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EXCLUSIVE: Franklin Graham leads ceremony as Samaritan's Purse gives armored 'bulletproof' ambulance to Israel

EXCLUSIVE: Franklin Graham leads ceremony as Samaritan's Purse gives armored 'bulletproof' ambulance to Israel

Yahoo02-06-2025
As Israel continues to recover from the deadly Hamas attacks of October 2023, Samaritan's Purse is stepping in to help. The Christian relief group has now given 20 ambulances to Magen David Adom, Israel's national emergency medical service. A total of 42 are planned, with 28 being armored to handle attacks.
At a ceremony outside the Tower of David in Jerusalem, Franklin Graham, president of Samaritan's Purse, dedicated the newest ambulance alongside former Governor Mike Huckabee, MDA leaders, and Israeli terror survivors. The ambulance is equipped with a mobile intensive care unit and can operate under fire.Former Idf Soldier Gives Hope, Builds Resilience In Training Severely Injured Soldiers
The funds for the vehicle came from Pastor Greg Laurie and his church, Harvest Christian Fellowship. Laurie told those gathered, "We want to say as Christians that we stand with Israel. You're not alone."
Franklin Graham read from the Bible, saying that Abraham was like a first responder when he rescued his nephew Lot."Abraham was the MDA of his generation," Graham said. He also took time to speak directly to three women who had lost loved ones or had been held hostage by Hamas. One of them, Karina Engel, shared her emotional story.
Engel's husband, Ronen, was killed defending their home, and she and her two daughters were kidnapped and taken to Gaza. They were held for 52 days before being released. Ronen's body is still being held by Hamas.
Wedding Of Paramedics Takes Place With Ambulance As Backdrop: 'Felt Only Right'
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Karina told the crowd that a Samaritan's Purse ambulance, dedicated in her husband's memory, is now stationed near their home.
"Every morning when I leave for work, I say 'good morning' to Ronen," she said through tears. She then placed a yellow ribbon on Graham's jacket, honoring those still held hostage.
Mike Huckabee spoke at the ceremony and said the need for an armored ambulance shows how serious the threat still is. "This is an occasion brought about because of suffering," he said.
"Thank God for Samaritan's Purse, Harvest Christian Fellowship, and the people who risk their lives to help others."
Magen David Adom leaders praised the donation. Director General Eli Bin said the ambulance "will become part of our modern defense" and called it a symbol of "kindness and protection."
Gilad Erdan, global president of MDA, said Samaritan's Purse "came to Israel's aid in its time of greatest need."
Edward Graham, a military veteran and Franklin Graham's son, said in a statement that he has seen the value of quick medical help in combat zones.
"We do this because God loves Israel," he said. "We pray this equipment will save lives and bring glory to God."
The ambulance carries a Bible verse from Jeremiah 29:11 on its side: "For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the Lord, thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give you a future and a hope."
The ceremony was held during Shavuot, the Jewish holiday that marks the giving of the Torah.
Twenty-two more armored ambulances are being built and are expected to arrive by the end of the year. Samaritan's Purse says its work will continue as long as there is a need.Original article source: EXCLUSIVE: Franklin Graham leads ceremony as Samaritan's Purse gives armored 'bulletproof' ambulance to Israel
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As Israel faces blame for the hunger crisis in Gaza, UN's own data shows most of its aid is looted
As Israel faces blame for the hunger crisis in Gaza, UN's own data shows most of its aid is looted

Fox News

time2 hours ago

  • Fox News

As Israel faces blame for the hunger crisis in Gaza, UN's own data shows most of its aid is looted

