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Iranian strikes expose bomb shelter shortage for Palestinian towns inside Israel

Iranian strikes expose bomb shelter shortage for Palestinian towns inside Israel

Tamra, Israel
CNN —
In a small, tight-knit town near Haifa in northern Israel, residents here never thought they would experience such horror.
Inhabited by Palestinian citizens of Israel, Tamra was left shaken after an Iranian missile struck a residential building late Saturday evening, killing four civilians, Israel's national emergency service Magen David Adom (MDA) reported.
The rocket struck a home belonging to the Khatib family at around 11:50pm, according to emergency responders. Manar Khatib, a local teacher, and her two daughters Shatha, 13, and Hala, 20, as well their relative Manar Diab were all killed instantly.
Manar's husband Raja and their youngest daughter Razan both survived.
Over the last 20 months of war, rockets have occasionally been launched from across Lebanon's border into northern Israel. But Tamra has never taken a hit like this – until hostilities with Iran erupted into direct strikes between the two countries this week.
The morning after, the mood in the Lower Galilee town was somber, compounded by anger over a lack of adequate bomb shelters, an issue that Palestinian citizens of Israel have long warned was a glaring inequality that exists throughout their communities.
The street where the missile landed was filled with bulldozers trying to clear the debris. Many cars were burned from the impact, with glass shattered all around. Residents and volunteers gathered around to offer support and condolences. The buildings next to the Khatib home had sustained some damage, and almost every home had its windows blown out.
'When we heard the strike, everyone in the village headed there to help. It was a very difficult and chaotic evening. We found body parts littered across the street, and very tragic sights we didn't want to see,' Mohammad Diab, an emergency rescue volunteer told CNN.
Diab said it was difficult to reach the family because of the intensity of the impact. Emergency responders searched for survivors trapped under the 'heavy destruction' of the three-story building.
A man stands inside a damaged room after missiles fired from Iran impacted a residential building in Tamra, northern Israel June 15, 2025.
Ammar Awad/Reuters
For 25-year-old neighbor Mohammad Shama, Saturday night was 'terrifying'.
'As soon as the escalations began with Iran, we knew the situation would be dangerous, but we didn't think the danger would come this close to us,' he told CNN.
He rushed to his neighbors' home as soon as he heard the blast and tried to help retrieve the bodies. The only reason the Khatib family's youngest daughter survived was because she was sleeping in the room the house uses as a shelter, he said.
But not every home in Tamra even has a shelter.
Lack of shelter access
Only 40% of Tamra's 37,000 residents have either a safe room or a functioning shelter, the town's mayor Musa Abu Rumi told CNN. And there are no bunkers or public shelters which are otherwise ubiquitous across most Israeli towns and cities.
In the wake of the attack, his municipality decided to open up educational facilities in Tamra to be used as shelters for whoever didn't feel safe sleeping at home.
'The government has never financed the construction of shelters in our town, because they have other priorities,' he said.
Several government ministers have visited Tamra in the wake of the attack, and Abu Rumi said others are planning to visit in the coming week. He told CNN he wants to take advantage of that to raise the issue of neglect in Tamra, and 'bridging the gap between Jewish Israelis and Palestinian citizens of Israel'.
