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At least 31 Palestinians killed by Israeli fire while heading to Gaza aid hub

Update At least 31 Palestinians killed by Israeli fire while heading to Gaza aid hub
Displaced Palestinians push a cart with bodies after people were reportedly hit by Israeli fire as they headed to a food distribution center in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on June 1, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 02 June 2025

At least 31 Palestinians killed by Israeli fire while heading to Gaza aid hub

At least 31 Palestinians killed by Israeli fire while heading to Gaza aid hub
  • Witnesses say Israeli forces fired on crowds around a kilometer from an aid site run by an Israeli-backed foundation

RAFAH, Gaza Strip: At least 31 people were killed and scores wounded Sunday as they were on their way to receive food in the Gaza Strip, according to a Red Cross field hospital and multiple witnesses. The witnesses said Israeli forces fired on crowds around a kilometer from an aid site run by an Israeli-backed foundation.

The military did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The foundation said in a statement that it delivered aid “without incident” early Sunday and has denied previous accounts of chaos and gunfire around its sites, which are in Israeli military zones where independent access is limited.

Officials at the field hospital said at least 21 people were killed and another 175 people were wounded, without saying who opened fire on them. An Associated Press reporter saw dozens of people being treated at the hospital.

New aid system marred by chaos

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation ‘s distribution of aid has been marred by chaos, and multiple witnesses have said Israeli troops fired on crowds near the delivery sites. Before Sunday, at least six people had been killed and more than 50 wounded according to local health officials.

The foundation says the private security contractors guarding its sites have not fired on the crowds, while the Israeli military has acknowledged firing warning shots on previous occasions.

The foundation said in a statement that it distributed 16 truckloads of aid early Sunday “without incident,” and dismissed what it referred to as “false reporting about deaths, mass injuries and chaos.”

‘The scene was horrible’

Thousands of people headed toward the distribution site hours before dawn, congregating at the Flag Roundabout, about a kilometer (1,000 yards) away, as they waited for the site to open, according to witnesses. They said Israeli forces ordered people to disperse and come back later – before opening fire.

“There was fire from all directions, from naval warships, from tanks and drones,” said Amr Abu Teiba, who was in the crowd.

He said he saw at least 10 bodies with gunshot wounds and several other wounded people, including women. People used carts to ferry the dead and wounded to the field hospital. “The scene was horrible,” he said.

Ibrahim Abu Saoud, another eyewitness, provided a nearly identical account. He said the military fired around 300 meters (yards) away.

Abu Saoud said he saw many people with gunshot wounds, including a young man who he said had died at the scene. “We weren’t able to help him,” he said.

Mohammed Abu Teaima, 33, said he saw Israeli forces open fire and kill his cousin and another woman as they were heading toward the distribution site. He said his cousin was shot in his chest and died at the scene. Many others were wounded, including his brother-in-law, he said.

“They opened heavy fire directly toward us,” he said as he was waiting outside the Red Cross field hospital for word on his wounded relative.

The hub is part of a controversial new aid system

Israel and the United States say the new system is aimed at preventing Hamas from siphoning off assistance. Israel has not provided any evidence of systematic diversion, and the UN denies it has occurred.

UN agencies and major aid groups have refused to work with the new system, saying it violates humanitarian principles because it allows Israel to control who receives aid and forces people to relocate to distribution sites, risking yet more mass displacement in the territory.

The UN system has struggled to bring in aid after Israel slightly eased its total blockade of the territory last month. Those groups say Israeli restrictions, the breakdown of law and order, and widespread looting make it extremely difficult to deliver aid to Gaza’s roughly 2 million Palestinians.

Experts have warned that the territory is at risk of famine if more aid is not brought in.

The war began when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting 251. They are still holding 58 hostages, around a third of them believed to be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire agreements or other deals.

Israel’s military campaign has killed over 54,000 people, mostly women and children, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not say how many of the dead were civilians or combatants. The offensive has destroyed vast areas of the territory, displaced around 90 percent of its population and left people almost completely reliant on international aid.


