US envoy Steve Witkoff visits Gaza as humanitarian crisis worsens
With food scarce and parcels being airdropped, Mr Witkoff and US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee toured one of Gaza Humanitarian Foundation's (GHF) distribution sites in Rafah, on Friday.
Chapin Fay, the group's spokesperson, said the visit reflected Mr Trump's understanding of the stakes and that "feeding civilians, not Hamas, must be the priority".
All four of the group's sites are in zones controlled by the Israeli military and have become flashpoints of desperation during their months of operation, with starving people scrambling for scarce aid.
Hundreds have been killed by either gunfire or trampling.
The Israeli military said it had only fired warning shots at people who approach its forces, and the GHF said its armed contractors have only used pepper spray or fired warning shots to prevent deadly crowding.
Mr Witkoff's visit comes a week after US officials walked away from ceasefire talks in Qatar, blaming Hamas and pledging to seek other ways to rescue Israeli hostages and make Gaza safe.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Thursday that Mr Witkoff was sent to craft a plan to boost food and aid deliveries, while Mr Trump wrote on social media that the fastest way to end the crisis would be for Hamas to surrender and release hostages.
Officials at Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza said they have received the bodies of 25 people, including 13 who were killed while trying to get aid, including near the site that US officials visited.
GHF denied anyone was killed at their sites on Friday and said most recent incidents had taken place near United Nations aid convoys.
The remaining 12 were killed in air strikes, the officials said. Israel's military did not immediately comment.
International organisations have said Gaza has been on the brink of famine for the past two years. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, the leading international authority on food crises, said recent developments, including a complete blockade on aid for two and a half months, mean the "worst-case scenario of famine is currently playing out in Gaza."
Though the flow of aid has resumed, including via airdrops, the amount getting into Gaza remains far lower than what aid organisations say is needed.
A security breakdown in the territory has made it nearly impossible to safely deliver food to starving Palestinians, much of the limited aid entering is hoarded and later sold at exorbitant prices.
At a press conference in Gaza City, representatives of the territory's influential tribes accused Israel of empowering factions that loot aid sites and implored Mr Witkoff to stay several hours in Gaza to witness life firsthand.
In a report issued Friday, Human Rights Watch called the current set-up "a flawed, militarised aid distribution system that has turned aid distributions into regular bloodbaths."
"It would be near impossible for Palestinians to follow the instructions issued by GHF, to stay safe, and receive aid, particularly in the context of ongoing military operations, Israeli military sanctioned curfews, and frequent GHF messages saying that people should not travel to the sites before the distribution window opens," the report said.
It cited doctors, aid seekers and at least one security contractor.
Since the group's operations began in late May, hundreds of Palestinians have been killed in shootings by Israeli soldiers while on roads heading to the sites, according to witnesses and health officials.
The Israeli military has said its troops have only fired warning shots to control crowds.
Responding to the report, Israel's military blamed Hamas for sabotaging the aid distribution system but said it was working to make the routes under its control safer for those travelling to aid sites.
GHF did not immediately respond to questions about the report.
The group has never allowed journalists to visit their sites and Israel's military has barred reporters from independently entering Gaza throughout the war.
International condemnations have mounted as such reports trickle out of Gaza, including from aid organisations that previously oversaw distribution.
A video published on Thursday by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) showed an aid convoy driving past a border crossing as gunfire ricocheted off the ground near where crowds congregated.
"We were met on the road by tens of thousands of hungry and desperate people who directly offloaded everything from the backs of our trucks," said Olga Cherevko, an OCHA staff member.
Some of Israel's traditional allies have moved toward recognising Palestinian statehood hoping to revive prospects of a two-state solution. Germany has thus far refrained from doing so.
On a tour in the occupied West Bank, Germany's Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul, called on Israel to be open to making peace and said Hamas militants should lay down their weapons and release the hostages.
Speaking in the Christian-majority village of Taybeh, Mr Wadephul called Israeli settlements in the West Bank a key obstacle to a two-state solution.
He condemned settler violence and destruction, and criticised the Israeli military for failing to do more to prevent the attacks.
The frequency of settler attacks in the West Bank have increased since the war between Israel and Hamas began, according to the United Nations. The conflict erupted on October 7 2023, when Hamas attacked southern Israel, killing around 1,200 people and abducting 251 others.
Hamas still hold 50 hostages, including around 20 believed to be alive. Most of the others have been released in ceasefires or other deals.