The Israel Democracy Institute (IDI), an independent research center published a report in the wake of the Tamra attack, describing how 'Arab communities remain unaddressed' almost two years since the outbreak of war. The report points to the 'significant gaps in protection' between Arab and Jewish communities.
Civil defense capabilities are built into the infrastructure of Israel. Israeli law requires all homes, residential buildings, and industrial building built since the early 1990s to have bomb shelters. These shelters prove crucial to protect Israelis when warning sirens go off – providing the public with safe and fortified locations to hide from incoming rockets.
Emergency and security personnel stand inside a damaged building after missiles fired from Iran impacted a residential building, in Tamra, northern Israel June 15, 2025.
Ammar Awad/Reuters
However, many Palestinian towns in the country's north 'lack public shelters, protected areas, and shelter facilities,' according to a statement from the Association for Civil Rights in Israel.
'The urgency in providing such a response gains secondary validity in light of the fact that the main disparity in the field of defense in the northern district is within Arab towns,' the statement continued.
Local resident Shama conceded that there is neglect in Tamra and said he suspects it's because of racism.
Social media videos show
In many ways, the Tamra strike has highlighted not just the tragedies of this war, but also increasingly embittered fault lines and divisions in Israeli society and governance.
In a neighboring town called Mitzpe Aviv, social media video verified by CNN showed Jewish Israelis rejoicing over the rockets raining down on Tamra this weekend, shouting 'may your village burn!'
Knesset member Dr. Ahmad Tibi told CNN scenes like that were the 'result of the culture of racism that has spread in Israeli society and the escalating fascism.'
Another Knesset member, Naama Lazimi, condemned the video on X, writing; 'shame and disgust.' On the lack of shelters, Lazimi added that 'this is an even greater shame because this is a state with racist and abandoning policies.'
Tamra resident Nejmi Hijazi also lamented the video, telling CNN 'in your own country, you are treated as a stranger, even as an enemy, even in your blood and in your death.'
Social media videos showing Palestinians in occupied East Jerusalem hailing Iran's attacks on Tel Aviv have also circulated.
One resident was apprehended and taken in for questioning, according to Jerusalem District Police – a move that national security minister Itamar Ben Gvir applauded, warning that 'anyone who celebrates with the enemy will be punished!'
Men walk near a damaged vehicle at an impact site following missile attack from Iran in Tamra, northern Israel, on June 15, 2025.
Ammar Awad/Reuters
As the threat of more strikes continues to fuel fears in Israel, the residents of Tamra are left feeling anxious.
'Last night was one of the most difficult nights I have ever experienced. I can't forget the image of the little girl I saw trapped under the rubble,' Manal Hijazi, a neighbor told CNN.
Hijazi described the Khatibs as some of the nicest and most loving people in the neighborhood. Manar had taught most residents in Tamra.
One of her former students is Raghda, a neighbor whose house was also damaged by the Saturday blast.
'I was in bed with my three daughters when the rocket struck. The window blasted open and I got hit by dust and rocket remnants. That happened all in front of my eyes, with my daughters right next to me,' Raghda told CNN, teary and shaking.
Raghda described the horror she felt cradling her 4-month-old daughter throughout the attack. She said her daughters were shocked and remained silent for many hours.
'There is no way I will be sleeping at home tonight,' she said.
CNN's Dana Karni contributed to this report.
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More than just a Squid Game: Gaza's aid trap
More than just a Squid Game: Gaza's aid trap

