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Israel-Hamas war: 30 killed, 300 injured waiting for aid in Gaza

Gaza’s civil defence agency says dozens of Palestinians were killed and injured waiting for aid after Israeli forces opened fire, as Israel threatens to annex parts of the war-torn city.

Israeli forces killed at least 30 people when they opened fire on a crowd waiting for humanitarian aid in the north of the Palestinian territory, according to Gaza’s civil defence agency.

The Israeli military said it had no knowledge of casualties in the incident north of Gaza City, as the United Nations said that pauses in Israel’s offensive against Hamas were not enough to help the population through a deepening hunger crisis.

The UN humanitarian agency, OCHA, said that four days into Israel’s “tactical pauses”, people were still dying from hunger and malnutrition, alongside casualties among those seeking aid.

People gather around one of the victims injured while waiting for aid trucks entering the northern Gaza Strip through the Zikim crossing, as he lies on the floor at the Shifa Hospital in Gaza City. Picture: Gaza
People gather around one of the victims injured while waiting for aid trucks entering the northern Gaza Strip through the Zikim crossing, as he lies on the floor at the Shifa Hospital in Gaza City. Picture: Gaza

Gaza civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP that “at least 30 martyrs were killed” and 300 wounded when Israeli forces opened fire on people waiting for aid north of Gaza City on Wednesday.

Mohammed Abu Salmiya, director of Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, said his facility had received 35 bodies from the shooting, which reportedly struck about 3km southwest of the Zikim crossing point for aid trucks entering Gaza.

The Israeli army said that dozens of Gazan's were seen “gathering around aid trucks in northern Gaza, and in proximity to IDF (army) troops operating in the area.

Protesters march with signs during a demonstration in solidarity with Palestinians in the Gaza Strip facing severe shortages of food and other essentials, in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah. Picture: AFP
Protesters march with signs during a demonstration in solidarity with Palestinians in the Gaza Strip facing severe shortages of food and other essentials, in the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah. Picture: AFP

“The troops fired warning shots in the area, not directed at the gathering, in response to the threat posed to them. According to an initial inquiry, the IDF is not aware of any casualties as a result of IDF fire. The details of the incident are still being examined.”

Hours earlier, 14 Palestinians were killed in four other incidents, three near aid distribution sites, the civil defence agency said.

In two of the incidents, the Israeli army said it had fired warning shots.

FOLLOW UPDATES BELOW:

ISRAEL SUGGESTS IT COULD ANNEX PARTS OF GAZA

Israel could announce a plan to annex parts of the Gaza Strip to pressure Hamas to accept a cease-fire deal, according to a cabinet minister.

Security cabinet member Zeev Elkin accused Hamas of trying to drag out the peace talks to gain leverage over Israel, with the official claiming an ultimatum was necessary to threaten the terror group into taking the negotiations seriously.

“The most painful thing for our enemy is losing lands,” he told the local KAN public broadcaster, The New York Post reports.

He said that the plan is a “significant pressure tool” to tell Hamas that, “the moment they play games with us they will lose land that they will never get back.”

Israel and the US pulled their negotiation teams from Qatar last week after accusing Hamas of showing “a lack of desire to reach a ceasefire.”

The terror group, which still holds 20 living hostages in the Gaza Strip, has maintained that it will not agree to any deal that does not ensure a permanent end to the war, a condition Israel has slammed as a non-starter as its leaders vowed to keep the fight going until Hamas is eradicated.

Dust rises over the northern Gaza Strip as right-wing activists observe from a vantage point during a rally calling to resettle the Northern Gaza Strip in Southern Israel, Israel. Picture: Getty Images
Dust rises over the northern Gaza Strip as right-wing activists observe from a vantage point during a rally calling to resettle the Northern Gaza Strip in Southern Israel, Israel. Picture: Getty Images

TRUMP’ SPECIAL ENVOY HEADS TO ISRAEL

Steve Witkoff, US President Donald Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East, will visit Israel on Thursday to “discuss next steps” on Gaza, an American official said.

Witkoff has been involved in indirect negotiations between Israel and Hamas to reach a ceasefire deal in Gaza.

The discussions broke down last week when Israel and the US recalled their delegations from Doha.

Mr Netanyahu announced the following day that Israel, together with its US allies, was “considering alternative options to bring our hostages home.”

“Special Envoy Witkoff will travel to Israel Thursday, where he will meet with officials to discuss next steps in addressing the situation in Gaza,” a US official told AFP, speaking on the condition of anonymity.

A videographer films next to airmen by a shipment of humanitarian aid packages loaded onto a C-130 Hercules military transport aircraft at King Abdullah II air base in Zarqa ahead of an airdrop mission over the Gaza Strip. Picture: AFP
A videographer films next to airmen by a shipment of humanitarian aid packages loaded onto a C-130 Hercules military transport aircraft at King Abdullah II air base in Zarqa ahead of an airdrop mission over the Gaza Strip. Picture: AFP

EU SENDS AID TO GAZA AS DEATH TOLL TOPS 60,000

France and Germany are set to air-drop aid into Gaza in the coming days as UN-backed experts warned the Israeli-blockaded Palestinian territory is slipping into a “worst case scenario of famine”.

It comes as the health ministry in the Hamas-run territory said the Palestinian death toll in the nearly 22-month war had topped 60,000.