New data published last week by the U.N. agency UNOPS shows that most of its aid entering the war-torn Gaza Strip has been looted inside the Palestinian territory. UNOPS provides management services for the world body's own humanitarian operations. Despite this, condemnation of Israel over the hunger crisis in Gaza has been ramping up, prompting an increasing number of Western governments to declare intentions to recognize a Palestinian state as punishment, and leading some media outlets to totally tune out the role both international humanitarian organizations and Hamas, whose October 2023 mass terror attack in Israel started the nearly two-year-old war, have played in this catastrophe. 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He added that statements by some Israeli government ministers about cutting off aid to force Gazans out of the territory have not helped either. "Their statements have become the story under which nothing else will fit… no amount of evidence, no amount of clarification, no amount of nuance is going to come anywhere near to grabbing that much attention," Alkhatib said. Farhan Aziz Haq, a spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres, confirmed to Fox News Digital that some aid had been stolen but said it was because so few supplies had entered Gaza in recent months that "people facing hunger have resorted to offloading supplies directly from our convoys," he said. "We understand the frustration, but let's be clear: this isn't our system. It's what happens when aid is squeezed through too few routes after months of deprivation," he claimed, adding "only a steady, reliable flow of aid and commercial supplies can restore people's belief that aid will arrive and allow for safe, orderly distributions," he claimed. Information posted on the website of UNOPS, the U.N. Office for Project Services, shows that around 87%, or 1,753 of the 2,013 aid trucks that entered Gaza since May 19 did not reach their final destinations, with the aid being stolen either "peacefully by hungry people or forcefully by armed actors." The data, which showed that a record 90 trucks carrying some 1,695 tons of aid were looted on May 31 alone, comes as shocking photos of emaciated Palestinian children – some of which were later proven to be children with pre-existing health conditions used as propaganda by Hamas – have gone viral. The revelations about the U.N.'s faulty aid system also come amid worldwide condemnation of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a new U.S. and Israel-backed aid distribution mechanism, devised, in part, to prevent aid from falling into Hamas' hands. The U.N. has refused to cooperate with the GHF. The aid group announced on Sunday that it had delivered nearly 105 million meals to Gazans since it started operations in May. It also comes in sharp contrast to reports by some media outlets who chose to ignore evidence of Hamas stealing and reselling aid in order to fund its ongoing war – seemingly as a way to suggest that Israel is using starvation as a tactic of war or committing "genocide." Israel has emphatically denied both claims. A recent article in the New York Times even went as far as reporting that there was "no proof" that Hamas had stolen U.N. aid, despite countless documented accounts, including from freed Israeli hostages who reported seeing stockpiles of U.N.-branded products inside Hamas tunnels. Kobi Michael, a senior researcher at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, said that not only did human rights organizations and many media outlets base their faulty reports on information published by Gaza's Ministry of Health, which is run by Hamas, they also did not "take the nature of Hamas seriously." "Hamas is not the most reliable source in the world," he said, adding that "the international media and other sources do not consider the interests of Hamas, or its strategy, and they do not seem to acknowledge that Hamas wants a chaotic situation in the Gaza Strip. Hamas wants there to be many casualties among Palestinian civilians, because it serves their interests." "Just to listen to what Hamas leaders have been saying since October 7," Michael continued. "They have promised to repeat October 7 again and again, they have called on the Arab world to join the armed resistance against Israel and on the Arab public to pressure their regimes. "They have also said publicly, and loudly, that they have no problem sacrificing another 100,000 Palestinian civilians for the sake of the victory," he said. Yet the GHF has faced scrutiny and blame for the humanitarian disaster unfolding in Gaza amid daily reports by Hamas-backed bodies of civilian deaths at or near their aid distribution points and following chaotic images of people fighting over the food packages or sheltering from gunfire. The new agency has hit back, saying that Hamas, the U.N. and other international aid agencies, are just hoping the initiative fails so they can control all aid operations in Gaza. On Friday, U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, together with U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee, visited southern Gaza to inspect one of GHF's aid distribution sites. "Went into Gaza today & observed humanitarian food program by U.S. launched GHF. Hamas hates GHF b/c it gets food to ppl w/o it being looted by Hamas. Over 100 MILLION meals served in 2 months," Huckabee wrote in a post on X. David Makovsky, director of the Koret Project on Arab-Israel Relations at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said blame for the crisis should not be placed on one party but that "by bringing the U.N.'s own records to bear we can level-set the conversation. "There is a whole debate about GHF, which will not be settled today," he noted. "Yet, in a humanitarian emergency crisis, feeding people should take absolute top priority and I think it is incumbent for the U.N. and GHF to work together to feed people. "I hope that by bringing in lots of food into Gaza you can help innocent suffering people and also dramatically bring down black market rates exploited by Hamas which they use to control their people," said Makovsky.

From Triumph in Iran to Starvation in Gaza: Netanyahu Squanders His Moment to Halt the War
From Triumph in Iran to Starvation in Gaza: Netanyahu Squanders His Moment to Halt the War

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

From Triumph in Iran to Starvation in Gaza: Netanyahu Squanders His Moment to Halt the War

When Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, led the country to a military victory over Iran in June, both his allies and rivals portrayed it as his finest achievement. Flush with newfound confidence and authority, Mr. Netanyahu seemed finally to have gained the political capital he needed to override opposition from his far-right government allies to a truce in Gaza. Six weeks later, the prime minister has squandered that moment. The talks between Hamas and Israel are, once again, stuck. Israel is now pushing for a deal to end the war in one go, instead of in phases. But like Hamas, Mr. Netanyahu has refused to make the compromises needed for such a deal to work — and the credit that he accrued in June has evaporated, both domestically and overseas. International condemnation of the growing starvation in Gaza, which aid agencies and many foreign government have largely blamed on Israel's 11-week blockade on the territory this year, is at its peak. Partly to protest Israel's responsibility for that situation, several longstanding allies of Israel have recognize a Palestinian state, or pledged to do so in the near future. Domestic opposition to the Gaza war is at an all-time high, and calls are growing for the remaining hostages held by Hamas to be returned through a diplomatic deal. Israel's ability to sustain the war, amid growing fatigue among its military reservists, is increasingly under question. After a rise in death by suicide by reserve soldiers, the military has set up a committee to investigate how to better support those leaving service. 'Israel is in the tightest spot it has been in at any point in the war,' said Michael Koplow, an analyst at Israel Policy Forum, a New York-based research group. 'It is dealing with a societal crisis over the continued war and plight of the hostages, a military crisis over the lack of clear aims and reservist fatigue, a diplomatic crisis over its close European allies lining up to unilaterally recognize Palestinian statehood, and an existential crisis over its eroding standing in the U.S.,' Mr. Koplow said. The protraction of the Gaza conflict also reflects President Trump's failure to capitalize on the leverage he accrued during the war with Iran. By joining Mr. Netanyahu's attacks, Mr. Trump gave Israel a symbolic victory. At the time, analysts expected him to demand that Mr. Netanyahu repay the favor by drawing the Gaza war to a close. 'He had all the leverage in the world to say to Netanyahu: 'Now we need to end this,'' said Daniel B. Shapiro, a fellow at the Atlantic Council, a Washington-based research group, and a former U.S. ambassador to Israel. 'Instead, Netanyahu seemed to persuade Trump to give him more time,' said Mr. Shapiro. 'Now, things are just dragging and dragging.'

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