Mada

time2 days ago

  • Mada

More than just a Squid Game: Gaza's aid trap

Shortly after midnight on June 17, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) announced that its aid distribution center in Khan Younis would open at 10 am. But Tarek al-Borayem from Gaza had already learned how things really worked in the two weeks since the GHF began its operations. The center would almost certainly begin distributing aid earlier than announced and shut its gates soon after. That's why he ignored the GHF's repeated warnings: 'Do not approach distribution centers or gather at the gates before they open.' Moving too early carries a deadly risk — Israeli forces can and do open fire at any moment. But the alternative, Borayem knows, is starving to death. This is the deadly game Palestinians in Gaza are forced to play each day. Borayem's prediction proved right. At 1:47 am, the GHF posted that the distribution had ended and the center was closed — four hours before the announced opening time. That day alone, at least 59 people waiting for aid were killed. Since the GHF began operations in late May, this daily game has killed 584 aid seekers and wounded over 4,000 others, according to the latest official figures. This was not a one-off occurrence. An analysis of the opening and closing times posted on the GHF's public social media page shows that the way its distribution operations are designed resembles a game. Many have compared it to Squid Game — the popular series in which contestants compete in games where losers are executed. The analogy has been invoked by both Palestinian civilians and Israeli soldiers in recent weeks. But the comparison doesn't quite hold. Unlike Squid Game, Gaza's 'aid game' has no fixed rules. Its start and end are not announced on a screen counting down time — but through bursts of gunfire. Over the past month, Mada Masr spoke to dozens of people who tried to reach GHF centers in hopes of securing a food parcel. Their testimonies were compiled alongside a database of every public announcement made by the GHF — opening hours, closures and procedural details — to identify patterns in its operations. The findings show that on average, each GHF center remained open for -13 minutes per day. A negative value. How can that be? To make sense of it, we must unpack the complex system under which the foundation has operated since May. It hinges on two key features: restricted access and deliberately misleading information about operating hours. The result is chaos and overcrowding, conditions that made it easier to target crowds, mostly made up of young men physically capable of reaching distribution points, fitting within a broader Israeli strategy to permanently reshape civilian life in Gaza. Amid this arrangement, Israeli soldiers have turned indiscriminate killing into something of a sport. And Palestinians have been left to play a rigged game with no chance of winning. The GHF operates four distribution centers across central and southern Gaza, excluding the north, which are intended to serve roughly one million people. They are located in areas that the Israeli military declared as combat zones and ordered residents to evacuate, placing them under direct military control. That means the centers are situated far from where people actually are. According to Mada Masr calculations — based on the locations of the centers and their average distance from 'safe zones' — civilians must walk an average of 6.6 kilometers to reach a center inside an active combat area. Under normal conditions, this journey would take one to two hours. Under war and Israeli-induced starvation, it can take at least twice as long. Only the young and able bodied can make the trip. This is the first contradiction embedded in the GHF's model. If a center is scheduled to open at 10 am, that means people must begin walking through designated 'safe corridors' at least two hours in advance — and that's under the best of circumstances. But the GHF's repeated announcements warn against this. 'Do not use the corridor before […], as the [Israeli] military has informed us it will be active in the area before and after the designated safe hours,' the warnings published on their social media repeatedly state. This presents an impossible choice: either depart before the designated 'safe' window opens and risk being shot by Israeli forces, or wait until it begins — only to arrive hours after the centers have opened, to find them already closed. To navigate this paradox, many people have opted to sleep on the ground overnight near the centers. And that is only the first layer of contradiction. The journey to reach a center would be arduous even if the opening hours were fixed and predictable. But the schedule keeps changing, which makes the trip impossible. Over the past month, the opening times of GHF centers have shifted repeatedly. Some days saw centers begin operating as early as 5 am, other days at 6 am, or noon. Other centers opened at 10 am, or 11 am, and, at times, 6 pm. On one occasion, the GHF announced a center would open at exactly 2:15 pm — a strangely specific time given the overall unpredictability. Stranger still: the announcement was posted at 2:25 pm — ten minutes after the stated opening time. This happened on multiple occasions. In some cases, no opening time was given at all. The GHF simply posted, 'The center is now open.' At other times, the GHF announced a specific opening time, only to later say that aid distribution at that site had already ended, sometimes hours earlier. These inconsistencies were so frequent that calculating the average daily operating time of each center — by subtracting the announced opening time from the announced closure — yields a negative figure: -13 minutes per day. Even when excluding the instances that lead to these negative values and factoring in only the days when centers adhered to their own posted schedules, the average daily operation time comes to just 13 minutes