At least 51 Palestinians killed while waiting for aid trucks in Gaza, health officials say
Palestinian witnesses told the Associated Press that Israeli forces carried out an airstrike on a nearby home before opening fire toward the crowd in the southern city of Khan Yunis.
The Israeli military said soldiers had spotted a gathering near an aid truck that was stuck in Khan Yunis, near where Israeli forces were operating. It acknowledged 'several casualties' as Israelis opened fire on the approaching crowd and said authorities would investigate what happened.
The shooting did not appear to be related to a new Israeli- and U.S.-supported aid delivery network that rolled out last month and has been marred by controversy and violence.
The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian affairs, or OCHA, said the people killed were waiting for food rations arriving in U.N. convoys.
Also on Tuesday, the main Palestinian telecommunications regulatory agency based in the West Bank city of Ramallah reported that Israeli strikes had cut off fixed-line phone service and internet access in central and southern Gaza.
One witness, Yousef Nofal, said he saw many people motionless and bleeding on the ground after Israeli forces opened fire. 'It was a massacre,' he said, adding that the soldiers continued firing on people as they fled from the area.
Mohammed Abu Qeshfa reported hearing a loud explosion followed by heavy gunfire and tank shelling. 'I survived by a miracle,' he said.
The dead and wounded were taken to the city's Nasser Hospital, which confirmed 51 people had been killed. Later Tuesday, medical charity MSF raised the death toll to 59, saying that an additional 200 had been wounded while trying to receive flour rations in Khan Yunis.
Samaher Meqdad was at the hospital looking for her two brothers and a nephew who had been in the crowd.
'We don't want flour. We don't want food. We don't want anything,' she said. 'Why did they fire at the young people? Why? Aren't we human beings?'
Palestinians say Israeli forces have repeatedly opened fire on crowds trying to reach food distribution points run by a separate U.S.- and Israeli-backed aid group since the centers opened last month. Local health officials say scores have been killed and hundreds wounded.
In those instances, the Israeli military has acknowledged firing warning shots at people it said had approached its forces in a suspicious manner.
Deadly Israeli airstrikes continued elsewhere in the enclave on Tuesday. Al-Awda Hospital, a major medical center in northern Gaza, reported that it received the bodies of eight Palestinians killed in an Israeli strike on a house in the central Bureij refugee camp.
Israel says the new system operated by a private contractor, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, is designed to prevent the militant group Hamas from siphoning off aid to fund its activities.
U.N. agencies and major aid groups deny there is any major diversion of aid and have rejected the new system, saying that it can't meet the mounting needs in Gaza and that it violates humanitarian principles by allowing Israel to control who has access to aid.
Experts have warned of famine in the territory that is home to about 2 million Palestinians.
The U.N.-run network has delivered aid across Gaza throughout the 20-month Israel-Hamas war, but has faced major obstacles after Israel loosened a total blockade it had imposed from early March until mid-May.
U.N. officials say Israeli military restrictions, a breakdown of law and order, and widespread looting make it difficult to deliver the aid that Israel has allowed in.
Olga Cherevko, a spokesperson for OCHA, said Tuesday that the aid Israeli authorities have allowed into Gaza since late May has been 'woefully insufficient.'
Fuel has not entered Gaza for over 100 days, she said. 'The only way to address it is by sufficient volumes and over sustained periods of time. A trickle of aid here, a trickle of aid there is not going to make a difference.'
Israel's military campaign since October 2023 has killed over 55,300 Palestinians, more than half of them women and children, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. Its count doesn't distinguish between civilians and combatants.
Israel launched its campaign aiming to destroy Hamas after the group's Oct. 7, 2023, attack in southern Israel, in which militants killed around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took about 250 others hostage.
The militants still hold 53 hostages, fewer than half of them alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire agreements or other deals.
Jahjouh, Magdy and Krauss write for the Associated Press. Magdy reported from Cairo and Krauss from Dubai. AP writer Sally Abou AlJoud in Beirut contributed to this report.
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