logo
Zionists kill 40 near aid distribution site in Gaza

Zionists kill 40 near aid distribution site in Gaza

Kuwait Times18-06-2025
'It turned out to be a trap,' says survivor
CAIRO: Zionist fire killed at least 40 people, half of them near an aid distribution site operated by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation on Monday, the territory's health ministry said, as UN officials denounced Zionist-backed aid delivery methods. Medics said at least 20 people were killed and 200 others wounded near an aid distribution site in Rafah, the latest in daily mass shootings that have killed hundreds of Palestinians trying to reach food since Zionist entity imposed a new distribution system after partly lifting a near three-month total blockade.
Zionist entity has put responsibility for distributing much of the aid it allows into Gaza into the hands of a new US-backed group, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which operates three sites in areas guarded by Zionist troops. The United Nations has rejected the plan, saying GHF distribution is inadequate, dangerous and violates humanitarian impartiality principles.
There was no immediate comment from the military about Monday's reports of shootings. In previous incidents it has occasionally acknowledged troops opening fire near aid sites, while blaming militants for provoking the violence. Relatives arrived at Nasser Hospital to mourn the dead. Women and children wept beside bodies wrapped in white shrouds. 'We went there thinking we would get aid to feed our children, but it turned out to be a trap, a killing. I advise everyone: don't go there,' said Ahmed Fayad, one of those who tried to reach aid on Monday.
'Lethal distribution system'
Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the United Nations Palestinian refugees agency UNRWA, said in a post on X: 'Scores of people have been killed & injured in the past days, including of starving people trying to get some food from a lethal distribution system.' Before the new system was set up, aid had been distributed to Gaza's 2.3 million residents mainly by UN agencies such as UNRWA, which employ thousands of staff inside Gaza and operate hundreds of sites across the breadth of the enclave.
Zionist entity says it has had to crack down on distribution because Hamas fighters were diverting food aid. The militants deny this and say Zionist entity is using hunger as a weapon. Lazzarini said Zionist entity had not lifted restrictions on UN agencies including UNRWA bringing in aid, despite an abundance of assistance ready to be moved into the enclave. On Sunday, COGAT, the military aid coordination agency, said that this week it had facilitated the entry of 292 trucks with humanitarian aid from the United Nations and the international community, including food and flour, into Gaza.
It said the military would continue to permit the entry of humanitarian aid while ensuring it did not reach Hamas. Before Monday's incident, the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said that at least 300 people had so far been killed, and more than 2,600 wounded, near aid distribution sites since the GHF began operations. In Geneva, Volker Turk, UN rights chief, told the UN Human Rights Council on Monday that Zionist entity had 'weaponized' food in Gaza. He repeated a call for investigations into deadly attacks near the GHF distribution sites. — Reuters
'(Zionist entity's) means and methods of warfare are inflicting horrifying, unconscionable suffering on Palestinians in Gaza,' said Turk. 'Disturbing, dehumanizing rhetoric from senior government officials is reminiscent of the gravest of crimes,' he added. On Sunday, at least five people were killed as thousands of Palestinians approached two GHF distribution sites in the central and southern the enclave. The GHF said in a statement that it resumed food deliveries on Sunday, distributing more than two million meals from its three distribution sites without incident.
The war in Gaza erupted 20 months ago after militants raided Zionist entity and took 251 hostages and killed 1,200 people, most of them civilians, on October 7, 2023, Zionist entity's single deadliest day. Zionist military campaign since has killed nearly 55,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to health authorities in Gaza, and flattened much of the densely populated strip. Most of the population is displaced, and widespread malnutrition is a significant concern. — Reuters
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Children starve to death in Gaza, UN slams ‘horror show'
Children starve to death in Gaza, UN slams ‘horror show'

Kuwait Times

timea day ago

  • Kuwait Times

Children starve to death in Gaza, UN slams ‘horror show'

