
Gaza aid distribution halts, Eid marked by violence
Aid distribution in Gaza has halted after the US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) said overcrowding had made it unsafe to continue operations, in the latest disruption to its troubled relief effort.
With severe food shortages plaguing the coastal enclave, fighting continued in many areas of the Gaza Strip.
Local health authorities said 16 Palestinians were killed in Israeli strikes, mostly in northern Gaza, while the Israeli army said four of its soldiers were killed and five were wounded by an explosion in a building in Khan Younis to the south.
In a day of confusing messaging, the GHF first announced its distribution sites in southern Gaza were closed, then it revealed that it had actually handed out food, before saying that it had had to close its gates as a precautionary measure.
"The distribution was conducted peacefully and without incident; however, it was paused due to excessive crowding that made it unsafe to proceed," it said in a statement.
As Palestinians across the war-ravaged Gaza Strip marked the start of one of Islam's most important holidays, Eid al-Adha, Israeli forces continued military operations that they say are needed to root out and destroy Hamas militants.
The Israeli military was rocked by the deaths of four soldiers in a booby-trapped building, which brought the army death toll to eight since the start of June.
"It is a sad and difficult day," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement.
The army earlier issued new evacuation orders for areas in and around Gaza City, warning of an imminent attack.
With many residential areas of Gaza reduced to rubble by months of fighting, locals held Eid al-Adha prayer services in the open, next to bombed-out mosques and homes.
"As you can see, we are holding Eid prayers, while the bombing, shelling and planes are ongoing," said one woman, Umm Mahmoud, in Khan Younis.
The United Nations has warned that most of Gaza's 2.3 million population is at risk of famine after an 11-week Israeli blockade of the enclave, with the rate of young children suffering from acute malnutrition nearly tripling.
The GHF began distributing food packages in Gaza at the end of May, overseeing a new model of aid distribution which the United Nations says is neither impartial nor neutral.
It suspended operations on Wednesday and asked the Israeli military to review security protocols after hospital officials said more than 80 people had been shot dead and hundreds wounded near distribution points between June 1-3.
Eyewitness blamed Israeli soldiers for the killings. The Israeli military said it fired warning shots on two days, while on Tuesday it said soldiers had fired at Palestinian "suspects" who were advancing towards their positions.
The army said on Friday that Gazans should only move to and from the GHF distribution centres from 6am to 6pm local time. Outside daylight hours these access routes should be considered a closed military zone.
"Entering it poses a significant risk to your life," military spokesman Avichay Adraee wrote on X.
However, many Gazans say they have to walk for hours to reach the sites, meaning they have to start traveling well before dawn if they are to stand any chance of receiving food.
Palestinians have described the distribution process as chaotic and poorly organised, and say limited supplies have led to early morning crushes on access routes.
On Friday, the GHF said it had delivered 8160 boxes of food, providing approximately 471,240 individual meals.
Since launching its operations, the GHF has opened three sites, but over the past two days, only two of them have been functioning.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


7NEWS
4 hours ago
- 7NEWS
‘We've seen hospitals being bombed. We've seen schools being bombed': The harrowing reality of life in Gaza
WARNING: Distressing images Tents pitched on the rubble of their homes and fires started using the burnt clothes off their backs — this is the reality of life in Gaza. Ghada Alhaddad grew up in Gaza, after her grandparents were displaced from parts of Palestine now called Israel. Since October 2023, she and her family have been displaced within Gaza at least five times. She believes this is below the average number of times families in the strip would have moved. The latest eruption of war in Gaza was sparked on October 7, 2023, when Hamas militants killed 1200 people in Israel and took some 250 hostages back to the enclave, according to Israeli tallies. Many of those killed or captured were civilians. More than 54,000 Palestinians have since been killed by Israel's retaliatory military campaign, according to Gaza health authorities. It has extended to other parts of the Middle East, namely Lebanon and Iran. A ceasefire between Hamas and Israel is currently being negotiated, but one previously agreed to on March 14 was soon broken by Israel on March 18. Since breaking the ceasefire, Israel has issued almost one displacement order every two days, international aid organisations say. Approximately 665,000 people have been forcibly displaced since March 18, according to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA). International organisations say this is forcing people into isolated areas, with the available so-called safe zones covering less than 20 per cent of the Gaza Strip. 'All of a sudden you have to go,' Alhaddad told 'Whatever you see, you pick it up and take it.' Once an order is made, you are forced to move quickly, Alhaddad said. 'You only have a couple of hours, you evacuate as quickly as possible,' she said. 'You take whatever you've got and that's it. You take as light as possible.' This far into the war, many people are dealing with significant injuries that affect their ability to move as well, Alhaddad said. Alongside the injured are 'elderly people, people with ... amputations', she said. 'Children and pregnant women.' Evacuations happen 'sometimes in the middle of the night, with no light', she said. 