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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Martin Belam and Kevin Rawlinson

At least 27 Palestinians killed after Israeli military opens fire at food distribution point, local health officials say – as it happened

People in the aftermath of what the Gaza health ministry say was Israeli fire near an aid distribution site in Rafah.
People in the aftermath of what the Gaza health ministry say was Israeli fire near an aid distribution site in Rafah. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Closing summary …

  • At least 27 people were killed by Israeli fire as they waited for food at a distribution point set up by an Israeli-backed foundation in Gaza, according to health officials in the strip

  • It is the third such incident in three days, with Israel admitting for the first time during the recent events that its forces shot at individuals who were moving towards them

  • “There were three children and two women among the dead,” Mohammed Saqr, the head of nursing at Nasser hospital, which received the 27 bodies, told the Guardian. “Most of the patients had gunshot wounds, others had shrapnel all over the bodies, which means they were targeted with tanks or artillery munitions”

  • In a statement, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said troops fired shots near a food distribution complex after noticing “a number of suspects moving towards them”

  • The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation said it had distributed 21 truckloads of food today. During the ceasefire period earlier this year, 600 trucks a day were entering the Gaza Strip, which has been blockaded by Israel’s government for months

  • The UN human rights office said on Tuesday the impediment of access to food and relief for civilians in Gaza may constitute a war crime, describing attacks on civilians trying to access food as unconscionable

  • Government sources have confirmed to El País that Spain’s ministry of defence has suspended the licence of an Israeli company intending to manufacture missiles in Spain

Government sources have confirmed to El País that Spain’s ministry of defence has suspended the licence of an Israeli company intending to manufacture missiles in Spain. The deal had been worth €285m (£240m / $324m).

Last week Spain’s secretary of state for defence, Amparo Valcarce had said the government was working on “disengagement plans” from Israel.

Gaza’s Hamas-led health ministry has said 40 Palestinians have been killed, and 208 wounded in the past 24 hours.

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation said it had distributed 21 truckloads of food today. During the ceasefire period earlier this year, 600 trucks a day were entering the Gaza Strip, which has been blockaded by Israel’s government for months.

This screengrab from a video shows displaced Palestinians being forced to travel lengthy distances in order to collect the limited resources that the Israeli government is allowing to be distributed.

Haaretz reports that the brother of Matan Angrest, an IDF soldier who has been held by Hamas in Gaza since 7 October 2023, has spoken at a Knesset committee.

It quotes Ofir Angrest saying:

Two months ago a video was released by Hamas of my brother. I saw there a person I do not recognise – broken, wounded and hopeless. We must say enough. It cannot be that we leave soldiers behind. What kind of message is being given now to the candidates for military service who are watching?

Associated Press is carrying more details from this morning’s killing of Palestinians in southern Gaza after Israeli troops opened fire on people about a kilometre away from one of the food distribution points set up under the new arrangement imposed on the territory by the Israeli government.

The UN has rejected the new system, saying it allows Israel to use aid as a weapon.

According to the Associated Press report, the shootings all occurred at a roundabout around a kilometre from the site. At least 27 people were killed according to Zaher al-Waheidi, the head of the Gaza health ministry’s records department.

Hisham Mhanna, a spokesperson for the International Committee of the Red Cross, said its field hospital in Rafah received 184 wounded people, 19 of whom were declared dead on arrival and eight more who later died of their wounds. The 27 dead were transferred to Nasser hospital in the city of Khan Younis.


There were three children and two women among the dead, according to Mohammed Saqr, head of nursing at Nasser hospital. Hospital director Atef al-Hout said most of the patients had gunshot wounds.

An Associated Press reporter saw wounded people being transferred to other hospitals by ambulance, and reported that outside, people were passing by on their way back from the site, mostly empty-handed, while empty flour bags stained with blood lay on the ground.

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which operates the sites, said on Tuesday there has been no violence in or around them. The Israeli military said it was looking into reports of casualties on Tuesday. International media access to Gaza has been restricted by the Israeli government.

Wilful restriction on food distribution in Gaza may constitute war crime by Israel, says UN rights office

The UN human rights office said on Tuesday the impediment of access to food and relief for civilians in Gaza may constitute a war crime, describing attacks on civilians trying to access food as unconscionable.

“For a third day running, people were killed around an aid distribution site run by the ‘Gaza Humanitarian Foundation’. This morning, we have received information that dozens more people were killed and injured,” Reuters reports the spokesperson for the UN high commissioner for Human Rights, Jeremy Laurence, told the media in Geneva.

Here are some more of the images being sent over the news wires from the Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, where Palestinians have been holding funerals for the people killed this morning when Israeli forces opened fire near an aid distribution centre.

The IDF said it “is aware of reports regarding casualties, and the details of the incident are being looked into”. It claimed “troops carried out warning fire, and after the suspects failed to retreat, additional shots were directed near a few individual suspects who advanced toward the troops” when they were allegedly not following “the designated access routes” imposed on the population by Israeli authorities.

The media office of the government in Gaza has issued a statement describing the new aid distribution arrangements being forced on the territory by the Israeli government as “mass death traps” as it called the shootings at or near aid distribution centres “horrific, intentionally repeated crimes.”

Hind Khoudary has been reporting from Deir al-Balah inside Gaza for Al Jazeera, and says that witnesses there told her there was “chaos” at the aid distribution point where at least 27 Palestinians have been killed after Israeli troops opened fire.

