
Outrage over more Zionist carnage as Gazans seek food
GAZA: Rescuers said the Zionist military killed at least 27 people near a US-backed aid center in Gaza on Tuesday, with the army reporting it had fired on 'suspects who advanced toward the troops'. United Nations chief Antonio Guterres on Tuesday slammed as 'unacceptable' the deaths of Palestinians seeking food aid in Gaza, a spokesman said, calling the loss of life in the territory 'unthinkable'. The White House said it is aware of reports of Zionist troops firing on Palestinian aid seekers. The UN human rights chief condemned such attacks on civilians as 'a war crime' after a similar shooting in the same area on Sunday killed and wounded scores of Palestinians seeking aid, according to the civil defense agency.
'We are witnessing unthinkable loss of life in Gaza (and) the secretary-general condemns the loss of lives and injuries of Palestinians seeking aid. It is unacceptable civilians are risking and in several instances losing their lives just trying to get food,' UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said. 'We're going to look into reports before we confirm them from this podium or before we take action,' said White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt at a press briefing.
Tuesday's deaths in the southern city of Rafah came as rescuers reported 19 people killed in other Zionist attacks in the territory, and as the Zionist army announced three soldiers had been killed in northern Gaza. 'Twenty-seven people were killed and more than 90 injured in the massacre targeting civilians who were waiting for American aid in the Al-Alam area of Rafah,' said civil defense spokesman Mahmud Bassal, who earlier told AFP the deaths occurred 'when (Zionist) forces opened fire with tanks and drones'.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said its field hospital in Gaza's Rafah city recorded 27 deaths on Tuesday, matching the toll given by rescuers. 'Early this morning, the 60-bed Red Cross Field Hospital in Rafah received a mass casualty influx of 184 patients. This includes 19 cases who were declared dead upon arrival and eight more who died due to their wounds shortly after,' the ICRC said.
The organization added in a statement that survivors of the early morning incident said they had been 'trying to reach an assistance distribution site'. The ICRC said Tuesday's shooting caused 'the highest number of weapon-wounded patients received in a single incident' since the field hospital opened more than a year ago. 'The unprecedented scale and frequency of recent mass casualty incidents treated at the field hospital is deeply worrying and illustrates the harrowing reality that civilians in Gaza are being forced to endure,' it added.
The Al-Alam roundabout is about a kilometer from a center run by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a recently formed group that the Zionist entity has worked with to implement a new aid distribution mechanism in the territory. The United Nations and major aid groups have refused to cooperate with the group over concerns it was designed to cater to Zionist military objectives.
At Nasser Hospital, the husband and children of Reem Al-Akhras, who was killed at Al-Alam, were beside themselves with grief. 'How can I let you go, mum?' her son Zain Zidan said through tears as he cradled her white-shrouded head outside the hospital. 'She went to bring us some food, and this is what happened to her.' Akhras's husband, Mohamed Zidan, said 'every day, unarmed people' were being killed. 'They carry no weapons or knives — just bags to collect aid. 'This is not humanitarian aid; it's a trap,' he said.
Rania Al-Astal, 30, said she had gone to Al-Alam with her husband to try to get food. 'The shooting began intermittently around 5:00 am. Every time people approached Al-Alam roundabout, they were fired upon,' she told AFP. 'But people didn't care and rushed forward all at once — that's when the army began firing heavily.'
Fellow witness Mohammed al-Shaer, 44, said at first 'the (Zionist) army fired shots into the air, then began shooting directly at the people'. In the end, he said, 'I didn't reach the center, and we didn't get any food.' The previous shooting on Sunday killed at least 31 people at the Al-Alam roundabout as they congregated before heading to the aid center, rescuers said. 'Deadly attacks on distraught civilians trying to access the paltry amounts of food aid in Gaza are unconscionable,' UN human rights chief Volker Turk said after Tuesday's deaths. 'Attacks directed against civilians constitute a grave breach of international law and a war crime.'
GHF on Tuesday named an evangelical Christian leader as its new chairman. The appointment of Reverend Johnnie Moore 'underscores GHF's determination to pair operational excellence with experienced, service-oriented leadership,' the group's acting executive director John Acree said in a statement. 'His insight will be invaluable as we build on our early success.'
Moore has had a confrontational approach to the United Nations. After Guterres expressed revulsion at 'reports of Palestinians killed and injured while seeking aid in Gaza' on Sunday, Moore responded angrily. 'Mr Secretary General, it was a lie,' the reverend posted to Guterres on X, 'spread by terrorists & you're still spreading it. Correct this.'
On Tuesday a leading US management consulting firm that helped create the GHF said it has terminated its contract with the organization and placed the partner leading the project on leave. Boston Consulting Group helped establish the GHF in Oct 2024. 'Unapproved follow-on work relating to Gaza lacked buy-in from multilateral stakeholders and was stopped on May 30. BCG has not and will not be paid for any of this work,' the group said in a statement. BCG said a formal review of the work has begun, and 'the partner who led this work has been placed on administrative leave.'