Far-right minister says Israel should reoccupy Gaza

Far-right minister says Israel should reoccupy Gaza
Updated 4 sec ago

Far-right minister says Israel should reoccupy Gaza

Far-right minister says Israel should reoccupy Gaza
  • Bezalel Smotrich evoked the 2005 withdrawal in which Israel evacuated 8,000 settlers and its soldiers from the Gaza Strip
  • Several Israeli far-right groups will march Wednesday under the slogan “20 years later, we’re coming back to the Gaza Strip”

JERUSALEM: Israel should reoccupy Gaza rather than negotiate with Hamas, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said Tuesday at an event marking the 20th anniversary of Israel’s withdrawal of settlers from the Palestinian territory.
“Gaza is an integral part of Israel. How to move on to a tangible plan (for resettlement)? We need to need think about it, and above all we must succeed,” said Smotrich, who lives in a settlement in the occupied West Bank.
Smotrich, who had threatened to leave the government if it allowed aid into Gaza, was on the back foot a day after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu authorized new humanitarian deliveries.
“If I’m still in the government despite everything, it’s probably because I have good reasons to believe positive things are about to happen,” the head of the Religious Zionism Party said.
Smotrich evoked the 2005 withdrawal in which Israel evacuated 8,000 settlers and its soldiers from the Gaza Strip.
“Who could have thought 20 years ago that Gaza would be like it is now?” he asked the audience, before suggesting that conditions in the territory now favored a return of Israeli settlers.
During a meeting at the Israeli parliament last week, elected officials and ministers were presented with a plan for the construction of new settlements.
“This is doable and realistic. I’m very optimistic. Conquering Gaza and settling it as an integral part of the State of Israel,” Smotrich said at the time.
Fellow far-right minister Yitzhak Wasserlauf echoed his comment. “This is the price that the terrorists must pay, and God willing, as soon as possible,” he said.
Several Israeli far-right groups will march Wednesday under the slogan “20 years later, we’re coming back to the Gaza Strip.”
Gaza’s Hamas government reacted angrily to Smotrich’s remarks, calling them “an explicit threat to continue the crimes of genocide and forced displacement against our people.”


Israeli public figures urge ‘crippling sanctions’ on their country amid Gaza famine

Israeli public figures urge ‘crippling sanctions’ on their country amid Gaza famine
Updated 2 min 22 sec ago

Israeli public figures urge ‘crippling sanctions’ on their country amid Gaza famine

Israeli public figures urge ‘crippling sanctions’ on their country amid Gaza famine
  • Group of 31 signatories to letter includes academics, artists and public intellectuals
  • Appeal follows mounting international condemnation of Israel’s conduct in the strip

LONDON: High-profile Israeli public figures have called for “crippling sanctions” to be launched against Israel by the international community to avert further disaster in Gaza.

The appeal came in a letter to The Guardian by a group of 31 signatories, including academics, artists and public intellectuals.

The letter was signed by Academy Award recipient Yuval Abraham; former Attorney General of Israel Michael Ben-Yair; former Parliament Speaker Avraham Burg; and winners of the Israel Prize, the country’s top cultural award, among others.

Israel is “starving the people of Gaza to death and contemplating the forced removal of millions of Palestinians from the strip,” the letter says.

Its signatories are esteemed figures in journalism, science, academia and more, representing a significant shift in Israeli public life, as more prominent figures begin to criticize the war in Gaza.

The letter’s endorsement of severe international sanctions against Israel is also taboo; politicians in the country have called for the targeting of those who promote such measures.

Israel’s war in Gaza, which is reaching the two-year mark, is also generating further public angst and criticism of the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The wider Jewish diaspora is engaged in renewed debate over the trajectory and morality of the war.

This week, two of Israel’s top human rights groups, ’T and Physicians for Human Rights Israel, published reports that described their country’s actions in Gaza as “genocidal.”

Tuesday’s letter says: “The international community must impose crippling sanctions on Israel until it ends this brutal campaign and implements a permanent ceasefire.

“No one should be unaffected by the pervasive hunger experienced by thousands of Gazans. No one should spend the bulk of their time arguing technical definitions between starvation and pervasive hunger.

“The situation is dire, and it is deadly. Nor should we accept arguments that because Hamas is the primary reason many Gazans are either starving or on the verge of starving, that the Jewish state is not also culpable in this human disaster. The primary moral response must begin with anguished hearts in the face of such a large-scale human tragedy.

“Blocking food, water, medicine, and power — especially for children — is indefensible,” it said. “Let us not allow our grief to harden into indifference, nor our love for Israel to blind us to the cries of the vulnerable. Let us rise to the moral challenge of this moment.”

Earlier this month, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, in comments to The Guardian, condemned his country’s planned “humanitarian city” in southern Gaza as a concentration camp.

Forcing Palestinians inside the zone from the rest of the enclave would amount to ethnic cleansing, he added.

Netanyahu and his government continue to deny the existence of famine in Gaza, or any potential Israeli links to the disaster unfolding in the territory.


