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At least 322 children reportedly killed in Gaza in 10 days: UN

At least 322 children reportedly killed in Gaza in 10 days: UN
A bracelet is wrapped around the hand of 10-year-old Dana Abu Sultan, who, along with her sister, brother, parents, uncle, and aunt, was killed when an Israeli army strike hit their tent. (AP)
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Updated 01 April 2025

At least 322 children reportedly killed in Gaza in 10 days: UN

At least 322 children reportedly killed in Gaza in 10 days: UN
  • UNICEF said most of these children were displaced, and sheltering in makeshift tents or damaged homes

UNITED NATIONS: Israel’s renewed offensive in Gaza has reportedly left at least 322 children dead and 609 wounded in the Palestinian territory in the past 10 days, UNICEF said Monday.
The figures include children who were reportedly killed or wounded when the surgical department of Al Nasser Hospital, in southern Gaza, was hit in an attack on March 23, the UN children’s agency said in a statement.
UNICEF said most of these children were displaced, and sheltering in makeshift tents or damaged homes.
Ending a nearly two-month ceasefire in the war with Hamas, Israel resumed intense bombing of Gaza on March 18 and then launched a new ground offensive.
“The ceasefire in Gaza provided a desperately needed lifeline for Gaza’s children and hope for a path to recovery,” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell.
“But children have again been plunged into a cycle of deadly violence and deprivation.”
Russell added: “All parties must adhere to their obligations under international humanitarian law to protect children.”
The UNICEF statement said that after nearly 18 months of war, more than 15,000 children have reportedly been killed, over 34,000 reportedly injured, and nearly one million children have been displaced repeatedly and denied basic services.
UNICEF called for an end to hostilities and for Israel to end its ban on humanitarian aid entering Gaza, which has been in force since March 2.
It also said children who are sick or wounded should be evacuated to receive medical attention.
“Food, safe water, shelter, and medical care have become increasingly scarce. Without these essential supplies, malnutrition, diseases and other preventable conditions will likely surge, leading to an increase in preventable child deaths,” UNICEF said.
“The world must not stand by and allow the killing and suffering of children to continue,” it added.


More Gazans die seeking aid and from hunger, as burial shrouds in short supply

More Gazans die seeking aid and from hunger, as burial shrouds in short supply
Updated 5 sec ago

More Gazans die seeking aid and from hunger, as burial shrouds in short supply

More Gazans die seeking aid and from hunger, as burial shrouds in short supply
CAIRO/GAZA: At least 40 Palestinians were killed by Israeli gunfire and airstrikes on Gaza on Monday, including 10 seeking aid, health authorities said, adding another five had died of starvation in what humanitarian agencies warn may be an unfolding famine.
The 10 died in two separate incidents near aid sites belonging to the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, in central and southern Gaza, local medics said. The United Nations says more than 1,000 people have been killed trying to receive aid in the enclave since the GHF began operating in May 2025, most of them shot by Israeli forces operating near GHF sites.
“Everyone who goes there, comes back either with a bag of flour or carried back (on a wooden stretcher) as a martyr, or injured. No one comes back safe,” said 40-year-old Palestinian Bilal Thari.
He was among mourners at Gaza City’s Al Shifa hospital on Monday who had gathered to collect the bodies of their loved ones killed a day earlier by Israeli fire as they sought aid, according to Gaza’s health officials.
At least 13 Palestinians were killed on Sunday while waiting for the arrival of UN aid trucks at the Zikim crossing on the Israeli border with the northern Gaza Strip, the officials added.
At the hospital, some bodies were wrapped in thick patterned blankets because white shrouds, which hold special significance in Islamic burials, were in short supply due to continued Israeli border restrictions and the mounting number of daily deaths, Palestinians said.
“We don’t want war, we want peace, we want this misery to end. We are out on the streets, we all are hungry, we are all in bad shape, women are out there on the streets, we have nothing available for us to live a normal life like all human beings, there’s no life,” Thari told Reuters.
There was no immediate comment by Israel on the incidents of shootings on Sunday and Monday.
Israel blames Hamas for the suffering in Gaza and says it is taking steps for more aid to reach its population, including pausing fighting for part of the day in some areas, air drops, and announcing protected routes for aid convoys.
Deaths from hunger
Meanwhile, five more people died of starvation or malnutrition over the past 24 hours, Gaza’s health ministry said on Monday. The new deaths raised the toll of those dying from hunger to 180, including 93 children, since the war began.
UN agencies have said that airdrops of food are insufficient and that Israel must let in far more aid by land and quickly ease access to it.
COGAT, the Israeli military agency that coordinates aid, said that during the past week, over 23,000 tons of humanitarian aid in 1,200 trucks had entered Gaza but that hundreds of the trucks had yet to be driven to aid distribution hubs by UN and other international organizations.
The Hamas-run Gaza government media office said on Sunday that more than 600 aid trucks had arrived since Israel eased restrictions late in July. However, witnesses and Hamas sources said many of those trucks have been looted by desperate displaced people and armed gangs.
Palestinian and UN officials said Gaza needs around 600 aid trucks to enter per day to meet the humanitarian requirements -the number Israel used to allow into Gaza before the war.
The Gaza war began when Hamas killed 1,200 people and took 251 hostage in an attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, according to Israeli figures. Israel’s offensive has since killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health officials.
According to Israeli officials, 50 hostages now remain in Gaza, only 20 of whom are believed to be alive.