Israel's retaliatory offensive has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. Its count doesn't distinguish between militants and civilians. The ministry operates under the Hamas government.
The UN and other international organisations see it as the most reliable source of data on casualties.
AP

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ABC News
3 hours ago
- ABC News
The junior doctor from Perth trying to build a children's hospital in Gaza
As the hospital walls shook and screams filled the night, Dr Mohammed Mustafa turned on his phone to film, simultaneously shocking the world and changing the course of his life. Bombs were falling again on Gaza, a two-month-long ceasefire abruptly ended by Israel in the early hours of March 18 this year. The trainee emergency doctor from Perth, known as Dr Mo, was thrust into the carnage of a mass casualty event. "I remember just thinking to myself, "Oh my God, how many dead are there?" Dr Mo tells Australian Story. "And then I went to my room and I just recorded what was going on, what had happened that night." In the video, the 35-year-old doctor's face is etched with pain and exhaustion as he describes operating through the night on patients, mostly women and children, "burnt head-to-toe, limbs missing". Overcome, the UK-raised son of Palestinian refugees lowers his head, covers his eyes with his big hand to hide the tears and turns off the video. Then he posts it on social media. "I think it really struck a lot of chords with a lot of people," Dr Mo says. "All of a sudden I became this focal point where I had a lot of people wanting to interview me." Israel has banned foreign journalists from Gaza, and killed more than 170 Palestinian journalists, so Dr Mo became a chronicler of life and death in war-torn Palestine, talking to television networks around the world and taking video of the ever-unfolding nightmare of the emergency room. Just how deeply Dr Mo's work resonated became clear when he returned to Perth. Hundreds of supporters, many of whom only knew him via social media, filled the airport arrivals hall and cheers went up as the 190cm, 140kg man-mountain emerged. His videos also resonated globally, attracting the attention of world leaders and political figures such as former UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and bringing him face-to-face with Piers Morgan and Greta Thunberg. Five months on, Dr Mo is now on a mission that has taken him not just to the halls of Australia's parliament but to governments around the world: to build a children's hospital in Gaza. To his 200,000-plus Instagram followers, Dr Mo is known by the username "Beast from the Middle East", a throwback to the chant that would rise up in the crowd as he thundered down the field as a professional rugby player. For the young Palestinian migrant to the UK, who was targeted at school for his ethnicity and Islamic faith, rugby offered a sense of belonging. Despite the schoolyard turmoil, he was a bright kid, and from an early age, Dr Mo was well aware his parents wanted him to be a doctor. "I pushed him hard [to] study medicine," his mother, Iman Mustafa, says. "I love medicine." After graduating, Dr Mo chose to specialise in emergency medicine, a field that, like rugby and his subsequent title-winning foray into ju-jitsu, satisfied his need for action. "I wanted to go and help in conflict zones," Dr Mo says. "I wanted to go help in natural disasters. I wanted to be there when it happened, to be right there and then." In 2017, despite his mother's protestations, Dr Mo moved to Queensland's Gold Coast to continue his training. "Emergency medicine in Australia is world-renowned and the pay is a lot better, the lifestyle is a lot better," he says. He became enamoured with Australia, its people, humour, and culture, and after moving to Western Australia, became an Australian citizen in April 2023. Six months later, while on night shift, Dr Mo learned of the horrific raids into Israel by Hamas on October 7. "Those images of women and children being kidnapped and taken into Gaza, when you saw dead women and children, there's no justification for that," Dr Mo says. But at the same time, he felt a sense of dread, knowing that Israel would respond with deadly force. "I felt sorry for what the people were about to endure in Gaza," he says. Israel's retaliatory strikes killed at least 1,900 children by the end of October, according to human rights researchers — an unprecedented toll in modern history. Dr Mo had never been to Gaza, never met his extended family living there. Now was the time. He volunteered as an emergency doctor and in June 2024, in the weeks after Australian aid worker Zomi Frankcom was killed by an Israeli air-strike while attempting to deliver food, Dr Mo began his first of two stints in Gaza. "You could hear the bombs going off in the background and the drones overhead, and you've got these children in body bags [within] the first 30 minutes, hour, that we arrived at the hospital," Dr Mo says. Dealing with high-stress situations is part of Dr Mo's life. But when he stood up in Parliament House in May to deliver a speech urging support for a children's hospital in Gaza, he was overwhelmed. "My palms were very, very sweaty and I was very, very nervous," he says. Dr Mo told of the guilt he harbours from having to decide between the child he can treat and the child who will bleed to death on the floor. He told of how at least 1,400 healthcare workers have been killed in Gaza since the start of the war. And a child dies there every 40 minutes. Sitting in the audience, along with politicians, diplomats, and aid workers, was Matiu Bush, the nursing academic with social media know-how who Dr Mo met and collaborated with during his second mission in Gaza. Together, they spearhead the campaign for the children's hospital, recently spending months overseas engaged in high-level lobbying for support of the proposal. "We're not an organisation, we're not part of the government," Dr Mo told the crowd. "We're just a doctor and a nurse." The mission is to build a children's hospital in Gaza, with its kitchen named in Zomi Frankcom's honour. The plan is to assemble the hospital in Gaza from modular units transported from Jordan. 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"I can't wait till we manage to get her out of Gaza." When Dr Mo calls Nour, he can hear fighter jets overhead and knows the danger she faces going to work at the hospital each day. When he closes his eyes, he sees the lifeless bodies of children he has put into body bags. "Switching off the phone doesn't stop those images in my head," he says. "There's a lot of pain that I've got, but if I can put aside the pain and I can focus on something positive, then maybe people from the other side can also put aside their pain and focus on the positive. "I just want the killing to stop, and I want these kids to grow up with a chance in the future."


