
End 'deadly' Gaza aid scheme after 400 Palestinians killed, NGOs say
The GHF's executive director is Johnnie Moore, an evangelical preacher and former adviser to Donald Trump, who last week called UN reports that more than 400 Palestinians had been killed trying to collect aid from his group 'disinformation'.
READ MORE: UK Government refuses to reveal assessment of Israel's nuclear weapons
Israel had imposed an 11-week aid blockade on Gaza which pushed the region to the brink of famine, before it was partially lifted on May 19. The GHF began operating a week later and now controls the four distribution sites in the strip, down from some 400 under the previous UN-led system.
In their joint statement, the more than 130 NGOs said that these militarised zones see Palestinians 'face daily gunfire and mass casualties while trying to access food and are denied other life-saving supplies'.
They called for the end to the 'the deadly Israeli distribution scheme (including the so-called Gaza Humanitarian Foundation) in Gaza' and for the system to 'revert to the existing UN-led coordination mechanisms, and lift the Israeli government's blockade on aid and commercial supplies'.
READ MORE: Co-op stocks selling products from Israel and 16 other countries – see the full list
The statement – signed by NGOs including Amnesty International, Oxfam, Médecins Sans Frontières, Medical Aid for Palestinians, and Save the Children – goes on: 'Today, Palestinians in Gaza face an impossible choice: starve or risk being shot while trying desperately to reach food to feed their families.
'The weeks following the launch of the Israeli distribution scheme have been some of the deadliest and most violent since October 2023.
'In less than four weeks, more than 500 Palestinians have been killed and almost 4000 injured just trying to access or distribute food. Israeli forces and armed groups – some reportedly operating with backing from Israeli authorities – now routinely open fire on desperate civilians risking everything just to survive.
'The humanitarian system is being deliberately and systematically dismantled by the Government of Israel's blockade and restrictions, a blockade now being used to justify shutting down nearly all other aid operations in favour of a deadly, military-controlled alternative that neither protects civilians nor meets basic needs.
'These measures are designed to sustain a cycle of desperation, danger, and death.
US president Donald Trump has backed the ethnic cleansing of Gaza (Image: Ken Cedeno, REUTERS) 'Experienced humanitarian actors remain ready to deliver life-saving assistance at scale. Yet more than 100 days since Israeli authorities reimposed a near-total blockade on aid and commercial goods, Gaza's humanitarian conditions are collapsing faster than at any point in the past 20 months.'
The statement goes on: 'Under the Israeli government's new scheme, starved and weakened civilians are being forced to trek for hours through dangerous terrain and active conflict zones, only to face a violent, chaotic race to reach fenced, militarized distribution sites with a single entry point. There, thousands are released into chaotic enclosures to fight for limited food supplies. These areas have become sites of repeated massacres in blatant disregard for international humanitarian law.
'Orphaned children and caregivers are among the dead, with children harmed in over half of the attacks on civilians at these sites. With Gaza's healthcare system in ruins, many of those shot are left to bleed out alone, beyond the reach of ambulances and denied lifesaving medical care.
READ MORE: Israel 'deliberately denying Arab citizens bomb shelters'
'Amidst severe hunger and famine-like conditions, many families tell us they are now too weak to compete for food rations. Those who do manage to obtain food often return with only a few basic items – nearly impossible to prepare without clean water or fuel to cook with.
'Fuel is nearly depleted, bringing critical lifesaving services – including bakeries, water systems, ambulances, and hospitals – to a standstill. Families are sheltering under plastic sheets, operating makeshift kitchens amid the rubble, without fuel, clean water, sanitation, or electricity.
'This is not a humanitarian response.
'Concentrating more than two million people into further confined areas for a chance to feed their families is not a plan to save lives. For 20 months, more than two million people have been subjected to relentless bombardment, the weaponization of food, water and other aid, repeated forced displacement, and systematic dehumanization - all under the watch of the international community.
"The Sphere Association, which sets minimum standards for quality humanitarian aid, has warned that the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation's approach does not adhere to core humanitarian standards and principles.
'This normalization of suffering must not be allowed to stand. States must reject the false choice between deadly, military-controlled food distributions and total denial of aid. States must uphold their obligations under international humanitarian and human rights law, including prohibitions on forced displacement, indiscriminate attacks, and obstruction of humanitarian aid. States must ensure accountability for grave violations of international law.'
