Dozens more people killed or injured seeking desperately needed aid in Gaza

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"Escalating Violence in Gaza Results in More Casualties Amid Aid Efforts"

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On Thursday, a tragic escalation of violence in Gaza resulted in dozens more Palestinians being killed or injured while attempting to access urgently needed aid. Reports indicate that Israeli forces opened fire near a distribution point, marking the third such incident in as many days. Since Monday, over a hundred individuals have died while trying to reach aid locations or waiting for the limited supplies being delivered by United Nations and commercial trucks. The Gaza civil defense agency reported that early Thursday morning, Israeli gunfire resulted in 15 fatalities and 60 injuries between Nuseirat and central Gaza, as thousands gathered in hopes of receiving food rations. Independent verification of these reports remains challenging, but witness accounts have largely corroborated the events described, highlighting the dire situation faced by those in search of assistance.

Eyewitnesses recounted harrowing experiences during the chaotic moments leading up to the violence. Abdullah Ahmed, who was approximately a kilometer away from an aid distribution site, described the scene of explosions and gunfire as he attempted to secure food for his family. He sustained injuries from shrapnel when artillery shells exploded nearby. Another witness, Abdel Fattah Younis, shared that they were targeted by intense gunfire as they approached the site, resulting in his own serious injuries. The Israeli army responded to these claims by stating that their troops had fired warning shots at individuals they deemed suspects but denied any awareness of injuries among civilians. The violence coincided with a particularly bloody day in Gaza, which also saw around 60 casualties from airstrikes. With the humanitarian crisis worsening due to a blockade that has led to severe food shortages, international organizations like the World Food Programme have reported insufficient aid deliveries relative to the needs of Gaza's population of over 2 million. The ongoing conflict, exacerbated by Israel's military operations against Hamas, has resulted in a staggering death toll, with the health ministry reporting over 55,600 deaths since the war's escalation began.

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Dozens more Palestinians were killed or injured inGazaas they sought desperately needed aid on Thursday, with reports that Israeli forces close to one distribution point had opened fire in the third such incident in as many days.

More than a hundred people have beenreported killedsince Monday while trying either to reach aid points or waiting to stop and offload the limited number of UN and commercial trucks entering the devastated territory. There have been about 20 such incidents in the last four weeks.

Gaza’s civil defence agency said Israeli fire had killed 15 people and wounded 60 between the town of Nuseirat and in the centre of Gaza early on Thursday morning after thousands had gathered in the hope of receiving rations.

Such reports are difficult to confirm independently, but interviews conducted by the Guardian with witnesses appear to corroborate many of the details.

Abdullah Ahmed, 31, said he had been around a kilometre from an aid distribution site run by theGazaHumanitarian Foundation (GHF), a US and Israeli-backed private organisation, when there had been a series of explosions and shootings at around 2am local time.

“I heard that the GHF site would open in the morning and set out early from my home [in the nearby town of al-Bureij] to get food.

“Because there are always many people, we try to be the first to increase our chances of getting aid. When I was heading to the aid distribution point, there was heavy but intermittent gunfire from tanks, artillery and quadcopters,” he said. “As we got closer to the site, gunfire resumed and shells were launched. A shell fell just a few metres away from me, and shrapnel hit me in my chest, neck and leg.”

Abdel Fattah Younis, 20, from Nuseirat said the shooting or shelling occurred when crowds had surged towards the GHF site in the belief that it had opened to distribute aid.

“We moved toward it, and we became fully exposed … Suddenly, intense gunfire was directed at us … I was shot once in the chest, and another bullet lodged in my lower back,” he said.

Dr Nasser Abu Samra, the head of the emergency reception department at al-Awda hospital, said it had received nine dead and 120 injured from the incident.

The Israeli army told Agence France-Presse that troops had fired “warning shots” at “suspects” approaching them in the Netzarim area, but that it was “not aware of any injured individuals”.

The reported incident came on a particularly bloody day in Gaza, with about 60 people also reported killed in a wave of airstrikes.

Food has become extremely scarce in Gaza since Israel’s imposition of a tight blockade on all supplies throughout March and April, leaving many of the territory’s inhabitants facing a“critical risk of famine”.

Since the blockade was partially lifted last month, the UN has tried to bring in aid but has faced major obstacles, including rubble-choked roads, Israeli military restrictions, continuing airstrikes and growing anarchy.

Aid officials said an average of 23 UN trucks a day had entered Gaza through the main checkpoint of Kerem Shalom in recent days, but most have been “self-distributed” by hungry Palestinians who stopped them, or looted by organised gangs.

The World Food Programme (WFP) said on Wednesday that it has been able to dispatch just 9,000 metric tonnes of food aid into Gaza over the last four weeks, “a tiny fraction of what a population of 2.1 million hungry people needs”.

Israel hopes the GHF will replace the previous comprehensive system of aid distribution run by the UN, which Israeli officials claim allowed Hamas to steal and sell supplies.

UN agencies and major aid groups, which have delivered humanitarian aid across Gaza since the start of 20-month-long war, haverejected the new system, saying it is impractical, inadequate and unethical. They deny there is widespread theft of aid by Hamas.

GHF said in an email on Wednesday that it had provided more than 30 million meals “safely and without incident” since it began operating last month.

Israel launched its campaign intended to destroy Hamas after the group’s 7 October 2023 attack on southern Israel, in which militants killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took 251 hostage. Hamas still holds 53 hostages, fewer than half of them alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefire agreements or other deals.

Gaza’s health ministry said on Tuesday that 5,194 people had been killed since Israel resumed major operations in the territory on 18 March, ending a two-month truce.

The death toll in Gaza since the war broke out has reached 55,600, according to the health ministry.

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Source: The Guardian