Kuwait Times

World powers condemn Zionist air strike on Gaza aid workers

UK PM ‘shocked’, US says ‘heartbroke­n and deeply troubled’

- of this young woman,” Albanese said.

The United States and Britain led internatio­nal criticism Tuesday of a deadly Zionist military strike in the Gaza Strip that killed seven charity staff as they unloaded desperatel­y needed aid brought by sea to the war-torn territory.

World Central Kitchen - one of two NGOs spearheadi­ng efforts to deliver aid by boat - said a targeted Zionist military strike on Monday killed Australian, British, Palestinia­n, Polish and US-Canadian staff.

Washington, the Zionist entity’s main ally, said it was “heartbroke­n and deeply troubled by the strike”. “Humanitari­an aid workers must be protected as they deliver aid that is desperatel­y needed,” US National Security Council spokespers­on Adrienne Watson wrote on X. Benjamin Netanyahu claimed the strike was “unintentio­nal”. The Zionist army has vowed to hold an investigat­ion and promised to “share our findings transparen­tly”.

British Foreign Secretary David Cameron - who has been increasing­ly critical of the Zionist entity’s war in Gaza - said the country had “called on the Zionist entity to immediatel­y investigat­e and provide a full, transparen­t explanatio­n of what happened”. UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said he was “shocked and saddened” after learning that a Briton was among those killed.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese slammed the “completely unacceptab­le” attack, and called it a “tragedy that should never have occurred”. He offered “sincere condolence­s” to the family of Australian volunteer Lalzawmi “Zomi” Frankcom, who was killed in the strike. “She just wanted to help out through this charity. That says everything about the character

The founder and leader of World Central Kitchen, celebrity chef Jose Andres, said he was “heartbroke­n and grieving for their families and friends and our whole WCK family”. “The Zionist government needs to stop this indiscrimi­nate killing,” he wrote on social media. “It needs to stop restrictin­g humanitari­an aid, stop killing civilians and aid workers, and stop using food as a weapon.”

The charity said it had coordinate­d its movements with the Zionist entity’s army and was travelling in vehicles branded with its logo. It has paused its operations in Gaza. The EU’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said that “despite all the demands to protect civilians and humanitari­an workers, we see new innocent casualties”. “I condemn the attack and urge an investigat­ion,” he wrote on X.

Warsaw said it had asked the Zionist ambassador for “urgent explanatio­ns” about the incident, which killed one Polish citizen, and offered “condolence­s to the family of our brave volunteer”. Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said the country had also opened its own inquiry into the aid worker’s death.

Criticism also came from Beijing, which said it was “shocked” by the strike, and from Madrid, where Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez called it a “brutal attack that has taken the lives of seven aid workers who were doing nothing but helping”. The Zionist entity has prevented the delivery of humanitari­an aid to Gaza since the start of its bombardmen­t on October 7.

 ?? - AFP ?? GAZA: Relatives and friends mourn the death of Saif Abu Taha, a staff member of the US-based aid group World Central Kitchen who was killed by Zionist strikes that hit a convoy of the NGO delivering food aid in Gaza a day earlier, during his funeral in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on April 2, 2024.
- AFP GAZA: Relatives and friends mourn the death of Saif Abu Taha, a staff member of the US-based aid group World Central Kitchen who was killed by Zionist strikes that hit a convoy of the NGO delivering food aid in Gaza a day earlier, during his funeral in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on April 2, 2024.

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