Hunger and malnutrition levels in Gaza pass limits that define famine, UN warns

Hunger and malnutrition levels in Gaza pass limits that define famine, UN warns
Updated 20 min 3 sec ago

Hunger and malnutrition levels in Gaza pass limits that define famine, UN warns

Hunger and malnutrition levels in Gaza pass limits that define famine, UN warns
  • Babies and young children literally wasting away from hunger as 39% of Gazans go entire days without food
  • More than 500,000 people enduring famine conditions; the rest face emergency levels of hunger
  • People starving not because food is unavailable but because access is blocked, Food and Agriculture Organization says

NEW YORK CITY: Gaza is facing a catastrophic hunger crisis, with food insecurity and malnutrition reaching levels that meet the official thresholds for famine, UN agencies warned on Tuesday.

An alert from the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, a system for determining the scale and nature of a food crisis, said that two of the three official indicators used to determine famine conditions are now present in parts of the Gaza Strip.

The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization, World Food Programme and UNICEF warned that time is rapidly running out to launch a full-scale humanitarian response.

“Gaza is now on the brink of a full-scale famine,” said the FAO’s director-general, Qu Dongyu.

“People are starving not because food is unavailable but because access is blocked, food systems have collapsed, and families cannot survive. The right to food is a basic human right.”

The agencies pointed to relentless conflict, the breakdown of essential services, and severe restrictions on aid deliveries as the key drivers of the crisis. Humanitarian access remains limited, despite the partial reopening of border crossings, and aid flows remain far below what is required to support Gaza’s more than 2 million residents.

Food consumption, a core indicator of famine, has dropped sharply since May. New data shows that 39 percent of Gazans go entire days without food. More than 500,000 people are enduring famine-like conditions, while the rest face emergency levels of hunger.

Acute malnutrition, a second indicator of famine, is surging. In Gaza City, rates among children under 5 years old have quadrupled in just two months, reaching 16.5 percent.

UNICEF warned that all 320,000 under-5s in Gaza are now at risk of acute malnutrition, with thousands already suffering from its most deadly form. Most nutritional services have collapsed, and infants lack access to clean water, baby formula and life-saving therapeutic food.

“Babies and young children are literally wasting away from hunger,” said UNICEF’s executive director, Catherine Russell.

“We need immediate, safe and unimpeded humanitarian access. Without it, preventable child deaths will continue.”

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Palestinians in Gaza were enduring a humanitarian catastrophe of epic proportions.

“This is not a warning, it is a reality unfolding before our eyes,” he said. “The current trickle of aid must become an ocean, with food, water, medicine and fuel flowing freely and without obstruction.

“This nightmare must end. Ending this worst-case scenario will require the best efforts of all parties, now.

“We need an immediate and permanent humanitarian ceasefire, the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages, and full, unfettered humanitarian access across Gaza. This is a test of our shared humanity — a test we cannot afford to fail.”

Reports of starvation-related deaths are increasing, though comprehensive data is difficult to gather as the healthcare system in Gaza teeters on the verge of total collapse after nearly two years of conflict.

The World Food Programme’s executive director, Cindy McCain, said waiting for a formal declaration of famine before acting would be “unconscionable.”

She called for Gaza to be “flooded with food aid immediately and without obstruction” and warned that “people are already dying of malnutrition; the longer we wait, the higher the death toll will rise.”

According to UN data, Gaza needs at least 62,000 tonnes of food and nutritional aid every month. The return of commercial food imports is also critical to dietary diversity and the restoration of local markets.

The agencies also stressed the urgent need for fuel and water supplies and infrastructure repairs to support humanitarian operations and prevent further deaths.

In their joint statement, the FAO, WFP and UNICEF called for an immediate and sustained ceasefire agreement, mass humanitarian access using all border crossings, the restoration of basic services, and international investment in efforts to rebuild Gaza’s food systems and agricultural capacity.

“The world must act now,” they said. “The lives of hundreds of thousands — especially children — depend on it.”


US pressures Lebanon to issue cabinet decision to disarm Hezbollah before talks continue

US pressures Lebanon to issue cabinet decision to disarm Hezbollah before talks continue
Updated 21 min 36 sec ago

US pressures Lebanon to issue cabinet decision to disarm Hezbollah before talks continue

US pressures Lebanon to issue cabinet decision to disarm Hezbollah before talks continue
  • Hezbollah refuses full disarmament, demands Israel withdraw first
  • US envoy Barrack won’t visit Beirut without disarmament commitment