'They just walk and walk, to no clear destination.' Alongside the physical pain of travelling to a new place, there is an emotional pain that comes with leaving, Alhaddad said. You wonder what would happen if you returned, she said. Gazans know that if they remain where they are, they will not be safe. But there are consequences that come with leaving, too. 'I'm not going to see my home again,' Alhaddad said. While areas are designated as safe when Israel makes a displacement order, Palestinians do not believe they are really safe. 'There is no safe place,' Alhaddad said. 'People used to take shelter in schools, then hospitals. But they're not safe.' "We've seen hospitals being bombed. We've seen schools being bombed." At least 767 people have been killed, and at least 2419 people have been injured, while sheltering in UNRWA premises since October 7, 2023. The areas Palestinians are now forced to shelter in are also not fit for purpose, Alhaddad said. 'Honestly, we don't have shelters,' she said. 'There's no water, no sanitation, no shelter. 'People build tents from piles of nylon sheets, empty flour sacks.' The displacement orders have 'pushed people down' to occupy less than 20 per cent of Gaza, Alhaddad said. The Gaza Strip is roughly half the size of Canberra, and prior to October 2023 already had more than two million people living in close quarters. 'When you walk on the street, you see people everywhere,' Alhaddad said. 'You can imagine how chaotic. There's no space. 'People build their tents on the rubble of their homes. 'People build their tents on the beach. On the pavement, on the graveyards or cemeteries. 'There's no place to build.' Alongside concerns over where to shelter each night, Palestinians are also dealing with widespread hunger. The UN warned in April that one in five people in Gaza were facing starvation, and the entire population was edging closer to famine. The situation has only gotten worse since then. 'Food is a big issue now,' Alhaddad said. 'Most people are starving, there is no food getting into Gaza. 'Starvation is really different. 'We've run out of food from our stocks. 'There were some agricultural lands, but they've been destroyed. 'People do not have the ability to grow their own food. Israel bombed our agricultural lands. 'We have no way of cooking, no fuel. Only wood. 'People cut trees, burn clothes.' Gaza is an 'open air prison', Alhaddad said. 'You've been imprisoned in this land, and you're not allowed to move.' There is no safe way to leave Gaza, she said. 'Israel shut down the borders,' she said. 'You can't travel to the West Bank. You can't travel to Jerusalem.' There is no way of leaving through the border with Egypt either, Alhaddad said. A United Nations conference on a two-state solution was scheduled to begin in New York on June 17 and run to June 20, co-chaired by Saudi Arabia and France. However, following the launching of a massive attack on Iran by Israeli forces on June 13, the conference has been postponed. The bombardment has continued between the two nations since — with Iranian officials reporting over 220 deaths, mostly civilians, while Israel said 24 civilians were killed. Alhaddad hopes foreign governments will push for a permanent ceasefire, when it does go ahead. 'The most important thing right now is a ceasefire,' she said. Alhaddad's neighbour was killed a few weeks ago in an Israeli strike which also claimed 12 other lives. 'One of my classmates was killed along with her three children,' she said. Alhaddad grew up with them, went to school with them, celebrated milestones with them and then one day they were dead, she said. "We need this bloodbath to stop. We need this bloodshed to stop." 'Entire families have been wiped out,' she said. 'We are exhausted. Wars have shaped our youth, our childhood. I just want a future with no war. 'It's my dream. I don't have any other dreams right now. 'I just want a ceasefire.' Last week, Australia was one of 149 countries to vote in favour of an immediate, unconditional and permanent ceasefire in the war in Gaza and to allow aid access, after the United States vetoed a similar effort in the Security Council the week before. The US, Israel and 10 others voted against the resolution, while 19 countries abstained from voting. Australia also last week sanctioned Israel's National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich in a co-ordinated move with Canada, New Zealand, Norway and the United Kingdom. The sanctions were applied for 'extremist violence and serious abuses of Palestinian human rights' in the West Bank, with the pair barred from travelling to Australia and any assets in the country being frozen. 'We are steadfastly committed to the two-state solution which is the only way to guarantee security and dignity for Israelis and Palestinians and ensure long term stability in the region, but it is imperilled by extremist settler violence and settlement expansion,' the government said in its announcement of the sanctions. Australia in July also sanctioned Israelis involved in attacking and killing Palestinians in the West Bank. Australia has listed Hamas as a terrorist entity since 2001, according to the federal government's national security website. The new measures prompted condemnation from the US, with Secretary of State Marco Rubio saying it would do little to achieve a ceasefire in the conflict.

Sky News AU
3 days ago
- Sky News AU
‘Missiles start falling': Miracle Israeli baby born in built-in bomb shelter at hospital
Israeli resident David Erlich shares the incredible story of how his 28th grandchild was born in a bomb shelter in Israel. 'The hospital had set up an entire underground basement bomb shelter facility that could not be damaged by bombs,' Mr Erlich told Sky News host Peta Credlin. 'All of a sudden, the sirens go on the telephones and everything.' 'The missiles start falling, and here she is in labour.'