The Advertiser
7 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Russian, Chinese navies hold drills in Sea of Japan
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The Russian and Chinese navies are carrying out artillery and anti-submarine drills in the Sea of Japan as part of scheduled joint exercises, the Russian Pacific Fleet says. The drills are taking place two days after US President Donald Trump said he had ordered two nuclear submarines to be positioned in "the appropriate regions" in response to remarks by former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev. However, they were scheduled well before Trump's action. Interfax news agency quoted the Pacific Fleet as saying Russian and Chinese vessels were moving in a joint detachment including a large Russian anti-submarine ship and two Chinese destroyers. It said diesel-electric submarines from the two countries were also involved, as well as a Chinese submarine rescue ship. The manoeuvres are part of exercises titled "Maritime Interaction-2025" which are scheduled to end on Tuesday. 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The Russian and Chinese navies are carrying out artillery and anti-submarine drills in the Sea of Japan as part of scheduled joint exercises, the Russian Pacific Fleet says. The drills are taking place two days after US President Donald Trump said he had ordered two nuclear submarines to be positioned in "the appropriate regions" in response to remarks by former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev. However, they were scheduled well before Trump's action. Interfax news agency quoted the Pacific Fleet as saying Russian and Chinese vessels were moving in a joint detachment including a large Russian anti-submarine ship and two Chinese destroyers. It said diesel-electric submarines from the two countries were also involved, as well as a Chinese submarine rescue ship. The manoeuvres are part of exercises titled "Maritime Interaction-2025" which are scheduled to end on Tuesday. 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The Russian and Chinese navies are carrying out artillery and anti-submarine drills in the Sea of Japan as part of scheduled joint exercises, the Russian Pacific Fleet says. The drills are taking place two days after US President Donald Trump said he had ordered two nuclear submarines to be positioned in "the appropriate regions" in response to remarks by former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev. However, they were scheduled well before Trump's action. Interfax news agency quoted the Pacific Fleet as saying Russian and Chinese vessels were moving in a joint detachment including a large Russian anti-submarine ship and two Chinese destroyers. It said diesel-electric submarines from the two countries were also involved, as well as a Chinese submarine rescue ship. The manoeuvres are part of exercises titled "Maritime Interaction-2025" which are scheduled to end on Tuesday. Interfax said Russian and Chinese sailors would conduct artillery firing, practise anti-submarine and air defence missions, and improve joint search and rescue operations at sea. Russia and China, which signed a "no-limits" strategic partnership shortly before Russia went to war in Ukraine in 2022, conduct regular military exercises to rehearse co-ordination between their armed forces and send a deterrent signal to adversaries. Trump said his submarine order on Friday was made in response to what he called "highly provocative" remarks by Russia's Medvedev about the risk of war between the nuclear-armed adversaries. Russia and the United States have by far the biggest nuclear arsenals in the world. It is extremely rare for either country to discuss the deployment and location of its nuclear submarines. Trump's comments came at a time of mounting tension with Moscow as he grows frustrated at the lack of progress towards ending the Ukraine war.

Sky News AU
9 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Anti-Israel Sydney Harbour Bridge protest calls for death of Israeli soldiers
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