BEIRUT: Washington is ramping up pressure on Beirut to swiftly issue a formal cabinet decision committing to disarm Hezbollah before talks can resume on a halt to Israel’s military operations in Lebanon, five sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Without a public commitment from Lebanese ministers, the US will no longer dispatch US envoy Thomas Barrack to Beirut for negotiations with Lebanese officials, or pressure Israel either to stop airstrikes or pull its troops from south Lebanon, according to the sources, who include two Lebanese officials, two diplomats and a Lebanese source familiar with the matter.
The US State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Washington and Beirut have been in talks for nearly six weeks on a US roadmap to fully disarm the militant Lebanese Hezbollah party in exchange for Israel to end its strikes and withdraw its troops from five points in southern Lebanon.
The original proposal included a condition that Lebanon’s government pass a cabinet decision pledging to disarm Hezbollah. Hezbollah has publicly refused to hand over its arsenal in full, but the group has privately weighed scaling it back.
The group, designated a terrorist organization by the US and much of the West, has also told Lebanese officials that Israel must take the first step by withdrawing its troops and stopping drone strikes on Hezbollah fighters and arms depots.
Hezbollah’s main ally, Lebanese speaker of parliament Nabih Berri, asked the US to ensure that Israel halt its strikes as a first step, in order to fully implement the ceasefire agreed last year that ended months of fighting between Hezbollah and Israel, according to four of the sources.
Israel rejected Berri’s proposal late last week, the four sources said. There was no immediate response from the Israeli prime minister’s office to questions from Reuters on the issue.
The US then began insisting that a cabinet vote take place imminently, all the sources said.
“The US is saying there’s no more Barrack, no more papers back and forth — the council of ministers should take a decision and then we can keep discussing. They cannot wait any longer,” the Lebanese source said.
The source and the Lebanese officials said Prime Minister Nawaf Salam would seek to hold a session in the coming days. Barrack met Salam in Beirut last week and said Washington cannot “compel” Israel to do anything.
In a post on X after his visit, Barrack said that “as long as Hezbollah retains arms, words will not suffice. The government and Hizballah need to fully commit and act now in order to not consign the Lebanese people to the stumbling status quo.”
All the sources said that Lebanon’s rulers fear that a failure to issue a clear commitment to disarm Hezbollah could trigger escalated Israeli strikes, including on Beirut.


Palestinian official says Hamas leader’s speech ‘offends’ Egypt, Jordan

Palestinian official says Hamas leader’s speech ‘offends’ Egypt, Jordan
Updated 49 min 46 sec ago

Palestinian official says Hamas leader’s speech ‘offends’ Egypt, Jordan

Palestinian official says Hamas leader’s speech ‘offends’ Egypt, Jordan
  • Rawhi Fattuh said Hamas leadership should recognize the Egyptian and Jordanian roles in supporting Palestinians in Gaza and rejecting Israeli displacement plans
  • He added that Khalil Al-Hayya’s speech demonstrates ‘the political confusion that Hamas is experiencing’

LONDON: Rawhi Fattuh, the chairman of the Palestinian National Council, criticized the speech by Hamas’ top leader in exile, Khalil Al-Hayya, as reflecting the internal crisis and political confusion faced by the armed group.

Fattuh said that Al-Hayya’s claims during a televised speech on Sunday against Egypt and Jordan are an attempt to export the group’s internal crisis to regional countries.

“The attacks on Egypt and Jordan demonstrate the political confusion that Hamas is experiencing,” he said, according to Wafa news agency.

He added that the speech reflects a desperate attempt to shift blame away from Hamas’ “failed policies and uncalculated adventures” that have worsened the suffering of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

Al-Hayya questioned Egypt’s role in stopping the mass starvation caused by the Israeli regime in Gaza, stating: “Are your brothers in Gaza dying of hunger while they are at your border, so close to you?”

Al-Hayya also urged Jordanians to continue their “popular uprising” to stop the Israeli atrocities in Gaza. This prompted a response from Amman stating that “the Jordanian people act independently and are not influenced by external directives or Palestinian factions.”

Fattuh said on Tuesday that Egypt and Jordan have been steadfast in their support for Palestinians in Gaza and against the Israeli displacement plans.

“It would have been more important under Hamas leadership to recognize this honorable role and appreciate the sacrifices, rather than to offend them with hostile statements that do not reflect the Palestinian national interest,” he said.

He held Hamas responsible for leaving almost 2 million Palestinians in Gaza as victims of Israeli atrocities, the monopoly of merchants, and deteriorating living conditions.

“These statements benefit the (Israeli) occupation,” he said, asserting that Palestinians refuse to engage in “imaginary battles” and stand with their Arab brethren.

Neither Hamas nor Islamic Jihad is part of the Palestine Liberation Organization, and both groups have long rejected calls to join what Palestinians consider their sole political representative since the 1960s.

The armed group has controlled the Gaza Strip since 2007 following clashes with the Palestinian Authority forces, which resulted in the deaths of nearly 700 Palestinians, according to an official tally.

Since then, it has engaged in several conflicts with Israel, the most recent being the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks, which resulted in the deaths and abduction of several hundred people and prompted an ongoing Israeli war on Gaza, which has killed over 60,000 Palestinians.