Palestinians bring back aid parcels they managed to procure as they walk on a coastal path west of Beit Lahia, after aid trucks entered the Israel-besieged Gaza Strip from the northern Zikim border crossing. Picture: AFP
Palestinians bring back aid parcels they managed to procure as they walk on a coastal path west of Beit Lahia, after aid trucks entered the Israel-besieged Gaza Strip from the northern Zikim border crossing. Picture: AFP

Concern has escalated in the past week about hunger in the Gaza Strip after more than 21 months of war, with The World Food Programme, UNICEF and the Food and Agriculture Organisation warning time was running out and that Gaza was “on the brink of a full-scale famine”.

“We need to flood Gaza with large-scale food aid, immediately and without obstruction, and keep it flowing each and every day to prevent mass starvation,” WFP executive director Cindy McCain said in a joint statement from the agencies.

France will air-drop 40 tonnes of aid into Gaza from Friday, Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said.

Destroyed buildings in Gaza following Israeli bombardment. Picture: AFP
Destroyed buildings in Gaza following Israeli bombardment. Picture: AFP

“We will organise, starting from Friday, and in close co-ordination with the Jordanian authorities, four flights carrying 10 tonnes of supplies each for the Gaza Strip,” Mr Barrot told BFMTV television.

Aid groups have warned that “mass starvation” is spreading among the territory’s more than two million residents.

Israel has in recent days allowed more aid trucks into the Gaza Strip but aid agencies said Israeli authorities could still do more to speed security checks and open more border posts.

Palestinians collect aid that landed in the Mediterranean Sea after being air-dropped over central Gaza. Picture: AP
Palestinians collect aid that landed in the Mediterranean Sea after being air-dropped over central Gaza. Picture: AP

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz also said Germany would work with Jordan to air lift humanitarian aid to Gaza, co-ordinating this “very closely with France and the United Kingdom”.

“This work may only make a small contribution to humanitarian aid, but it sends an important signal: We are here, we are in the region,” Merz said.

The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification Initiative (IPC) – a grouping of NGOs and institutions that serves as the world’s main monitor for gauging malnutrition – said famine in Gaza had reached the “worst-case scenario”.

The alert did not amount to a declaration of a full-scale famine, but was intended to draw “urgent attention to food security” and “prompt immediate action”, it said.

Urgent “unimpeded” humanitarian access into Gaza was the only way to stop rapidly rising “starvation and death”, it added.

NYT ISSUES CLARIFICATION OVER VIRAL PHOTO

The New York Times has issued a clarification over a photo of a child in Gaza the newspaper claimed was suffering “severe malnutrition” after it emerged the boy had a pre-existing condition.

The heartbreaking photo of Muhammad Zakariya Ayyoub al-Matouq, also published by other outlets including NBC News, The Guardian, and BBC, was put up as evidence of starvation in Gaza as a result of Israel’s war against Hamas.

Hidaya, a 31-year-old Palestinian mother, cradles her sick 18-month-old son Mohammed al-Mutawaq. Picture: AFP
Hidaya, a 31-year-old Palestinian mother, cradles her sick 18-month-old son Mohammed al-Mutawaq. Picture: AFP
Palestinians transport an injured man as they bring back aid parcels west of Beit Lahia. Picture: AFP
Palestinians transport an injured man as they bring back aid parcels west of Beit Lahia. Picture: AFP

But pro-Israel journalist David Collier said little Muhammad has “cerebral palsy, hypoxaemia, and was born with a serious genetic disorder,” citing a May 2025 medical report from Gaza.

In a post on X, The New York Times said the newspaper had added an Editors’ Note to its story.

See the statement below.

UK AID AIR-DROPPED INTO GAZA

Meanwhile, the UK carried out its first air drop of aid into Gaza on Wednesday morning (AEST).

Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s office said “the first air drops of British aid” were landing Tuesday (local time) “containing around half a million pounds worth of lifesaving supplies”.

“The Palestinian people have endured terrible suffering now in Gaza because of a catastrophic failure of aid, we see starving babies, children too weak to stand,” Starmer said in a televised address, adding “the suffering must end”.

GAZA CIVIL DEFENCE SAYS ISRAEL STRIKES KILL 30

Gaza’s civil defence agency said Tuesday (Wednesday AEST) that Israeli air strikes killed at least 30 Palestinians, including women and children, in the central Nuseirat district.

Civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal said the strikes were carried out overnight and into the morning and “targeted a number of citizens’ homes” in Nuseirat refugee camp.

Israeli army soldiers stand atop main battle tanks deployed along the border of the Gaza Strip and southern Israel. Picture: AFP
Israeli army soldiers stand atop main battle tanks deployed along the border of the Gaza Strip and southern Israel. Picture: AFP

The camp’s Al-Awda Hospital said it had received “the bodies of 30 martyrs, including 14 women and 12 children”.

The Israeli military said it had “struck several terror targets in the central Gaza Strip”, but that the number of reported casualties “does not align with the information held by the (military)”.

The Al-Awda Hospital later reported that 13 people had been killed by Israeli gunfire while waiting near an aid distribution point on Gaza’s main north-south route, Salah al-Din Road.

The Israeli military said it was “not aware of casualties as a result of (army) fire adjacent to the distribution site in the central Gaza Strip”.

The health ministry in the Hamas-run territory said the overall death toll from Israel’s military campaign in Gaza had now reached 60,034, the majority of them civilians.

– with AFP

Originally published as Israel-Hamas war: 30 killed, 300 injured waiting for aid in Gaza

Read related topics:Israel Conflict

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Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/world/middle-east/france-germany-set-to-join-aid-efforts-in-gaza-as-unbacked-experts-warn-famine-hits-worstcase-scenario/news-story/e2906758fdb9bff3a01536bb32eb8fd2