The Zionist entity has come under mounting pressure to improve the humanitarian situation in Gaza, where people are facing severe shortages after the Zionist entity imposed a more than two-month blockade on supplies. The health ministry in Gaza said at least 4,240 people have been killed in the territory since the Zionist entity resumed its offensive on March 18, taking the war's overall toll to 54,510, mostly civilians. – Agencies
Hashtags

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

Kuwait Times
18 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
72 martyred as Zionists keep up Gaza genocide
GAZA: Palestinian men injured in Zionist attacks receive medical attention at Khan Yunis' Nasser Hospital in the southern Gaza Strip on June 19, 2025. - AFP GAZA: Gaza's civil defense agency said Zionist forces killed at least 72 people on Thursday, including 21 who had gathered near aid distribution sites as famine looms after more than 20 months of war. Civil defense spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP that six people were killed while waiting for aid in the southern Gaza Strip and 15 others in a central area known as the Netzarim corridor, where thousands of Palestinians have gathered daily in the hope of receiving food rations. In northern Gaza, Bassal said that nine separate Zionist strikes killed another 51 people, updating earlier tolls provided by his agency. Bassam Abu Shaar, who witnessed the shooting incident in the Netzarim area, said thousands of people had gathered there overnight in the hope of receiving aid at the US- and Zionist-backed distribution site when it opened in the morning. 'Around 1:00 am (2200 GMT Wednesday), they started shooting at us,' he told AFP by phone, reporting gunfire, tank shelling and bombs dropped by drones. Abu Shaar said that the size of the crowd had made it impossible for people to escape, with casualties left lying on the ground within walking distance of the distribution point, which is run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. 'We couldn't help them or even escape ourselves,' he said. At least 300 Palestinians have been killed in recent weeks while trying to reach aid distribution points in Gaza, which is suffering from famine-like conditions, the territory's health ministry has said. In early March, the Zionist entity imposed an aid blockade on Gaza amid a deadlock in truce negotiations, only partially easing restrictions in late May. After the Zionist entity loosened its blockade, the privately run Gaza Humanitarian Foundation began distributing aid, but its operations have been marred by chaotic scenes. UN agencies and major aid groups have refused to cooperate with the foundation — which has the support of Israel and its ally the United States — over concerns it was designed to cater to Zionist military objectives. – AFP

Kuwait Times
3 days ago
- Kuwait Times
As death toll rises, Gazans make life-risking journeys to seek food
One million people without adequate shelter GAZA: Like thousands of other Palestinians in Gaza, Hind Al-Nawajha takes a dangerous, miles-long journey every day to try to get some food for her family, hoping she makes it back alive. Accompanied by her sister, Mazouza, the mother-of-four had to duck down and hide behind a pile of rubble on the side of the road as gunshots echoed nearby. 'You either come back carrying (food) for your children and they will be happy, or you come back in a shroud, or you go back upset (without food) and your children will cry,' said Nawajha, 38, a resident of Beit Lahiya, in northern Gaza. 'This is life, we are being slaughtered, we can't do it anymore.' In the past two days, dozens of Palestinians have also been killed by Zionist fire as they tried to get food from aid trucks brought into the enclave by the United Nations and international relief agencies, Gaza medics said. On Thursday, medics said at least 51 people were killed by Zionist gunfire and military strikes, including 12 people who tried to approach a site operated by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation in the central Gaza Strip, the latest in near-daily reports of killings of people seeking food. The Zionist military said there were several attempts by 'suspects' to approach forces in the area of Netzarim in the central Gaza Strip, in a manner that endangered them. It said forces fired warning shots to prevent suspects from approaching them, and it was currently unaware of injuries in the incident. In an email, GHF criticized Gazan health officials, accusing them of regularly releasing inaccurate information. GHF said that Palestinians do not access the nearby GHF site via the Netzarim corridor. It did not address questions about whether GHF was aware that such an incident had occurred. Thirty-nine people were killed, meanwhile, in separate airstrikes in the northern Gaza Strip, medics said. One of those strikes killed at least 19 people, including women and children, in a tent in Shati refugee camp in Gaza City, they added. Another strike killed at least 14 people and damaged several houses in Jabalia, in the north of the enclave, medics said. There was no immediate comment from the Zionist army on those attacks. In recent days, the military said its forces had opened fire and fired warning shots to disperse people who approached areas where troops were operating, posing a threat. It said it was reviewing reports of casualties among civilians. Sleeping by the road Zionist entity has been channeling much of the aid it is now allowing into Gaza through a new US- and Zionist-backed group, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which operates a handful of distribution sites in areas guarded by Zionist forces. The Gaza health ministry said hundreds of Palestinians have been killed trying to reach GHF sites since late May. The United Nations rejects the GHF delivery system as inadequate, dangerous and a violation