GAZA: The head of Gaza's largest hospital on Tuesday said 21 children have died due to malnutrition and starvation in the Palestinian territory in the past three days, while the Zionist entity pressed a devastating assault. Health authorities announced 77 Palestinians were killed and 376 others were injured in the past 24 hours as a result of the Zionist occupation forces' continued war of extermination on the Gaza Strip. The Zionist military campaign in Gaza has killed 59,106 Palestinians, mostly civilians. Kuwait slams Zionist blockade Kuwait reiterated its condemnation and denunciation of the unjust blockade imposed by the Zionist occupation on Gaza Strip, a statement issued by the ministry of foreign affairs said Monday. The statement added the unjust blockage is a flagrant violation of international law and international humanitarian law, and disregards relevant international legitimacy resolutions, particularly Security Council resolutions, including Resolution 2417, which condemns the use of starvation of civilians as a method of warfare in conflict situations. The ministry expressed the Kuwait's condemnation of these grave and brutal crimes, including the killing of food seekers. The statement stressed the need for the international community and the Security Council to fulfill their legal and moral responsibilities and work to ensure the implementation of UN resolutions, lift the blockade imposed on the people in Gaza Strip and to allow the immediate entry of humanitarian aid. The ministry also called to halt the genocide and systematic starvation of the Palestinian people. Gaza's population of more than two million people is facing severe shortages of food and other essentials, with residents frequently killed as they try to collect humanitarian aid at a handful of distribution points. 'Twenty-one children have died due to malnutrition and starvation in various areas across the Gaza Strip,' Mohammed Abu Salmiya, the director of Al-Shifa Medical Complex in Gaza, told reporters. Abu Salmiya told reporters that new cases of malnutrition and starvation were arriving at Gaza's remaining functioning hospitals 'every moment'. 'We are heading towards alarming numbers of deaths due to the starvation inflicted on the people of Gaza,' he added. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called Gaza a 'horror show' in a speech on Tuesday, with 'a level of death and destruction without parallel in recent times'. In Gaza City, six-week-old Yousef's lifeless body lay limp on a hospital table, his skin stretched over protruding ribs and a bandage where a drip had been inserted into his tiny arm. Doctors said the cause of death was starvation. Yousef's family couldn't find baby formula to feed him, said his uncle, Adham Al-Safadi. 'You can't get milk anywhere, and if you do find any it's $100 for a tub,' he said, looking at his dead nephew. Other Palestinians who died of hunger over the last day were also children, including 13-year-old Abdulhamid Al-Ghalban, who died in a hospital in the southern city of Khan Yunis. For the first time since the war began, Palestinian officials say dozens are now dying of hunger. At least 101 people are known to have died of hunger during the conflict, according to Palestinian officials, including 80 children, most of them in just the last few weeks. The Norwegian Refugee Council, which supported hundreds of thousands of Gazans in the first year of the war, said its aid stocks were now depleted and some of its own staff were starving. 'Our last tent, our last food parcel, our last relief items have been distributed. There is nothing left,' its director Jan Egeland told Reuters. '(The Zionist entity) is not yielding. They just want to paralyze our work,' he said. The head of the UN Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA said on Tuesday that its staff, as well as doctors and humanitarian workers, were fainting on duty in Gaza due to hunger and exhaustion. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said on Tuesday that images of civilians killed during the distribution of aid were 'unbearable' and urged the Zionist entity to deliver on pledges to improve the situation. On Tuesday, men and boys lugged sacks of flour past destroyed buildings and tarpaulins in Gaza City, grabbing what food they could from aid warehouses. 'We haven't eaten for five days,' said Mohammed Jundia. 'Hospitals are already overwhelmed by the number of casualties from gunfire. They can't provide much more help for hunger-related symptoms because of food and medicine shortages,' said Khalil Al-Deqran, a spokesperson for the health ministry. Deqran said some 600,000 people were suffering from malnutrition, including at least 60,000 pregnant women. Symptoms among those going hungry include dehydration and anemia, he said. Baby formula in particular is in critically short supply, according to aid groups, doctors and residents. Chaotic scenes have become frequent at aid distribution areas since the US- and Zionist-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation began overseeing aid operations. The UN on Tuesday said Zionist forces had killed over 1,000 Palestinians trying to get food aid since the GHF began its operations. 'As of July 21, we have recorded 1,054 people killed in Gaza while trying to get food; 766 of them were killed in the vicinity of GHF sites and 288 near UN and other humanitarian organizations' aid convoys,' UN human rights office spokesman Thameen Al-Kheetan told AFP. Earlier Tuesday, Gaza's civil defense agency said Zionist strikes had killed 15 people, after the World Health Organization said the Zionist entity attacked its facilities amid its expanding ground operations. Agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP Zionist strikes on the Al-Shati camp west of Gaza City had killed at least 13 people and wounded more than 50. Most of Gaza's population has been displaced at least once during the conflict and the Al-Shati camp — on the Mediterranean coast — hosts thousands of people displaced from the north in tents and makeshift shelters. Raed Bakr, 30, lives with his three children and said he heard 'a massive explosion' at about 1:40 am on Tuesday (2240 GMT Monday), which blew their tent away. 'I felt like I was in a nightmare. Fire, dust, smoke and body parts flying through the air, dirt everywhere. The children were screaming,' Bakr, whose wife was killed last year, told AFP. Reports of the latest death toll came as the Roman Catholic church's most senior cleric in the Holy Land said the humanitarian situation in Gaza was 'morally unacceptable'. 'We have seen men holding out in the sun for hours in the hope of a simple meal,' Latin Patriarch Pierbattista Pizzaballa told a news conference in Jerusalem after visiting Gaza. His visit came after a Zionist army strike on the only Catholic church in the territory killed three people last week, prompting Pope Leo XIV to condemn the 'barbarity' of the war and the 'indiscriminate use of force'. The World Health Organization also sharply criticized the Zionist military. The UN agency's chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus accused troops of entering its staff residence, and forcing women and children to evacuate, as they handcuffed, stripped and interrogated male staff at gunpoint. The latest criticism of the Zionist entity came as its forces expanded ground operations in Deir el-Balah following intense shelling of the area in central Gaza on Monday. The civil defence agency's Bassal said two people were killed in Deir el-Balah. Guterres said 'devastation is being layered upon devastation' by the offensive. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) estimated that between 50,000 and 80,000 people were living in the area, which until now had been considered relatively safe. Some 30,000 were living in displacement sites. OCHA said nearly 88 percent of the entire Gaza Strip was now either under evacuation orders or within Zionist militarized zones, forcing the population of 2.4 million into an ever-shrinking space. – Agencies

