza.

    Israel also faces a genocide case at the International Court of Justice for its war on the enclave.

    (AA/NAN)

  • Hundreds of families displaced by wave of Israeli air strikes on Gaza, witnesses say

    Hundreds of families displaced by wave of Israeli air strikes on Gaza, witnesses say

    Israel has carried out a wave of air strikes across the Gaza Strip, triggering the mass displacement of hundreds of Palestinian families, witnesses say.

    Rescue teams recovered the bodies of five people, while dozens of injured civilians were evacuated to Al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza City, according to local reports.

    The bombardment follows one of the largest evacuation orders issued since the war resumed in March.

    It comes amid increasing pressure on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to refocus efforts to reach a ceasefire agreement.

    Residents in Gaza City said dozens of Israeli air raids targeted densely populated eastern neighbourhoods, including Shujaiya, Tuffah, and Zeitoun.

    Videos posted by activists on social media captured scenes of chaos and explosions illuminating the night sky, followed by flames and thick plumes of smoke rising above the skyline.

    One of the strikes reportedly hit a school in Zeitoun that had been sheltering displaced families.

    The five fatalities reportedly occurred in a strike at the Al Shati camp, to the west of Gaza City.

    The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) had earlier ordered residents to leave large parts of northern Gaza, in anticipation of the attacks. Most of those displaced overnight moved westwards within Gaza City rather than to the southern region as instructed by the IDF.

    “We had no choice but to leave everything behind,” said Abeer Talba, a mother of seven who fled Zeitoun with her family.

    “We got phone calls recordings in Arabic telling us we were in a combat zone and must evacuate immediately.

    Read Also: Gaza war hurts my whole body, says Guardiola

    “This is the seventh time we’ve been forced to flee,” she added. “We’re in the streets again, no food, no water. My children are starving. Death feels kinder than this.”

    Amid the growing humanitarian crisis, fears are mounting that the evacuation orders and sustained air strikes are part of a broader Israeli plan to expand its ground offensive deeper into Gaza.

    But there is also speculation in Israeli media that some generals are close to concluding that military operations in Gaza are near to being achieved.

    That is also the view of many former army leaders who fear that the descent of the Gaza campaign into more attritional, guerilla-style warfare would lead to more deaths – of hostages, civilians and soldiers.

    The Israeli prime minister’s next moves are being closely watched. While Benjamin Netanyahu’s instincts have always been to continue the war and defeat Hamas, he is coming under increasing pressure at home and abroad to pursue a new ceasefire agreement.

    BBC

  • Dozens killed overnight in Gaza by IDF strikes

    Dozens killed overnight in Gaza by IDF strikes

    Dozens of Palestinians were killed overnight by further Israeli air strikes on the war-torn enclave amid a breakdown in a new cease-fire agreement.

    An estimated 54 Palestinians sheltering at Fahmi Al-Jargawi School in Gaza City have been killed by airstrikes carried out by the Israeli Defence Forces, the BBC reported  yesterday.

    The scores of dead refugees included children from Beit Lahia after fires were seen engulfing two classrooms fixed as living quarters in the school, which was housing hundreds of people, according to the Hamas-run civil defence authority.

    At least 35 were reported to be killed when the school was hit.

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    Video footage depicted fire engulfing parts of the school and graphic images of severely burned victims, including kids.

     Yesterday morning, the IDF said it hit 200 “terrorist organisations” across the Gaza Strip in 28 hours as military ops carried on.

    The IDF claimed it targeted a “Hamas and Islamic Jihad command and control centre” in an area used by “terrorists” to presumably “plan” attacks against Israeli civilians and IDF troops, accusing Hamas of using the Gaza population “as human shields.”

  • 20 killed in Gaza in renewed Israeli strikes

    20 killed in Gaza in renewed Israeli strikes

    No fewer than 20 people have been killed, including several children, since early Wednesday morning in the Gaza Strip in renewed Israeli attacks, the Palestinian news agency WAFA reported.

    WAFA, citing Gaza medical sources, also reported that there were airstrikes and fatalities in Jabalia and Deir al-Balah, as well as near Khan Younis in the south of the territory.

    The information however could not be independently verified as the Israeli army had not yet provided any information on the matter.

    Dozens of deaths have been reported daily from the coastal area after Israel’s military launched a major new offensive late last week.

    Ground troops are now also deployed in the area, with Israel’s actions in the region facing increasing international criticism, including from close allies.

    On Tuesday, the United Kingdom suspended trade talks with Israel, sanctioned some West Bank settlers and summoned Israel’s ambassador to the UK.

    Also on Tuesday, EU foreign policy Chief, Kaja Kallas, said that the European Union intends to review its cooperation agreement with Israel in view of the situation in Gaza.

    Read Also: 17 dead as Israel presses new Gaza offensive

    The current conflict began on Oct. 7, 2023, when the Palestinian Islamist Hamas militia and others invaded Israel, killing 1,200 and took some 250 hostage.

    Israel responded with a massive attack, which has since killed more than 53,000 in Gaza, according to the Hamas-controlled health authority.

    The figures do not distinguish between civilian and militant casualties.

    (dpa/NAN)