The Manila Times

Israelis kill 20, injure 155 Gazans seeking aid

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PALESTINIA­N TERRITORIE­S: Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry said early Friday that Israeli troops killed 20 people and wounded 155 others waiting to receive desperatel­y needed aid in the besieged territory, but Israel said the reports were “erroneous.”

Efforts mounted on Thursday to get more aid into the devastated Palestinia­n territory, where fighting still rages after mediators failed to reach a truce for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

The health ministry said in a statement that citizens had gathered at a junction in Gaza City in the north, when they were fired upon by Israeli forces, revising upward an initial toll of 11 killed and 100 wounded.

Mohammed Ghurab, director of emergency services at a hospital in northern Gaza, told AFP there were “direct shots by the occupation forces” on people who had gathered at the junction to wait for a food truck.

An AFP journalist on the scene saw several bodies and people who had been shot.

The Israeli military denied that it had opened fire on the crowd of Gazans waiting for aid.

“Press reports that Israeli forces attacked dozens of Gazans at an aid distributi­on point are erroneous,” it said in a brief statement, adding that it was “analyzing the incident seriously.”

UN agencies have warned of famine in Gaza, which Israel besieged after the unpreceden­ted attack by Hamas militants on October 7.

The humanitari­an emergency has forced some countries to use airdrops and sea routes for aid supplies because of limited land access to Gaza via Jordan, Israel and Egypt.

The Spanish aid vessel Open Arms, towing about 200 tons of food, was nearing Israel’s coast after departing Cyprus on Tuesday, the Marine Traffic website showed on Thursday.

Cypriot Foreign Minister Constantin­os Kombos said a second, bigger vessel was being readied for the maritime aid corridor, which will be complement­ed by a temporary pier to be built off Gaza by US troops.

However, the air and sea missions are “no alternativ­e” to land deliveries, 25 organizati­ons, including Amnesty Internatio­nal and Oxfam, said in a statement.

Dire shortages have left many scrambling for scraps of aid, among them Mokhles al-Masry, 27, who was displaced from Beit Hanoun to Beit Lahia in northern Gaza.

“There is no food, nothing to feed our children. We can’t even find a bottle of baby milk. We’ve been wandering around since early morning, hoping that a plane would drop parachutes,” he said.

Amnesty’s secretary-general, Agnes Callamard, said that the decision to build the pier, which could enable the provision of more than 2 million meals a day, suggests that the internatio­nal community seems to accept that the war will drag on.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, meanwhile, doubled down on pledges to invade Rafah in the south, where most of Gaza’s population has sought refuge and Israel is threatenin­g a ground assault.

“There is internatio­nal pressure to prevent us from entering Rafah and completing the job,” Netanyahu said.

“I will continue to repel the pressures and we will enter Rafah ... and bring complete victory to the people of Israel,” he said during a visit to a field intelligen­ce base.

Around 1.5 million Palestinia­ns have sought refuge along Gaza’s southern border with Egypt in and around Rafah.

Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari said late Wednesday that a “significan­t” number of them would need to be moved “to a humanitari­an island that we will create with the internatio­nal community.”

The Israeli military said on Thursday it was “raiding Hamas hideouts and military stronghold­s” in southern Gaza’s main city of Khan Younis.

In central Israel, police said a Gaza-raised Palestinia­n had stabbed a soldier in a shopping center. The soldier shot his attacker dead before dying from his injuries, they said.

World Health Organizati­on chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said aid had been delivered to Al-Aqsa hospital in central Gaza, which he said was “struggling with water, sanitation, hygiene and waste management.”

Two of the hospital’s warehouses were being used to shelter 7,000 displaced people, Tedros said.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? INNOCENT CHILD
A Palestinia­n man kisses the shrouded body of a child killed in an Israeli bombing in Deir el-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on Thursday, March 14, 2024.
AFP PHOTO INNOCENT CHILD A Palestinia­n man kisses the shrouded body of a child killed in an Israeli bombing in Deir el-Balah in the central Gaza Strip on Thursday, March 14, 2024.

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