Closing their joint statement, the NGOs call on state actors to:
Take concrete measures to end the suffocating siege and uphold the right of civilians in Gaza to safely access aid and receive protection.
Urge donors not to fund militarized aid schemes that violate international law, do not adhere to humanitarian principles, deepen harm, and risk complicity in atrocities.
Support the restoration of a unified, UN-led coordination mechanism—grounded in international humanitarian law and inclusive of UNRWA, Palestinian civil society, and the wider humanitarian community—to meet people's needs.
It closes: 'We reiterate our urgent calls for an immediate and sustained ceasefire, the release of all hostages and arbitrarily detained prisoners, full humanitarian access at scale, and an end to the pervasive impunity that enables these atrocities and denies Palestinians their basic dignity.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
4 minutes ago
- The Independent
Interest rates would have been cut, if not for Trump's tariffs, Fed chair says
The Federal Reserve would have likely cut interest rates by now had it not been for President Donald Trump 's sweeping tariffs on nearly every U.S. trading partner, Chair Jerome Powell said on Tuesday. Amid a battle with the president, who has been pressuring the Fed to cut interest rates, Powell said they had to re-evaluate their plans for interest rates once inflation forecasts went up after April's so-called 'Liberation Day' tariffs. 'We went on hold when we saw the size of the tariffs, and essentially, all inflation forecasts for the United States went up materially as a consequence of the tariffs,' Powell said while sitting on a panel at the European Central Bank forum. When asked if the Fed would have cut interest rates by now, had the tariffs not been implemented, Powell said, 'I think that's right.' Trump has lashed out at Powell for refusing to cut interest rates, calling him 'not a smart person,' and accusing him of making the government spend more money unnecessarily. He's repeatedly attacked Powell online for not following other countries in lowering short-term interest rates. He has even suggested he would 'terminate' Powell – something he cannot do. On Monday, Trump sent a handwritten letter to Powell, who he often calls 'too late,' claiming he 'cost the U.S.A. a fortune' by not cutting interest rates. 'You should lower the rate – by a lot! Hundreds of billions of dollars are being lost,' Trump wrote on a paper containing the global Central Bank rates. Lowering short-term interest rates can encourage people to borrow and spend more, which stimulates the economy. It also reduces the amount of interest the government must pay on debt. But it can also increase inflation. But Powell said the Fed was being 'prudent' by adopting a wait-and-see method when it comes to the impact of tariffs. The U.S. economy is currently stable with low unemployment rates and declining inflation. However, Powell said the impact of tariffs could come later this year. He reminded the panel that inflation is behaving the way the Fed initially expected. 'We haven't seen effects much, yet, from tariffs and we didn't expect to by now. We've always said the timing, amount, and persistence of inflation would be highly uncertain,' Powell said. He added, 'We expect to see, over the summer, higher readings, but we're prepared to learn that it can be higher or lower or later or sooner than we expected.' Powell did not indicate whether the Fed would cut interest rates in July, saying that they were making decisions based on how data changes. While Trump can hope for Powell to resign, he can remain Chairman of the Federal Reserve until 2026 when his term ends.