Kuwait praised for progressive steps in disability rights
Kuwait praised for progressive steps in disability rights

Kuwait Times

timea day ago

  • Kuwait Times

Kuwait praised for progressive steps in disability rights

KUWAIT: Chairwoman of the Kuwaiti Association for Parents of Persons with Disabilities and member of the United Nations Committee of Experts on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Rehab Borsley, has lauded recent decisions granting persons with disabilities — who are children of Kuwaiti women — lifelong treatment as Kuwaiti citizens. She described the move as a significant victory for the rights of persons with disabilities and a direct implementation of Article 3 of Kuwait's Disability Law No. 8 of 2010. In a press statement, Borsley emphasized that these decisions go beyond fulfilling legal obligations, representing a reaffirmation of Kuwait's humanitarian leadership in the field of disability rights. 'Kuwait has long enacted progressive laws that not only ensure rights and protections for persons with disabilities, but in many aspects, exceed the provisions of the International Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities,' she said. Borsley underscored the importance of continued collaboration between government institutions and civil society organizations to support and empower persons with disabilities. 'We must intensify efforts to provide an inclusive and supportive environment that enhances the quality of life for people with disabilities and ensures their integration as active members of society,' she noted. She also pointed to the global benchmarks set by the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of 2015 and the forthcoming Third Global Disability Summit in Germany in 2025, stressing the need for Kuwait to continue its pioneering efforts in line with these international aspirations. Borsley highlighted Kuwait's ongoing work to improve healthcare, social services, education, culture, and sports opportunities for people with disabilities, while also strengthening their psychological and social well-being. She affirmed that these efforts aim to unlock their full potential, empower them to achieve self-realization, and create an enabling environment that recognizes them as essential partners in building a 'New Kuwait.'

Zionists butcher 130 in Gaza amid ethnic cleansing, starvation
Zionists butcher 130 in Gaza amid ethnic cleansing, starvation

