
Israel bombs Gaza City after issuing new evacuation orders
The school was destroyed in the attack along with tents sheltering displaced Palestinians [Khames Alrefi/Anadolu]
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Israel carried out dozens of air strikes on Gaza on Monday, targeting Gaza City and its eastern districts, after ordering fresh evacuations, which have raised concerns of a renewed offensive.
At least 27 Palestinians were killed across the enclave, including 10 people seeking food aid who were struck while gathering near a distribution warehouse in Gaza City's Zeitoun neighbourhood, according to Gaza health officials.
Al-Ahli Hospital confirmed the deaths and said others were wounded in the blast.
People collect their belongings from the rubble at Yafa School after the Israeli attack. Photo: Anadolu Agency
Two more Palestinians were reportedly shot and killed near an aid distribution point in southern Rafah, medical staff at Nasser Medical Complex told Al Jazeera.
Among the buildings hit was the Yafa School in the Tuffah neighbourhood of eastern Gaza City, which was destroyed in a direct strike. The school had also been sheltering displaced families, according to local sources.
Read: Turkey spy chief talks Gaza truce with Hamas leader
Yafa School is located in the Tuffah neighbourhood in eastern Gaza City. Photo: Anadolu Agency
Israel intensified its assault on northern Gaza after issuing forced evacuation orders. Photo: Anadolu Agency
Ceasefire in Gaza
Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, who is visiting Washington, DC on Monday, is expected to face pressure to reach a ceasefire and prisoner exchange agreement in the Gaza Strip, according to reports in the Israeli press.
The Times of Israel cited sources as saying that the remaining sticking points in achieving a ceasefire include the Palestinian group Hamas's demand for a permanent end to the war, as opposed to Israel's efforts to secure a temporary ceasefire that leaves open the option for it to resume fighting.
Read more: Israeli soldiers ordered to shoot at unarmed aid seekers in Gaza: report
They also said that Hamas is demanding a return to old mechanisms for distributing humanitarian aid or the establishment of a new system to replace the current one managed by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a proposition backed by Arab mediators.
Israel says GHF, an Israeli and US-backed private mechanism, is essential in preventing the diversion of aid by Hamas, but it has forced Gazans to walk long distances in order to pick up food while also crossing Israeli army lines, coming under deadly fire on a near-daily basis, the Times of Israel reported.
Israel's Haaretz newspaper, citing senior White House officials, reported that senior officials from US President Donald Trump's team will pressure Dermer to reach an agreement on 'ending the attacks on Gaza and returning the remaining prisoners'.
It was also reported that US officials would tell Dermer that Israel's insistence on 'eliminating Hamas' would be left for the future.
Moreover, Egypt's foreign minister said Sunday evening that his country is working on a new Gaza deal that includes a 60-day ceasefire in exchange for the release of some Israeli hostages and the rapid entry of humanitarian aid into the besieged enclave.
'We're working toward a durable solution and a permanent ceasefire,' Badr Abdelatty said in a televised interview with the local OnTV television.
He said the proposal is a joint effort by Egypt, Qatar and the US and represents 'a first step' toward a sustainable ceasefire.
'What's on the table now is a 60-day truce in exchange for the release of a number of Israeli hostages and the swift delivery of aid to Gaza, including medical supplies,' he added.
This move, the top diplomat said, 'would create momentum to move toward a lasting ceasefire, eventually leading to the implementation of the Jan. 19 agreement'.
'There is an American vision and understanding of the importance of including guarantees in any upcoming agreement to ensure the sustainability of a ceasefire,' he said.
Egypt, Qatar and the US brokered on January 19 a three-phased ceasefire deal between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas. The agreement was intended to ultimately bring an end to the Israeli genocidal war in Gaza.