Hunger mounts, cemeteries grow in Sudan’s besieged Al-Fashir

Hunger mounts, cemeteries grow in Sudan’s besieged Al-Fashir
Updated 04 August 2025

Hunger mounts, cemeteries grow in Sudan’s besieged Al-Fashir

Hunger mounts, cemeteries grow in Sudan’s besieged Al-Fashir
  • Many people have resorted to eating hay or ambaz, a type of animal feed made out of peanut shells
  • One advocacy group said even ambaz was running out

Hundreds of thousands of people under siege in the Sudanese army’s last holdout in the western Darfur region are running out of food and coming under constant artillery and drone barrages, while those who flee risk cholera and violent attacks.
Al-Fashir, the capital of North Darfur state, is the biggest remaining frontline in the region between Sudan’s army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), under fire at a pivotal point in a civil war now well into its third year.
“The RSF’s artillery and drones are shelling Al-Fashir morning and night,” one resident told Reuters. Electricity was completely shut down, bakeries were closed and medical supplies scarce, he added.
“The number of people dying has increased every day and the cemeteries are expanding,” he said.
The war between the Sudanese army and the RSF erupted in April 2023 when the former allies clashed over plans to integrate their forces.
The RSF made quick gains in central Sudan, including the capital Khartoum, but the army
pushed them westward this year, leading to an intensification in fighting in Al-Fashir.
The city’s fall would give the RSF control over nearly all of Darfur — a vast region bordering Libya, Chad, Central African Republic and South Sudan — and pave the way for what analysts say could be Sudan’s de facto division.
Besieged along with the army and its allies are hundreds of thousands of Al-Fashir’s residents and people displaced by previous attacks, many living in camps that monitors say are already in famine.
One doctor, who asked not to be named for her safety, said hunger was an even bigger problem than the shelling.
“The children are malnourished, the adults are malnourished. Even I today haven’t had any breakfast because I can’t find anything,” she said.
The RSF has blocked food supplies and aid convoys trying to reach the city have been attacked, locals said. Prices for the goods traders are able to smuggle in cost more than five times the national average.
Many people have resorted to eating hay or ambaz, a type of animal feed made out of peanut shells, residents told Reuters. One advocacy group said even ambaz was running out.
The RSF, which has its roots in the Janjaweed militias accused of atrocities in Darfur in the early 2000s, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

RISKS OF FLIGHT
Many residents fleeing the city have sought shelter in Tawila, about 60 km (40 miles) west. Some of those who made it told Reuters they were attacked by groups of RSF fighters along the way.
“We fled to Shagra (village) first before getting to Tawila and they attacked us again,” 19-year-old Enaam Abdallah said.
“If they find your phone, they take it. Money, they take it. A donkey or anything, they’ll take it. They killed people in front of us and kidnapped girls in front of us,” she said.
On Monday, Emergency Lawyers, a human rights group, said at least 14 people fleeing Al-Fashir were killed and dozens injured when they were attacked in a village along the route.
Tawila is hosting more than half a million displaced people, most of whom have arrived since April, when the RSF stepped up its assault on Al-Fashir and attacked the massive Zamzam displacement camp to the city’s south.
But Tawila offers little aid or shelter, as humanitarian organizations are stretched by foreign aid cuts. People who arrived there told Reuters they receive small amounts of grain, including sorghum and rice, but amounts were varying and insufficient.
Sudan is in the throes of the rainy season, which in combination with poor living conditions and inadequate sanitation has led to an outbreak of cholera.
Since mid-June, aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres has treated 2,500 cases of cholera, a spokesperson told Reuters.
Some 52 people have died from the disease, according to the Coordinating Committee for Displaced People, a Sudanese advocacy group that operates across Darfur.
Vaccines needed to stem the outbreak, if provided, will take time to arrive given the rains.
An assessment by the Norwegian Refugee Council found that only 10 percent of people in Tawila had reliable access to water, and even fewer had access to latrines. Most families report eating one meal a day or less, the organization said.
“We don’t have houses to protect us from the rain and we don’t have tarps. We have to wait for the rain to stop for the children to sleep,” mother-of-four Huda Ali said as she sat among roofless shelters made of straw.
She said she tried to make sure her children washed their hands and only ate food that had been properly heated.
The United Nations called for a humanitarian pause to fighting in Al-Fashir last month as the rainy season began, but the RSF rejected the call.
Fighting has also raged across Sudan’s
Kordofan region,which borders Darfur, as the two sides fight to demarcate clear zones of control amid stalled mediation efforts.