per day. Over the week leading up to Sunday, the figure dropped to just 9 minutes per day. A database compiled by Mada Masr shows that in the first month of operations, the average time between posting an announcement that it is open and a GHF center actually opening was four hours. But that window narrowed significantly over time. In the past two weeks, the average wait between announcement and opening fell to 2.5 hours. During the last week, it plummeted to just 24 minutes. How is this system supposed to work? According to the GHF's instructions, people are expected to 'stay updated on the latest announcements regarding the locations, times and instructions for upcoming parcel distributions.' In theory, that means staying glued to the GHF's social media page and having stable internet access. But in practice, during the final week of data collection, once an announcement was posted, people had an average of just 24 minutes to cover a distance that would normally take up to two hours to walk. Complying with the 'rules' of the game, then, becomes virtually impossible. And since waiting often means slow death, tens of thousands of Palestinians are forced to take this gamble each day. They have no choice but to either camp overnight near the center inside combat zones or leave well before the designated 'safe hours' in hopes of arriving within the narrow, unpredictable window — often just a few minutes — when the center might briefly open, before suddenly shutting again. But reaching the site is only the end of the first level. What happens next is another level. Sand barriers line the path leading to the centers. At the entrance — according to witness testimonies and photos of the centers — iron cages funnel people into gates with facial recognition cameras installed on them. Once identified, aid seekers are directed to collect an aid parcel. But due to massive crowds and poor internet connectivity, it's often unclear whether a center has actually opened. And since operations last minutes at a time, chaos breaks out as people rush to grab what little they can. One witness who arrived at the center in Netsarim on June 16 told Mada Masr that they showed up by 6 am, the designated opening time posted by the GHF. Word spread through the crowd that the gates were open, and people surged forward, only to be met with rounds of Israeli fire. The opening turned out to be a rumor. In reality, the center had shut down hours earlier. At the Rafah center on June 3, another witness described how thousands waited quietly for the gates to open. But without warning, bullets began to rain down on them. 'For no apparent reason,' the witness said. 'Dozens of people started falling' as screams and panic tore through the crowd. This wasn't an isolated case. Mada Masr collected several testimonies describing similar scenes. In testimonies published Friday by the Israeli daily newspaper Haaretz, Israeli officers and soldiers said they had orders to open fire on unarmed crowds — 'even though it was clear they posted no threat.' One soldier called the aid sites 'a killing field.' When the shooting would stop, he said, Palestinians know they can approach. 'Our form of communication is gunfire.' When the Israeli military does acknowledge opening fire at aid centers, it cites the approach of 'suspicious elements' as justification. But in many cases, there were no crowd surges, nothing that could warrant live fire. Over the past week, eyewitnesses described tall, fixed or mobile cranes they called 'towers,' stationed around some GHF centers. The cranes were outfitted with machine guns or sniper rifles. Witnesses described what they called 'silent killing;' people dropping to the ground without any audible shots or visible shooters. According to several testimonies, no one heard gunfire. Only the sudden collapse of bodies showed that shooting had taken place. Because of their silent operation during the night, the impression is that these guns are triggered by motion sensors that automatically fire at moving bodies. That is what brought to mind scenes from Squid Game, a comparison that has taken hold among both Palestinian civilians and Israeli soldiers. One soldier, quoted by Haaretz, said the operation near the aid center in his deployment area is referred to as Operation Salted Fish — Israel's own version of 'red light, green light,' the first game in Squid Game, in which contestants are gunned down by motion sensors. As UNRWA communications director Juliette Touma puts it, GHF's aid distribution model is 'deeply humiliating,' exploiting 'very desperate people.' The only reason to take that risk comes 'when your daughter is screaming from hunger,' says Yazan Sohayeb, who tried to get aid from the distribution center in Netsarim. This reality has pushed many Palestinians to head toward the centers in groups, hoping to improve their odds of securing some aid — or at least to help one another if one gets shot. Sohayeb, for instance, made the trip with his son. Others told Mada Masr they travel with neighbors. In some cases, witnesses described people carrying sticks or bladed weapons, hoping to win in the deadly aid game. Because of this, access to aid has become limited to those most capable of braving the risks — primarily men, and especially young men. A GHF staffer working at one of the distribution centers, speaking to Mada Masr on condition of anonymity and without disclosing their location, says that an American official overseeing an aid distribution center told them that drawing out young men was one of the intended outcomes of this model. 'It's a method of filtering out young men who are capable of supporting their families, and eliminating them — part of a plan that doesn't cost much militarily, while operating under the guise of a declared humanitarian aid initiative,' the staffer said, citing the official. 