Daily Mail
19 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Kristi Noem makes stomach-churning claim about CANNIBAL aboard ICE deportation flight
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has claimed an illegal immigrant detained by ICE agents started to eat his own arms during a deportation flight. Noem shared the horrifying details to highlight the type of people federal agents are targeting as her department cracks down on illegal immigrants in the US. Speaking alongside President Donald Trump on Tuesday, she said: 'The other day, I was talking to some Marshalls that have been partnering with ice. 'They said that they had detained a cannibal and put him on a plane to take him home. 'And while they had him in his seat, he started to eat himself and they had to get him off and get him medical attention.' Noem added: 'These are the kind of deranged individuals that are on our streets in America that we're trying to target and get out of our country.' She also slammed former President Joe Biden when speaking of the incident, saying the Democrat had 'let the worst of the worst come in here'. A Homeland Security spokesperson confirmed Noem was referring to an incident mentioned in a June 27 post on her X account. That post said: 'Had some plane issues on the ride back from Guatemala. Fortunately, an ICE deportation flight carrying criminal illegal aliens had just touched down on the same tarmac in Guatemala. 'Hitched a ride back to the USA on ICE Air - great flight', the Daily Mail has approached ICE and the department for further details on the incident. The revelation came as she appeared alongside President Trump on a visit to a new immigrant detention center in the Florida Everglades on Tuesday morning. The two toured the new facility — nicknamed 'Alligator Alcatraz' — and praised its remote, high-security design. President Trump said it would soon house what he described as 'the most vicious people on the planet.' He added: 'It is not a place I want to go hiking any time soon. Very soon this facility will house some of the most menacing migrants, the most vicious people on the planet. 'We're surrounded by miles of swamp land and the only way out is deportation.' Trump said he'd like to see similar facilities in 'many states,' adding Florida would getting a second one 'and probably a couple more.' 'At some point they might morph into a system where you're going to keep it for a long time,' he added. Democrats have slammed it as a 'prison camp,' environmentalists have questioned its impact and Native Americans protested it being built on sacred ground. Despite controversy surrounding the construction of such a facility, he said: 'I couldn't care less.' The White House has delighted in the area's remoteness - about 50 miles west of Miami - and the fact that it is teeming with pythons and alligators. It hopes to convey a message to detainees and the rest of the world that repercussions will be severe if the immigration laws of the US are not followed. Before arriving, Trump even joked of migrants being held there, 'We're going to teach them how to run away from an alligator if they escape prison.' The president said any migrant being processed into the facility who wanted to return to their home country would be allowed to do so. He said he would be making a decision on exempting farm workers and construction workers in the next few weeks. The center was built in eight days over 10 miles of Everglades. It features over 200 security cameras, 28,000-plus feet of barbed wire and 400 security personnel.


The Independent
24 minutes ago
- The Independent
EPA staffers are trying to get people to adopt lab rats as Trump team shuts down research projects
Cuts to the Environmental Protection Agency are forcing it to curb much of its research work, leaving it with an abundance of lab animals — so it's holding an adoption drive. EPA staff at a research office in North Carolina have launched an adoption campaign for their lab rats and zebrafish in response to cuts to its research projects introduced by the Donald Trump administration, according to the Wall Street Journal. A research and development official at the EPA said that scientists were having a difficult time obtaining supplies for even basic testing, which led to an oversupply of lab animals. The EPA has about 20,000 animals in its labs, including rabbits, mice, and rats. The animals are generally used to gauge the safety of environmental pollutants. For those interested in having their own rat or zebrafish, the animals are available at the EPA's Research Triangle complex in North Carolina, according to a report by the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility. The EPA is in the process of shuttering its Office of Research and Development, and will instead replace it with a much smaller office called the Office of Applied Science and Environmental Solutions. It will use the acronym OASES. The new office will focus on shorter-term projects that are "statutorily required functions" rather than long-term research, like the effects of potentially harmful chemicals, according to a fact sheet that was emailed to the office's employees. The plan will result in the elimination of more than 1,000 science positions, which accounts for three quarters of the total office's staff. The reductions are currently on hold pending a preliminary federal court injunction challenging the cuts. PEER Science Policy Director Kyla Bennett, a scientist and attorney formally with EPA, said the cuts amounted to the EPA "abandoning its status as a premier scientific organization." 'Scientific research is vital to EPA's core mission of protecting public health and the environment, but that mission is quickly eroding," she said in a PEER press statement. PEER warned that the cuts would make the EPA more dependent on research from chemical companies, which may be incentivized to hide the harmful effects of certain chemicals, and will force the agency to abandon ongoing research that relies on lab animals. Lee Zeldin, Trump's administrator of the EPA, told the Wall Street Journal that changes at the agency reflect the priorities that Trump campaigned on and that voters supported. He described the changes as eliminating waste and "fraud" that the Biden administration allegedly tolerated. A group of approximately 400 EPA employees signed a public letter sent to Zeldin on Monday claiming that the Trump administration is ignoring science for the benefit of corporate polluters. Amelia Hertzberg, an environmental protection specialist at the EPA who signed the letter told the Wall Street Journal that Zeldin under Trump is "fundamentally changing the mission of the EPA when he focuses on industry needs above human health and the environment." An EPA spokeswoman told the paper that the agency was "bound by laws established by Congress — not what some would like the laws to say." Bennett said the EPA is "undergoing an ill-advised scientific self-lobotomy." 'Instead of developing a strategic plan for meeting its scientific needs, Trump's EPA has decided to largely abandon scientific research except when it is specifically mandated by law, thus embracing some short-term savings to its long-term detriment.'