She reported for the news network that she had been told “There’s no process. There’s no system. You just need to run first to be able to get the food. The Israeli forces just opened fire randomly, shooting Palestinians … using quadcopters and live ammunition.”

Khoudary added that what is being distributed is a “very limited amount” of “flour, oil, lentils and other canned food.”

Benjamin Netanyahu’s government has banned Al Jazeera from operating in Israel.

Lufthansa has extended the suspension of its flights to and from Tel Aviv until 22 June, Reuters reports.

Here are some of the images sent to us over the news wires of displaced Palestinians attempting to collect humanitarian aid under the new distribution system being imposed on the Gaza Strip by Israeli authorities. At least 27 Palestinians were killed and nearly 200 injured earlier on Tuesday when Israeli forces opened fire near one of the distribution points in the south of the territory.

At least 27 Palestinians killed and dozens wounded by Israeli fire near food distribution point, say local health authorities

At least 27 Palestinians were killed and dozens wounded by Israeli fire near a food distribution site in the southern Gaza Strip on Tuesday, local health authorities said.

It is the third consecutive day of similar incidents as Israel attempts to impose a new aid distribution regime on the Gaza Strip, which it has been blockading for weeks.

The Israeli military said its forces had opened fire on a group of individuals who had left designated access routes near the distribution centre in Rafah.

Journalists have not been able to independently verify the casualty count, but Reuters reports a spokesperson for the International Committee of the Red Cross told the news agency its field hospital in Rafah received 184 casualties, adding that 19 of those were declared dead upon arrival, and eight died of their wounds shortly after.

Updated

10 Palestinians killed by Israeli strikes on Gaza – reports

At least ten Palestinians have been reported killed by Israeli strikes across the Gaza Strip on Tuesday morning, according to news agency Wafa.

The dead, it reported, included two children killed in a strike on a house sheltering displaced people in Khan Younis.

Medical sources told Wafa that Nasser hospital had received 32 bodies, including 24 people killed when Israeli forces opened fire near an aid distribution point earlier in the day.

Reuters reports that the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which Israeli authorities are using to bypass the traditional aid groups operating inside the Palestinian territories, said it distributed 21 truckloads of food early Tuesday.

In its statement about troops opening fire on people near an aid distribution point in southern Gaza, Israel’s military has claimed “IDF troops are not preventing the arrival of Gazan civilians to the humanitarian aid distribution sites. The warning shots were fired approximately half a kilometer away from the humanitarian aid distribution site toward several suspects who advanced toward the troops in such a way that posed a threat to them.”

At the weekend Philippe Lazzarini, the Unrwa commissioner-general described the aid distribution system being enforced by Israeli authorities as a “death trap”, adding that “This humiliating system has forced thousands of hungry and desperate people to walk for tens of miles to an area that’s all but pulverized due to heavy bombardment.”

Israel’s military has announced overnight that three soldiers have been killed in combat in the north of the Gaza Strip.

The Times of Israel reports that according to an initial IDF probe, the five troops were in a vehicle in Jabaliya when it was struck by an explosive device. Two other troops were wounded in the incident. 423 Israeli soldiers have been killed in combat inside Gaza since Israel began its ground operation there following the surprise 7 October Hamas attack inside southern Israel.

Palestinians killed after Israeli military opens fire at food distribution point

Gaza’s civil defence agency said Tuesday that at least 15 people were killed in the south of the Gaza Strip – with Palestinian news agency Wafa putting the number higher at 24 – when Israeli troops again opened fire near a food distribution point.

A correspondent for Wafa reported that “Israeli artillery and aircraft fired shells and gunfire at displaced people as they waited for aid” in the vicinity of the Al-Alam roundabout, which is to the west of Rafah. It reported that 200 people were injured.

The IDF said in a statement Tuesday that it shot “a few individual suspects who advanced toward the troops”, claiming that people had not followed designated routes. It said “The IDF is aware of reports regarding casualties, and the details of the incident are being looked into”, adding that the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation operates “to enable the distribution of aid to the Gazan residents – and not to Hamas.”

Jake Wood, the ex-Marine who previously headed the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation resigned several days ago, saying the operation could not fulfil its mission in a way that adhered to “humanitarian principles”.

Updated

Welcome and opening summary …

Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s rolling coverage of the conflict in Gaza and the wider Middle East. Here are the headlines …

  • Gaza’s civil defence agency said Tuesday that Israeli troops killed at least 15 people in the south of the Gaza Strip. “At least 15 people were killed and dozens wounded … when Israeli forces opened fire with tanks and drones on thousands of civilians who had gathered since dawn near the Al-Alam roundabout in the Al-Mawasi area, northwest of Rafah,” civil defence spokesperson Mahmoud Bassal told news agency AFP. The Palestinian news agency wafa put the number of people killed at 24

  • The IDF said in a statement Tuesday that it shot “a few individual suspects who advanced toward the troops” during the movement of Palestinians along the designated routes toward aid distribution sites in the southern Gaza Strip. It said the people deviated from the designated routes

  • Israel’s military said three soldiers were killed during combat in northern Gaza on Monday, without providing details. Israeli media reported that they were killed in an explosion in the Jabaliya area. About 860 Israeli soldiers have been killed since the 7 October attack, including more than 400 during the fighting inside Gaza

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