Kuwait finance minister resigns, state news agency says

Kuwait finance minister resigns, state news agency says
Updated 1 min 50 sec ago

Kuwait finance minister resigns, state news agency says

Kuwait finance minister resigns, state news agency says
  • Sabeeh Al-Mukhaizeem, who is the electricity, water and renewable energy minister, will serve as acting minister of finance, Kuna said

KUWAIT: Kuwait Finance Minister Nora Al-Fassam has resigned from her position, state news agency Kuna reported on Monday, without giving reasons for her resignation.
Sabeeh Al-Mukhaizeem, who is the electricity, water and renewable energy minister, will serve as acting minister of finance, Kuna said.


Sudan paramilitaries kill 14 civilians fleeing besieged city: monitor

Sudan paramilitaries kill 14 civilians fleeing besieged city: monitor
Updated 04 August 2025

Sudan paramilitaries kill 14 civilians fleeing besieged city: monitor

Sudan paramilitaries kill 14 civilians fleeing besieged city: monitor

KHARTOUM: Sudanese paramilitary fighters have killed at least 14 civilians trying to flee a besieged city in Darfur, a rights group said Monday, more than 27 months into their war against the army.
The Emergency Lawyers, which documents atrocities in the war between the Rapid Support Forces and the Sudanese army, said that “dozens more were injured and an unknown number of civilians detained” in the paramilitary attack on Saturday on the outskirts of El-Fasher city, in the western Darfur region.


Lebanon president promises justice 5 years after Beirut port blast

Lebanon president promises justice 5 years after Beirut port blast
Updated 04 August 2025

Lebanon president promises justice 5 years after Beirut port blast

Lebanon president promises justice 5 years after Beirut port blast
  • The blast on August 4, 2020 was one of the world’s largest non-nuclear explosions, devastating swathes of the Lebanese capital, killing more than 220 people and injuring over 6,500

BEIRUT: Lebanese President Joseph Aoun on Monday vowed that “justice is coming,” five years after a catastrophic explosion at Beirut’s port for which nobody has been held to account.
The blast on August 4, 2020 was one of the world’s largest non-nuclear explosions, devastating swathes of the Lebanese capital, killing more than 220 people and injuring over 6,500.
The explosion was triggered by a fire in a warehouse where tons of ammonium nitrate fertilizer had been stored haphazardly for years after arriving by ship, despite repeated warnings to senior officials.
Aoun said that the Lebanese state “is committed to uncovering the whole truth, no matter the obstacles or how high the positions” involved.
“The law applies to all, without exception,” Aoun said in a statement.
Monday has been declared a day of national mourning, and rallies demanding justice are planned later in the day, converging on the port.
“The blood of your loved ones will not be in vain,” the president told victims’ families, adding: “Justice is coming, accountability is coming.”
After more than a two-year impasse following political and judicial obstruction, investigating judge Tarek Bitar has finished questioning defendants and suspects, a judicial official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
Bitar is waiting for some procedures to be completed and for a response to requests last month to several Arab and European countries for “information on specific incidents,” the official added, without elaborating.
The judge will then finalize the investigation and refer the file to the public prosecution for its opinion before he issues an indictment decision, the official said.
President Aoun said that “we are working with all available means to ensure the investigations are completed with transparency and integrity.”
Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, a former International Court of Justice judge, said on Sunday that knowing the truth and ensuring accountability were national issues, decrying decades of official impunity.
Bitar resumed his inquiry after Aoun and Salam took office this year pledging to uphold judicial independence, after the balance of power shifted following a devastating war between Israel and militant group Hezbollah.
Bitar’s probe stalled after the Iran-backed group, long a dominant force in Lebanese politics but weakened by the latest war, had accused him of bias and demanded his removal.
Mariana Fodoulian from the association of victims’ families said that “for five years, officials have been trying to evade accountability, always thinking they are above the law.”
“We’re not asking for anything more than the truth,” she told AFP.
“We won’t stop until we get comprehensive justice.”
On Sunday, Culture Minister Ghassan Salame said the port’s gutted and partially collapsed wheat silos would be included on a list of historic buildings.
Victims’ families have long demanded their preservation as a memorial of the catastrophe.