7NEWS
18-06-2025
- 7NEWS
‘Like the world has forgotten us:' Gazans fear their ongoing suffering will become invisible amid Israel-Iran conflict
The young girl sits on the dusty floor, clutching her father's shoe close to her chest as she cries and screams in anger. Bisan Qwaider is unconsolable. Her father has just been killed while trying to get food for her and her 10 hungry siblings. Bisan's father, Shadi, had left the family's tent in Mawassi, in southern Gaza, a few days earlier for Ma'an, just east of Khan Younis, the photojournalist who captured the scene of Qwaider's grief on Sunday, Khaled Sha'ath, said. Shadi knew travel to the area was dangerous: Ma'an had been under an Israeli evacuation order for some time and has come under Israeli bombardment. But, despite the risk, his children were hungry and he believed he could get some food there for them. Gaza is facing a hunger crisis. A UN-backed report published in late April warned that one in five people in Gaza were facing starvation and that the entire enclave was edging closer to famine. The situation has only worsened since then, according to the UN. Sha'ath said Qwaider was killed in an airstrike and his body was pulled from the rubble on Sunday. He is one of hundreds of people who have died while attempting to find food in Gaza in recent weeks, according to Gaza health authorities. When about the situation in Ma'an, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) responded by sending through a map of Gaza with 'dangerous combat zones' highlighted in red, which included Ma'an — as well as more than half of the territory. In late May, Israel partially lifted an 11-week total blockade on Gaza, but humanitarian organisations say the aid entering now is only a tiny fraction of what is needed. 'Without immediate and massively scaled-up access to the basic means of survival, we risk a descent into famine, further chaos, and the loss of more lives,' the UN's humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher said last week. The humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza has sparked outrage around the world, recently prompting even some of Israel's closest allies to speak up. Last week, Australia was one of 149 countries to vote in favour of an immediate, unconditional and permanent ceasefire in the war in Gaza and aid access, after the United States vetoed a similar effort in the Security Council the week before. The US, Israel and 10 others voted against the resolution, while 19 countries abstained from voting. France, the United Kingdom and Canada issued a rare statement last month criticising Israel and threatening 'concrete steps' if the situation in Gaza does not improve. The UK paused trade negotiations with Israel and sanctioned West Bank settlers last month, and the European Union said it would review a key cooperation agreement with Israel. But as tensions continue to escalate between Israel and Iran, people in Gaza are now worried that even the limited pressure on Israel over their suffering will quickly evaporate. 'The war between Israel and Iran made people forget about us completely,' Mohammad, a Gazan who did not want to share his last name, said on Monday. 'No one is looking at us, there's no food or water or anything. 'Every day, people go to try to get food and aid, and they end up being carried in body bags.' Umm Mustafa, another Gazan, said the growing conflict between Iran and Israel means that their suffering has disappeared from the international news agenda. 'All the (focus) has shifted to the Israeli-Iranian war, even though the Gaza Strip has been wiped off of the map,' Mustafa said. Abu Juma'a, who lives in Gaza City, said that while there were 'some voices calling and standing in solidarity with Gaza and calling for humanitarian aid to be let in, the Israeli-Iranian war meant there is no one calling for the food and water to be provided in Gaza.' One in 40 dead More than 55,300 people have been killed and more than 128,700 injured in Gaza since October 7, 2023, according to health authorities there. The numbers are staggering: The death toll represents some 2.5 per cent of the entire Gaza population, meaning that out of every 40 Palestinians living in Gaza before the war, one is now dead. A peer-reviewed study published earlier this year in The Lancet journal, said that the number of people killed in Gaza is significantly higher than the figure reported by authorities in the enclave. CNN cannot independently verify those claims and Israel has barred international journalists from travelling to Gaza independently since October 7. And the deadly hunger crisis is worsening. The International Committee of the Red Cross said on Monday that people are struggling to access basic goods because of Israeli restrictions on what can be brought into the territory. Meanwhile, a US and Israeli-backed aid initiative, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) — a controversial organisation that was established amid Israeli accusations that Hamas is stealing aid in Gaza and profiting off its sale — is struggling to fulfil the task. The organisation has been criticised by multiple international aid agencies that it isn't fit for purpose. According to Gaza health authorities, at least 300 people have been killed since the GHF opened its distribution points in late May, which are located in areas surrounded by active combat zones. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said last week that Israeli authorities have allowed only a select number of UN agencies and international non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to resume the delivery of aid into Gaza after partially lifting the blockade and that 'only very limited amounts of certain food items, nutrition supplies, some health supplies, and water purification items' are allowed. Other aid supplies such as shelter materials, hygiene products and medical equipment are still being blocked by Israel, according to OCHA. 'People can't find anything to eat or drink,' another Gaza resident, Abu Mohammed said. 'The price of a bag of flour is now 300 to 500 times more expensive than before … it does feel like the world has forgotten us.' For young Bisan Qwaider, the only thing from her father she could get a hold of was his shoe. As she screamed for her father, she looked to the sky and shouted a message for those she believed were responsible for his death. 'May God hold you accountable,' she said.