of humanitarian impartiality rules. Zionist entity says it is needed to prevent Hamas fighters from diverting aid, which Hamas denies. On Wednesday, the GHF said in a statement it had distributed 3 million meals across three of its aid sites without an incident. The Gaza war was triggered when Palestinian militants attacked Zionist entity on October 7, 2023. Zionist entity's subsequent military assault on Gaza has killed nearly 55,600 Palestinians, according to Gaza's health ministry, while displacing almost the entire population of more than 2 million and causing a hunger crisis. The Norwegian Refugee Council warned on Thursday that more than 1 million people were without adequate shelter, saying equipment such as tents and tarpaulins had been blocked by Zionist entity from entering since March 1. Nawajha returned empty-handed on Wednesday from her journey to find food, flopping down exhausted on the dusty ground outside the tent in Gaza City, where she has been displaced and sheltering with her family. She and her sister have been camping by the road for the past 20 days. They say they try to force their way into the distribution site where trucks carrying aid arrive, but are often outmuscled by men, who sometimes fight over sacks of flour coming off UN trucks. '(When) there is no food, as you can see, children start crying and getting angry,' said Nawajha. 'When we are for three, four kilometers or more on our legs... Oh my... our feet are bruised and our shoes are torn off.' — Reuters

Kuwait Times
3 days ago
- Kuwait Times
Zionists slaughter 140 in Gaza, raid West Bank camps
GAZA: Zionist gunfire and strikes killed at least 140 people across Gaza in the past 24 hours, local health officials said, as some Palestinians in the Strip said their plight was being forgotten as attention has shifted to the air war between Zionist entity and Iran. At least 40 of those killed over the past day died as a result of Zionist gunfire and airstrikes on Wednesday, Gaza's health ministry said. The deaths included the latest in near daily killings of Palestinians seeking aid in the three weeks since the Zionist entity partially lifted a total blockade on the territory. Medics said separate airstrikes on homes in the Maghazi refugee camp, the Zeitoun neighborhood and Gaza City killed at least 21 people, while five others were killed in an airstrike on an encampment in Khan Yunis in southern Gaza. Fourteen more people were killed in Zionist fire at crowds of Palestinians awaiting aid trucks brought in by the United Nations along the Salahuddin road in central Gaza, medics said. On Tuesday, Gaza's health ministry said 397 Palestinians among those trying to get food aid had been killed and more than 3,000 wounded since aid deliveries restarted in late May. Some in Gaza expressed concern that the latest escalations in the war between the Zionist entity and Hamas that began in Oct 2023 would be overlooked due to the new Zionist-Iran conflict. 'People are being slaughtered in Gaza, day and night, but attention has shifted to the Iran-(Zionist) war. There is little news about Gaza these days,' said Adel, a resident of Gaza City. 'Whoever doesn't die from (Zionist) bombs dies from hunger. People risk their lives every day to get food, and they also get killed and their blood smears the sacks of flour they thought they had won,' he told Reuters. The Zionist entity is now channeling much of the aid into Gaza through a new US- and Zionist-backed group, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which uses private US security and logistics firms and operates a handful of distribution sites in areas guarded by Zionist forces. Philippe Lazzarini, head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, called the current system for distributing aid 'a disgrace & a stain on our collective consciousness', in a post on X on Wednesday. The World Food Program called on Wednesday for a big increase in food distribution in Gaza, saying that the 9,000 metric tons it had dispatched over the last four weeks inside Gaza represented a 'tiny fraction' of what was needed. 'The fear of starvation and desperate need for food is causing large crowds to gather along well-known transport routes, hoping to intercept and access humanitarian supplies while in transit,' the WFP said in a statement. 'Any violence resulting in starving people being killed or injured while seeking life-saving assistance is completely unacceptable,' it added. Palestinians in Gaza have been closely following the Zionist entity's air war with Iran, long a major supporter of Hamas. 'We are maybe happy to see (the Zionist entity) suffer from Iranian rockets, but at the end of the day, one more day in this war costs the lives of tens of innocent people,' said 47-year-old Shaban Abed, a father of five from northern Gaza. 'We just hope that a comprehensive solution could be reached to end the war in Gaza, too. We are being forgotten.' Meanwhile, Zionist troops raided two Palestinian refugee camps in the occupied West Bank's north overnight. The military told AFP that at 'around 4:00 am (Zionist) forces entered Balata camp', near the northern city of Nablus. It added that the troops had been deployed to the nearby Askar camp prior to the operation in Balata camp. Imad Zaki, head of the popular services committee of Balata camp, also told AFP that the military began its raid at 4:00 am on Wednesday. 'They closed all entrances to the camp, seized several homes after evicting their residents, and ordered the homeowners not to return for 72 hours. These homes were turned into military outposts and interrogation centers,' Zaki said. 'The soldiers are conducting house-to-house and neighborhood-to-neighborhood searches, destroying the contents of homes and physically assaulting the residents,' Zaki told AFP. He added that life had been 'largely paralyzed' for the camp's residents but that no injuries were reported. – Agencies