
Starving child in Gaza was killed 'seconds' after receiving aid, former US military contractor says
Anthony Aguilar told the UnXeptable podcast on Monday that he saw Israeli forces kill the young boy, named Amir, and countless others while he was manning a GHF aid distribution point in southern Gaza on 28 May.
"This young boy, Amir, walked up to me, barefoot and wearing tattered clothes that hung off his emaciated body," Aguilar said.
"He walked 12km to get there, and when he got there, he thanked us for the remnants and the small crumbs that he got.
"He set them down on the ground, because I was kneeling at this point, and he sets his food down, and he places his hands on my face, on the side of my face, on my cheeks, these frail, skeleton, emaciated hands - dirty - and he puts them on my face, and he kissed me.
New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch
Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters
"He kissed me, and he said thank you in English, thank you. And he collected his items, and he walked back to the group," he said.
"Then he was shot at with pepper spray, tear gas, stun grenades and bullets shot at his feet [and then] in the air, and he runs away scared, and the IDF [Israeli army] were shooting at the crowd.
"They're shooting into this crowd and Palestinians - civilians, human beings - are dropping to the ground, getting shot. And Amir was one of them."
According to the United Nations, more than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces while trying to access food in Gaza since the controversial GHF began operations in late May.
Middle East Eye journalist Ahmed Dremly, who visited one of the GHF sites to collect food for his family, compared the experience of trying to receive food to the TV show Squid Game, in which killing was entertainment.
Israeli troops have admitted to deliberately shooting and killing unarmed Palestinians waiting for aid in the Gaza Strip, following direct orders from their superiors.
'They're not animals, they're human beings'
Last week, Philippe Lazzarini, the commissioner-general of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (Unrwa), called the mass starvation in Gaza "constructed and deliberate".
In a statement, he said that GHF's flawed distribution system is not designed to address the humanitarian crisis.
"It's serving military and political objectives. It's cruel as it takes more lives than it saves lives. Israel controls all aspects of humanitarian access, whether outside or within Gaza."
'We treat these civilians in Gaza worse, with less dignity, than we treated the ISIS fighters that surrendered in Baghouz in Syria'
- Anthony Aguilar, former US contractor
He also said that airdrops – which Israel had approved – were "the most expensive and inefficient way to deliver aid".
"It is a distraction to the inaction," he added.
Israel, which rejects the criticism, has instead accused Hamas of stealing aid and says its blockade on the entry of food is partly aimed at preventing the group from diverting supplies.
In Monday's podcast, Aguilar condemned what he called the dehumanisation of Palestinians.
"What I want to say to the American people and to the people of Israel is that I've been there, I've touched them, I've talked to them. These civilians in Gaza that are getting the food, they're starving. They're not animals, they're human beings, and they're being treated like animals.
"We treat these civilians in Gaza worse, with less dignity, than we treated the ISIS fighters that surrendered in Baghouz in Syria."
Famine thresholds have been reached
On Tuesday, a UN-backed global food security body said famine was unfolding across Gaza, with one in three children in Gaza City acutely malnourished.
"Latest data indicates that famine thresholds have been reached for food consumption in most of the Gaza Strip and for acute malnutrition in Gaza City," the UN-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) said in a new report.
Starvation in Gaza: Dizziness, fatigue and people collapsing in the streets Read More »
"Amid relentless conflict, mass displacement, severely restricted humanitarian access, and the collapse of essential services, including healthcare, the crisis has reached an alarming and deadly turning point."
The warning comes as nearly 150 Palestinian children and adults in Gaza have succumbed to death from starvation since Israel's onslaught on Gaza in October 2023.
The blockade on the Palestinian enclave has fluctuated in intensity, but since 2 March, Israel has prevented all food and aid from reaching starving Palestinians.
Last week, more than 100 international human rights and humanitarian organisations called for an end to the siege, citing widespread starvation affecting their staff.
Unrwa communications director Juliette Touma also told MEE last week that several of the organisation's staff fainted on duty due to malnutrition.
More than 58,000 Palestinians have been killed as a result of Israel's war on Gaza, which several countries, as well as many international rights groups and experts, now qualify as genocide.
Hashtags

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


TAG 91.1
2 hours ago
- TAG 91.1
Sheikh Abdullah welcomes intent of 10 nations to recognise Palestine
Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs welcomed the intention of Malta, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Finland, Iceland, Luxembourg, Andorra, Portugal and San Marino's to recognise the State of Palestine. In a statement, Sheikh Abdullah described the move as a historic step that reflects growing international support for the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people, including their right to establish an independent and sovereign state. He added that the increasing number of countries signalling their intention to recognise Palestine represents positive momentum toward reviving the political process and advancing efforts for a just and lasting peace in the region. These developments, he said, contribute to strengthening regional peace, security and the broader aspirations for development and prosperity. Sheikh Abdullah also called on the international community to take similar steps, affirming that recognising Palestine is a moral, humanitarian and legal responsibility. Such recognition, he stressed, is essential to achieving a comprehensive and sustainable resolution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.


The National
2 hours ago
- The National
US sanctions PA, and new Syria-Russia relations
The US has imposed sanctions on officials of the Palestinian Authority and members of the Palestine Liberation Organisation. A senior Syrian official has visited Russia for the first time since the fall of the Assad regime. The US is turning to the UAE for energy. On today's episode of Trending Middle East: This episode features Thomas Helm, Jerusalem correspondent; and Khaled Yacoub Oweis, Jordan correspondent.