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Business Recorder
3 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Gaza rescuers say Israeli forces kill over 50 as ceasefire calls mount
GAZA CITY: Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli forces killed at least 51 people, including 24 at a seafront rest area, as fresh calls grow for a ceasefire in the war-ravaged Palestinian territory. The swift resolution of Israel's 12-day war with Iran has revived hopes for a halt to the fighting in Gaza, where more than 20 months of combat have created dire humanitarian conditions for the population of more than two million. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will visit the White House on July 7, a US official told AFP on condition of anonymity. Israel steps up Gaza bombardment ahead of White House talks on ceasefire US President Donald Trump recently urged Israel to 'make the deal in Gaza', and the Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer is visiting Washington this week for talks with US officials. But on the ground, Israel has continued to pursue its offensive across the Palestinian territory. Gaza's civil defence agency said 51 people had been killed by Israeli forces on Monday, including 24 in a strike on a rest area on Gaza City's seafront. 'I saw body parts flying everywhere, and bodies cut and burned… It was a scene that made your skin crawl,' 26-year-old eyewitness Ahmed Al-Nayrab told AFP, recalling a 'huge explosion that shook the area'. 'The place is always crowded with people because the rest area offers drinks, family seating and internet access.' Another eyewitness, 35-year-old Bilal Awkal, said 'blood covered the ground and screams filled the air'. 'Women and children were everywhere, like a scene from a movie about the end of the world.' Approached for comment by AFP, the Israeli army said it was 'looking into' the reports. The Hamas government media office reported that photojournalist Ismail Abu Hatab was among those killed in the strike. Israeli restrictions on media in Gaza and difficulties in accessing some areas mean AFP is unable to independently verify the tolls and details provided by rescuers and authorities in the territory. 'Targeting was deliberate' Civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP that 27 others were killed by Israeli strikes or fire across Gaza, including 11 near aid points in the centre and south. Eyewitnesses and local authorities have reported repeated killings of Palestinians near distribution centres in recent weeks, after Israel began allowing in a trickle of aid at the end of May. Samir Abu Jarbou, 28, told AFP by phone that he had gone with relatives to pick up food in an area of central Gaza around midnight. 'Suddenly the (Israeli) army opened fire, and drones started shooting. We ran away and got nothing,' he said. In the southern city of Khan Yunis, the dead and wounded were rushed to a hospital in an open-top trailer after aid seekers said they were fired on by Israeli forces in Rafah. 'The targeting was deliberate, aimed at people as they were leaving,' eyewitness Aboud al-Adwi told AFP. UN condemns 'weaponisation of food' in Gaza AFP footage from Nasser Hospital showed the wounded being treated on a blood-stained floor. The Israeli military did not immediately provide comment when asked by AFP about the civil defence reports. 'No longer any benefit' Netanyahu had said on Sunday that Israel's 'victory' over Iran had created 'opportunities', including for freeing hostages. Opposition leader Yair Lapid, meanwhile, said on Monday there was 'no longer any benefit' to the war. Israel's defence minister suggested during a meeting with Netanyahu and the army's general staff that the campaign in Gaza was nearing its goal. 'We now face the completion of the campaign in Gaza, to achieve its objectives – foremost among them, the release of all hostages and the defeat of Hamas,' Israel Katz said. Trump had said on Friday that he was hoping for a new ceasefire in Gaza 'within the next week'. Three days later, Washington announced the $510-million sale to Israel of bomb guidance kits and related support. 'The United States is committed to the security of Israel, and it is vital to US national interests to assist Israel to develop and maintain a strong and ready self-defense capability,' the US Defence Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA) said in a statement. Qatar's foreign ministry spokesman Majed Al-Ansari told journalists on Monday that 'momentum' had been created by the Iran truce but 'we won't hold our breath for this to happen today and tomorrow'. Israel launched its campaign in response to Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack, which resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures. Of the 251 hostages seized during the assault, 49 are still held in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead. Israel's retaliatory campaign has killed at least 56,531 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to the Hamas-run territory's health ministry. The United Nations considers these figures to be reliable.


Business Recorder
3 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Wanton exaggeration?
This is apropos a Business Recorder op-ed 'The killing fields of Gaza' carried by Human sometime ago. That the writer, Sirajuddin Aziz, has presented an informed perspective on the plight of the Gazans is a fact. But there's an element of exaggeration in his argument when he, for example, says, 'the genocide by Israel is a locus of Cambodian violence. Gaza today is a scene of mass murder'. It is true that Israel has been carrying out genocide in Gaza. It was in December last year that the Amnesty International concluded that Israel had committed and it continued to commit genocide during its war on Gaza. 'Amnesty International's report demonstrates that Israel has carried out acts prohibited under the Genocide Convention, with the specific intent to destroy Palestinians in Gaza. These acts include killings, causing serious bodily or mental harm and deliberately inflicting on Palestinians in Gaza conditions of life calculated to bring about their physical destruction…,'according to Agnès Callamard, Secretary General of Amnesty International.? Agreed. But one must not lose sight of the fact that both Israel and Hamas have often traded accusations of genocide against each other. Insofar as the case of Khmer Rouge is concerned, however, the then communist terrorist government made no such accusation ever. When Khmer Rouge came to power after a bloody civil war in which 600,000 people died, the cities were evacuated; economic production and consumption were collectivized; books were confiscated; Buddhism, Islam and other forms of religious worship were banned. The list of Khmer Rouge's crimes against humanity is indeed very long. It was under Pol Pot's rule over one and a half million of Cambodia's eight million inhabitants perished owing to a variety of reasons, including torture, disease and hunger. Be that as it may, no doubt, Sirajuddin Aziz is a prolific and highly knowledgeable writer. Armed with a highly appreciable sense of history, he writes with conviction. Generally, his are brilliant pieces of writing. Unfortunately, however, he often overstates situations. In my view, therefore, wanton exaggeration now appears to be another feature of Sirajuddin Aziz's writing style. Mehtab Akhund (Karachi) Copyright Business Recorder, 2025


Business Recorder
3 hours ago
- Business Recorder
PARTLY FACETIOUS: How many constitutional clauses are followed in letter and spirit?
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