
No plans to allow any aid into Gaza, says Israeli minister
Aid supplies including food, fuel, water and medicine have been blocked by Israel from entering Gaza since 2 March, more than two weeks before the collapse of the ceasefire between Israel and the Palestinian militant group with a return to air and ground attacks on the territory.
The medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières said on Wednesday that Gaza was becoming a 'mass grave for Palestinians'.
The Israeli defence minister, Israel Katz, said: 'Israel's policy is clear: no humanitarian aid will enter Gaza, and blocking this aid is one of the main pressure levers preventing Hamas from using it as a tool with the population.'
He added: 'No one is currently planning to allow any humanitarian aid into Gaza, and there are no preparations to enable such aid.'
Amnesty International is among the aid agencies that have described Israel's blockade on all supplies going into Gaza as a crime against humanity and a violation of international humanitarian law. Israel has denied any violations.
More than 51,000 Palestinians have died in Gaza since the conflict began, including more than 1,600 since Israel resumed airstrikes and ground operations on 18 March. The Gaza health ministry does not distinguish between combatants and civilians but has said more than half of those dead were women and children.
Another 13 people were killed in airstrikes overnight, with a well-known photographer, Fatema Hassouna, among those reported dead in the northern area of the strip.
Doctors and aid groups on the ground said the humanitarian situation in Gaza was becoming graver by the day. 'The situation is the worst it has been in 18 months in terms of being deprived of your basic necessities and the resumption of hostilities and attacks against Palestinians in all of Gaza,' said Mahmoud Shalabi, a director at Medical Aid for Palestinians.
Israel has been accused of worsening the humanitarian situation by targeting hospitals and medical personnel working in Gaza, with two hospitals struck and debilitated by airstrikes this week. Israel has claimed Hamas has used medical facilities as a cover for terrorist operations.
On Tuesday, a report by the New York Times revealed that the autopsy reports of 14 medics and rescue workers killed by Israeli troops in Gaza in March showed they had mainly died from gunshot wounds to the head and the chest, and most had been shot several times.
The resumption of aid into Gaza has become a highly inflammatory political issue in Israel. There are 58 hostages still in Gaza, who were taken captive after the Hamas attacks on southern Israel on 7 October 2023, with 24 believed to still be alive. Far-right figures in Benjamin Netanyahu's government have said no aid should be restored to the civilians of Gaza until Hamas agrees to the hostages' release.
'As long as our hostages are languishing in the tunnels, there is no reason for a single gram of food or any aid to enter Gaza,' the national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, said on Wednesday.
Katz said Israel intended to eventually set up its own 'civilian-based distribution infrastructure' for aid in Gaza, to prevent supplies falling into the hands of Hamas militants, but he gave no timelines or details of how it would be established.
Reports have suggested this could involve the Israel Defense Forces setting up and running logistics centres for aid, and vetted aid agencies being tasked with distributing it. However, the plan remains unclear and the UN is said to have so far refused to hand over the names of employees.
Efforts by mediators from Egypt, Qatar and the US to restore the collapsed ceasefire in Gaza and return the hostages have continued to hit stumbling blocks.
Katz said that no matter what deal was agreed, Israeli troops would remain in the buffer zones it had occupied in Gaza, as well as in neighbouring Syria and Lebanon.
Since resuming operations in March, Israeli troops have seized control of 30% of the Gaza Strip, establishing what they describe as an 'operational security perimeter'. Hamas has demanded that any hostage deal must guarantee the withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza.
Katz said: 'Unlike in the past, the [Israeli military] is not evacuating areas that have been cleared and seized.' The military would 'remain in the security zones as a buffer between the enemy and [Israeli] communities in any temporary or permanent situation in Gaza, as in Lebanon and Syria', he said.
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STV News
an hour ago
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Israel and GHF have claimed that the toll has been exaggerated. White House special envoy Steve Witkoff arrives to meet families of hostages at the plaza known as the hostages' square in Tel Aviv. / Credit: AP The GHF — backed by millions of dollars in U.S. support — launched in May as Israel sought an alternative to the UN-run system, which had safely delivered aid for much of the war but was accused by Israel of allowing Hamas to siphon off supplies. Israel has not offered evidence for that claim, and the UN has denied it. From May 27 to July 31, 859 people were killed near GHF sites, according to a United Nations report published Thursday. Hundreds more have been killed along the routes of UN-led food convoys. Hamas-led police once guarded those convoys and went after suspected looters, but Israeli fire targeted the officers. 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