The National
3 hours ago
- The National
Federal Reserve holds US interest rates despite Trump pressure, but divisions emerge
A divided Federal Reserve held US interest rates steady on Wednesday, despite an increasing pressure campaign by President Donald Trump to lower borrowing costs. The Fed's target range remained set at 4.25 to 4.50 per cent following the central bank's decision to extend its rate-cut pause for a fifth consecutive month. The UAE Central Bank, which follows Fed decisions because of the dollar peg, also maintained its base rate for the overnight deposit facility at 4.4 per cent following the US central bank's announcement. It also decided to maintain the interest rate applicable to borrowing short-term liquidity from the CBUAE at 50 basis points above the base rate for all standing credit facilities. Fed governors Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman – both appointed by Mr Trump – dissented, arguing the central bank should have lowered the federal funds target rate by 25 basis points. It was the first time in more than two decades that two Fed governors had dissented on a policy decision. Governor Adriana Kugler was absent and did not vote. The dissents reflect a growing division inside the central bank over interest rates as pressure builds on Fed Chair Jerome Powell, who has faced repeated attacks from Mr Trump to lower rates. The latest developments also come amid growing speculation over who will lead the central bank once Mr Powell's term expires next year. Trump pressure Earlier on Wednesday, Mr Trump seized on a better-than-expected GDP report to demand lower interest rates. '2Q GDP JUST OUT: 3%, WAY BETTER THAN EXPECTED! 'Too Late' MUST NOW LOWER THE RATE. No inflation! Let people buy, and refinance, their homes,' he wrote on the Truth Social media platform. Mr Trump has suggested the Fed lower interest rates by three percentage points to help reduce borrowing costs on the US national debt as well as shore up the housing market. 'We don't consider the fiscal needs. No advanced-economy central bank does that, and it wouldn't be good for if we did do that,' Mr Powell said at a news conference. Mr Trump escalated his pressure campaign by touring the Fed's headquarters last week, criticising Mr Powell for the costs associated with the project. The two men publicly bickered at the renovation site, but Mr Powell offered a more conciliatory tone on Wednesday. 'I was quite pleased to have the President say multiple times that what he really wanted to see was us getting this construction completed as soon as possible. That is our focus,' Mr Powell said. So far, Mr Trump's attacks have done little to persuade Mr Powell to move. The Fed has adopted a wait-and-see approach towards cutting rates this year, owing to uncertainty over the economic effects of Mr Trump's tariff policies. 'Higher tariffs have begun to show more clearly the prices of some goods, but their overall effects on economic activity and inflation are being unseen,' Mr Powell said. And even Fed members who have called for rate cuts have suggested doing so at a far more moderate pace than what Mr Trump wants. Fed division Driving the dissent among the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee was which side of the central bank's dual mandate to prioritise: price stability or maximum employment. Mr Waller and Ms Bowman both signalled in the weeks leading up to the latest meeting that they believed it was appropriate to cut interest rates this month before the labour market weakens further. Recent data showed the labour market as being in stasis, with both hiring and quitting rates near historic lows, even as the unemployment rate remains stable at 4.1 per cent. However, Mr Powell said the Fed was further away from its price stability mandate than its maximum employment mandate. Economists generally argue that tariffs will lead to higher inflation and recent data showed that businesses are beginning to pass costs of some everyday items, such as household appliances, to consumers. But Mr Powell said it was unlikely that this would lead to persistent inflation. 'A pretty reasonable base case is that this will be a one-time price increase, and in the end, we'll make sure that that's the case,' he said. 'We're just trying to do that efficiently.' Fed officials have previously suggested there could come a point when their two mandates could clash. Cutting rates too soon could reverse course on the downwards trend inflation seen since its 2022 peak, while holding rates for too long could lead to unnecessary damage in the housing market. Fed officials were expected to receive more information this week, including inflation and unemployment data from June on Thursday and Friday, respectively. Powell non-committal on cut Mr Powell offered a more hawkish perspective on policy decisions, firmly siding with the central bank's price stability mandate. 'When we have risks to both goals, and one of them is farther away from goal than the other, and that's inflation, that means policy should be tight, because tight policy is what brings inflation down,' he said. Mr Powell did not give any indication which way the Fed was leaning ahead of its September meeting. 'He doesn't want to have to backtrack … if he gets too stimulative too quickly, and so it's a very well telegraphed, orchestrated slow process so that once he does start to ease, it doesn't need to be reversed,' said Arnim Holzer, Global Macro Strategist at Easterly EAB. Traders pared back expectations of the Fed resuming its interest rate cuts in September from roughly 63 per cent yesterday to about 54 per cent on Wednesday, according to CME Group data. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 171 points – or 0.38 per cent – while the S&P 500 also closed lower, dropping 0.12 per cent. The Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.15 per cent. 'It was a slightly bearish result,' Mr Holzer said. Fed officials are due to receive two rounds of unemployment and inflation data before they meet next month. Meanwhile, officials are also likely to continue tracking how Mr Trump's negotiations with major trading partners evolve. The White House recently announced a 15 per cent tariff on the European Union, while discussions continue with China. Meanwhile, Mr Trump has announced a range of tariffs on Mexico and Canada. 'For the Fed to take their time here makes sense because we don't know the rules of the road unless and until we get the answers on Canada and Mexico,' said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B Riley Wealth.