'In other words: kill the provider, and his family is left to starve to death.' In a mid-May briefing to the United Nations Security Council — two weeks before the GHF officially began operations — Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Tom Fletcher noted a similar exclusionary logic of the aid model. GHF distribution, Fletcher said, 'practically excludes many, including people with disabilities, women, children, the elderly, the wounded.' Earlier that month, UNICEF spokesperson James Elder said that the Israeli model implemented by the GHF appeared to be designed to 'reinforce control over life-sustaining items as a pressure tactic.' The design and structure of GHF's operations serve strategic goals. By concentrating all four centers in southern Gaza and entirely excluding the north, the model appears intended to compel residents of northern Gaza to relocate south — aligning with Israel's declared policy. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reaffirmed the policy in March, after breaching the ceasefire agreement and resuming military operations in Gaza. Elder said that the aid model essentially imposes 'an impossible choice between displacement and death.' But this is not only a short-term strategy. A paper published in July 2024 by a journal affiliated with the Israeli military, titled Light at the End of the Tunnel: Toward a Civil Campaign, underscores the long-term importance of exerting control over civilian life as a means of securing dominance over Gaza, both during and after war. 'Various tools, and other means to affect civilian affairs must be developed,' the author argues. 'A fundamental question is how Israel, despite its vast experience in fighting within civilian environments, ended up in a war with all its civil affairs capabilities so severely limited. I will argue that employing these means in a large-scale, targeted manner, is critical to creating the turning-point needed to decisively defeat Hamas as a holistic governing system.' The author goes on to argue that this control must begin 'the moment Israel starts to engage directly with the population, manage aid distribution, and assumes responsibility for the day after – not as a political move, but as a response to the reality emerging on the ground.' The author lays out the features of this control: 'Israel should develop digital tools, build infrastructure and employ contractors that are not Israeli (for security missions, aid distribution and providing direct services).' The paper's author, Yotam HaCohen, is a strategic consultant with the Israeli military's Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT). According to a New York Times investigation published in late May, HaCohen, alongside a group of Israeli politicians, military officers and business people, began discussing the possibility of controlling aid distribution in Gaza as early as December 2023, just two months into the war. Following a series of discussions, the group agreed to develop an alternative aid distribution system that would circumvent United Nations agencies. The idea was to operate through 'pockets' within areas under Israeli military control — without Israel directly managing the system. The reasoning was that 'the Israelis did not want Israel to take on the responsibility of caring for Gaza's roughly two million residents,' sources told the outlet at the time. A month later, early attempts were made to pilot a model of aid distribution outside the UN framework — accompanied by an unprecedented smear campaign against UN agencies, particularly UNRWA. These trials quickly failed. But the group continued to develop its plans, refining the model in coordination with foreign contractors. Chief among them was Philip F. Reilly. Reilly, a former CIA operative, helped train the Contras — US-backed right-wing militias fighting Nicaragua's Marxist government in the 1980s, according to a 2022 podcast interview cited in the New York Times investigation. 'Two decades later,' the report says, '[Reilly] was one of the first US agents to land in Afghanistan after the September 11 attacks,' later serving as CIA station chief in Kabul. The plan ultimately placed a group affiliated with Reilly in charge of distributing aid under Israeli military oversight. In November, Reilly's representatives registered two US-based entities: Safe Reach Solutions, responsible for securing the aid, and the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, tasked with its distribution, sources said to the New York Times. The Israeli military soon began coordinating with the two entities to roll out the new model. A former Israeli military officer involved in the planning told The Washington Post that they carried out 'the entire operational planning of how we can deliver the aid needed — the exact amount needed and not an ounce more.' However, as the outlet notes, 'it was unclear how Israeli officials calculated this 'exact amount.'' In March, The Guardian reported that COGAT briefed representatives from several humanitarian organizations on the new system. 'The plan was presented as an established fact, with Israeli officials claiming it already had full US support,' aid officials told the outlet. So when the GHF officially launched operations in late May, its performance came as no surprise. Everyone knew the goal was never to deliver aid — but to weaponize it. That conclusion was widely echoed by international and UN agencies, all of which refused to take part. It was also what prompted the GHF's first CEO Jake Wood to resign before the foundation even began its operations, according to his statement. In the end, Israel's plan — 'with full US support' — produced a deadly game in which Palestinians are gunned down by snipers while trying to survive starvation. Hundreds have been killed and thousands wounded. All of the horror for a single box containing rice, lentils, pasta, canned goods and biscuits — enough, according to the GHF's stated guidelines and witness testimony, to last just one week. After that, the deadly gamble must be repeated all over again.