Kuwait Times

time2 days ago

  • Kuwait Times

Zionists butcher 130 in Gaza amid ethnic cleansing, starvation

GAZA: Gaza's civil defense agency said Zionist forces opened fire on crowds of Palestinians trying to collect humanitarian aid in the war-torn Palestinian territory on Sunday, killing 73 people and wounding dozens more. Health authorities in Gaza Strip announced on Sunday that 130 Palestinians were martyred and 495 others injured over the past 24 hours as the Zionist occupation continues its genocidal war on Gaza. At least 67 were killed as truckloads of aid arrived in the north, while six others were reported shot near an aid point close to Rafah in the south, where dozens of people lost their lives just 24 hours earlier. The UN World Food Program said its 25-truck convoy carrying food aid 'encountered massive crowds of hungry civilians which came under gunfire' near Gaza City, soon after it crossed from the Zionist entity and cleared checkpoints. The Zionist military said soldiers had fired warning shots 'to remove an immediate threat posed to them' as thousands gathered near Gaza City. Deaths of civilians seeking aid have become a regular occurrence in Gaza, with the authorities blaming Zionist fire as crowds facing chronic shortages of food and other essentials flock in huge numbers to aid centers. The UN said earlier this month that nearly 800 aid-seekers had been killed since late May, including on the routes of aid convoys. In Gaza City, Qasem Abu Khater, 36, told AFP he had rushed to try to get a bag of flour but instead found a desperate crowd of thousands and 'deadly overcrowding and pushing'. 'The tanks were firing shells randomly at us and (Zionist) sniper soldiers were shooting as if they were hunting animals in a forest,' he added. 'Dozens of people were martyred right before my eyes and no one could save anyone.' Civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP the death toll was 67 and expected to rise while the WFP condemned violence against civilians seeking aid as 'completely unacceptable'. '(Zionist) forces' gunfire' was responsible for the deaths in the south, he added. The Zionist military campaign has killed 58,895 Palestinians in Gaza, mostly civilians. GAZA: An injured boy reacts as he sits on the ground by other men who were all wounded while queueing for aid, at Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on July 20, 2025. - AFP Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday expressed his regret to Pope Leo XIV after what he described as a 'stray' munition killed three people sheltering at the Holy Family Church in Gaza City. At the end of the Angelus prayer on Sunday, the pope slammed the 'barbarity' of the Gaza war and called for peace, days after the Zionist strike on the territory's only Catholic church. The strike was part of the 'ongoing military attacks against the civilian population and places of worship in Gaza', he added. 'I appeal to the international community to observe humanitarian law and respect the obligation to protect civilians, as well as the prohibition of collective punishment, the indiscriminate use of force, and the forced displacement of populations.' The Catholic Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem, Pierbattista Pizzaballa, held mass at the Gaza church on Sunday after travelling to the devastated territory in a rare visit on Friday. Most of Gaza's population of more than two million people have been displaced at least once during the war and there have been repeated evacuation calls across large parts of the coastal enclave. On Sunday morning, the Zionist military ordered residents and displaced Palestinians sheltering in the Deir el-Balah area to move south immediately. The Zionist entity was 'expanding its activities' against Hamas around Deir el-Balah, 'where it has not operated before', the military's Arabic-language spokesman Avichay Adraee said on X. Dozens of families began leaving their homes, carrying some of their belongings. Hundreds of thousands of displaced Gazans have been sheltering in the Deir al-Balah area. The announcement prompted concern from families of Zionist captives that the Zionist offensive could harm their loved ones. Much of Gaza has been reduced to a wasteland during more than 21 months of war and there are fears of accelerating starvation. Palestinian health officials said hundreds of people could soon die as hospitals were inundated with patients suffering from dizziness and exhaustion due to the scarcity of food and a collapse in aid deliveries. 'We warn that hundreds of people whose bodies have wasted away are at risk of imminent death due to hunger,' said the health ministry, which is controlled by Hamas. Gaza residents said it was becoming impossible to find essential food such as flour. The health ministry said at least 71 children had died of malnutrition during the war, and 60,000 others were suffering from symptoms of malnutrition. Later on Sunday, it said 18 people have died of hunger in the past 24 hours. Food prices have increased well beyond what most of the population of more than two million can afford. Several people who spoke to Reuters via chat apps said they either had one meal or no meal in the past 24 hours. 'As a father, I wake up in the early morning to look for food, for even a loaf of bread for my five children, but all in vain,' said Ziad, a nurse. 'People who didn't die of bombs will die of hunger. We want an end to this war now, a truce, even for two months,' he told Reuters. Others said they felt dizzy walking in the streets and that many fainted as they walked. Fathers leave tents to avoid questions by their children about what to eat. UNRWA, the UN refugee agency dedicated to Palestinians, demanded the Zionist entity allow more aid trucks into Gaza, saying it had enough food for the entire population for over three months which was not allowed in. Some Palestinians suggested the move on Deir al-Balah might be an attempt to put pressure on Hamas to make more concessions in long-running ceasefire negotiations. – Agencies

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store