UN slams ‘unacceptable’ Gaza aid centre tragedy
The UN is calling for the “perpetrators to be held accountable” after 31 starving Palestinians were killed as they tried to scrounge food for their families from a US-backed aid centre in Gaza.
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UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called for an independent investigation into the deaths of at least 31 Palestinians near a US-backed aid distribution site in Gaza, after rescuers blamed the deaths on Israeli gunfire.
“I am appalled by the reports of Palestinians killed and injured while seeking aid in Gaza yesterday,” Mr Guterres said.
“It is unacceptable that Palestinians are risking their lives for food.
“I call for an immediate and independent investigation into these events and for perpetrators to be held accountable.”
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SIX KIDS AMONG 14 KILLED IN ISRAELI STRIKE ON GAZA HOME
Gaza’s civil defence agency said an Israeli strike on a home in the northern town of Jabalia killed 14 people.
“The number of martyrs from the targeting of the Al-Bursh family home has risen to 14, including six children and three women, in addition to more than 20 missing individuals still under the rubble,” agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP.
‘SHOT FROM ALL SIDES’: MSF SHOCKED BY AID CENTRE ATTACK
Medical charity Doctors Without Borders said that people it treated at a Gaza aid site run by a new US-backed organisation reported being “shot from all sides” by Israeli forces.
The NGO, known by its French name MSF, blamed the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation’s aid distribution system for chaos at the scene in the southern Gaza town of Rafah.
Gaza’s civil defence agency said Israeli fire killed 31 Palestinians at the site.
Witnesses told AFP the Israeli military had opened fire.
The GHF and Israeli authorities denied any such incident took place but MSF and other medics reported treating crowds of locals with gunshot wounds at the Nasser hospital in the nearby town of Khan Younis.
“Patients told MSF they were shot from all sides by drones, helicopters, boats, tanks and Israeli soldiers on the ground,” MSF said in a statement.
MSF emergency co-ordinator Claire Manera in the statement called the GHF’s system of aid delivery “dehumanising, dangerous and severely ineffective”.
“It has resulted in deaths and injuries of civilians that could have been prevented. Humanitarian aid must be provided only by humanitarian organisations who have the competence and determination to do it safely and effectively.”
MSF communications officer Nour Alsaqa in the statement reported hospital corridors filled with patients, mostly men, with “visible gunshot wounds in their limbs”.
MSF quoted one injured man, Mansour Sami Abdi, as describing people fighting over just five pallets of aid.
“They told us to take food – then they fired from every direction,” he said.
“This isn’t aid. It’s a lie.”
The Israeli military said an initial inquiry found its troops “did not fire at civilians while they were near or within the humanitarian aid distribution site”.
A GHF spokesperson said: “These fake reports have been actively fomented by Hamas,” the Islamic militant group that Israel has vowed to destroy in Gaza.
ISRAEL ARMY PUSHES AHEAD IN GAZA
Israel’s defence minister said that he had ordered the army to push ahead with its fight against Hamas “regardless of any negotiations”, after a US envoy called the group’s latest response to a Gaza truce proposal unacceptable.
“I have instructed the IDF (military) to continue forward in Gaza against all targets, regardless of any negotiations”, Israel Katz said in a statement on Sunday.
“Either Hamas releases the hostages, or it will be destroyed.”
Meanwhile, the Israeli army said it had intercepted a missile fired from Yemen on Sunday after air raid sirens sounded in Jerusalem and other cities.
“Following the sirens that sounded a short while ago in several areas in Israel, a missile launched from Yemen was intercepted,” the army said in a statement.
GRETA THUNBERG SETS SAIL TO GAZA
A boat organised by an international activist coalition opposed to Israel’s blockade of Gaza departed from Sicily on Sunday to deliver humanitarian aid to the Palestinian territory.
The boat from Freedom Flotilla Coalition left from the port of Catania, carrying around a dozen people, including Swedish activist Greta Thunberg, according to Marco Grimaldi, the deputy head of the Greens and Left Alliance, which has supported the mission.
“The ship carries the flag of public opinion, we are trying to make even more noise” about the humanitarian situation in Gaza,” Grimaldi said.
The Freedom Flotilla Coalition, launched in 2010, is a nonviolent international movement supporting Palestinians, combining humanitarian aid with political protest against the blockade on Gaza.
The “Madleen” is a small sailboat carrying “fruit juices, milk, rice, tinned food and protein bars donated by hundreds of Catania residents”, journalist Andrea Legni reported from aboard.
Franco-Palestinian MEP Rima Hassan said Thursday she would also join the voyage.
HAMAS DELIVERS SHOCK CEASEFIRE DEMANDS
Hamas has responded to the US ceasefire proposal with a string of new conditions — which have been slammed by White House Special Envoy Steve Witkoff as “totally unacceptable”.
The terror group requested a ceasefire lasting up to seven years, a full IDF withdrawal from all territory captured since March, the cancellation of the new aid distribution model in Gaza, and a return to the previous aid mechanism, The Times of Israel reported.
Hamas’ demands effectively stalled negotiations toward a 60-day truce by demanding that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu consider a permanent ceasefire after an initial release of hostages.
Mr Netanyahu echoed Mr Witkoff’s assessment that the response was “unacceptable”, accusing Hamas of clinging “to its rejectionism”.
If a permanent ceasefire is not reached within 60 days, Hamas also want the US-backed proposal to halt the Jewish State from resuming fighting, according to the outlet.
Israel earlier warned Hamas to either accept the deal and free the hostages held in Gaza “or be annihilated”.
In a statement on Sunday, Hamas said it had “submitted its response … to the mediating parties”.
“As part of this agreement, 10 living prisoners of the occupation held by the resistance will be released, in addition to the return of 18 bodies, in exchange for an agreed-upon number of Palestinian prisoners,” it added.
A source within the group’s political bureau said it had offered “a positive response to Witkoff, but with emphasis on guaranteeing a permanent ceasefire and full Israeli withdrawal” from the Gaza Strip.
Mr Witkoff said Hamas’s response was “only takes us backward”, urging the group to “accept the framework proposal we put forward”.
“That is the only way we can close a 60-day ceasefire deal in the coming days in which half of the living hostages and half of those who are deceased will come home to their families and in which we can have … substantive negotiations in good-faith to try to reach a permanent ceasefire,” he added in a post on X.
WHITE HOUSE SAYS IRAN HAS NUKE DEAL PROPOSAL
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Steve Witkoff has sent the Iranian regime a “detailed and acceptable proposal” for a nuclear deal.
In a statement, Ms Leavitt said it was in Iran’s best interests to accept the deal.
“President Trump has made it clear that Iran can never obtain a nuclear bomb,” Ms Leavitt said, confirming that the US proposal has been communicated to Iran. She declined to provide further details.
Mr Trump earlier said that an Iran deal was possible in the “not-too-distant future.”
ISRAEL CONFIRMS DEATH OF HAMAS LEADER
The Israeli military confirmed that it had killed Muhammad Sinwar, one of Hamas’s top military commanders in Gaza, during air strikes earlier this month that targeted the vicinity of a hospital in southern Gaza.
Muhammad Sinwar was the younger brother of the former Hamas leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar.
The strike also killed Muhammad Shabana, commander of the terror group’s Rafah Brigade, and Mahdi Quara, commander of the South Khan Younis Battalion.
“The terrorists were eliminated while operating in an underground command and control centre, under the European Hospital in Khan Younis, deliberately endangering the civilian population in and around the hospital,” the Israel Defence Forces said in a statement.
– with AFP
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