Pope Leo XIV Calls for Compassion, Courage, and Human Connection at Weekly Audience
Pope Leo XIV Calls for Compassion, Courage, and Human Connection at Weekly Audience

See - Sada Elbalad

time25-06-2025

  • See - Sada Elbalad

Pope Leo XIV Calls for Compassion, Courage, and Human Connection at Weekly Audience

Ahmed Emam Speaking to thousands gathered in St. Peter's Square during his weekly General Audience, Pope Leo XIV emphasized themes of resilience, personal responsibility, and the importance of caring for others—especially in times of hardship. The address focused on two stories drawn from traditional texts that illustrate perseverance in the face of suffering and the value of human dignity and connection. The Pope spoke of a woman marginalized by society due to illness, and a father grieving for his daughter. Both individuals, he said, found the strength to act out of love and desperation—reminding listeners of the human instinct to seek care and support even in moments of despair. 'These episodes highlight the universal human experience of vulnerability,' he said. 'But they also remind us that reaching out, even in silence, is a powerful act of courage.' Pope Leo underlined the importance of practical care, especially in families. He described a symbolic moment where a young girl, having recovered from a life-threatening condition, is told to eat. This, he explained, points to the need for both emotional and physical nourishment in recovery and daily life. 'Do we provide that kind of nourishment to those who depend on us—especially our children?' he asked. 'Not just food, but attention, love, and values?' Acknowledging the weight many carry—disappointment, exhaustion, or personal crisis—the Pope urged people not to withdraw or lose heart. 'Don't stay still,' he said. 'Reach out. Care. Act. That is how we move forward.' He concluded by encouraging attendees to embrace change and become sources of support and encouragement to others, noting that even small acts can lead to personal and collective renewal. read more Gold prices rise, 21 Karat at EGP 3685 NATO's Role in Israeli-Palestinian Conflict US Expresses 'Strong Opposition' to New Turkish Military Operation in Syria Shoukry Meets Director-General of FAO Lavrov: confrontation bet. nuclear powers must be avoided News Iran Summons French Ambassador over Foreign Minister Remarks News Aboul Gheit Condemns Israeli Escalation in West Bank News Greek PM: Athens Plays Key Role in Improving Energy Security in Region News One Person Injured in Explosion at Ukrainian Embassy in Madrid News China Launches Largest Ever Aircraft Carrier Sports Former Al Zamalek Player Ibrahim Shika Passes away after Long Battle with Cancer Videos & Features Tragedy Overshadows MC Alger Championship Celebration: One Fan Dead, 11 Injured After Stadium Fall Lifestyle Get to Know 2025 Eid Al Adha Prayer Times in Egypt Business Fear & Greed Index Plummets to Lowest Level Ever Recorded amid Global Trade War Arts & Culture Zahi Hawass: Claims of Columns Beneath the Pyramid of Khafre Are Lies News Flights suspended at Port Sudan Airport after Drone Attacks Videos & Features Video: Trending Lifestyle TikToker Valeria Márquez Shot Dead during Live Stream News Shell Unveils Cost-Cutting, LNG Growth Plan Technology 50-Year Soviet Spacecraft 'Kosmos 482' Crashes into Indian Ocean

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