DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip: At least 31 Palestinians were fatally shot on their way to an aid distribution site in the Gaza Strip on Saturday, while Israeli airstrikes killed at least 28 Palestinians including four children, Palestinian hospital officials and witnesses said.
There were no signs of a breakthrough in ceasefire talks following two days of meetings between US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Trump had said he was nearing an agreement between Israel and Hamas that would potentially wind down the war.
Trumpās Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff said on Sunday that he was āhopefulā on Gaza ceasefire negotiations. Witkoff told reporters in Teterboro, New Jersey, that he planned to meet senior Qatari officials on the sidelines of the FIFA Club World Cup final.Ā
The 31 Palestinians shot dead were on their way to a distribution site run by the Israeli-backed American organization Gaza Humanitarian Foundation near Rafah in southern Gaza, hospital officials and witnesses said.
The Red Cross said its field hospital saw its largest influx of dead in more than a year of operation after the shootings, and that the overwhelming majority of the more than 100 people hurt had gunshot wounds.
Airstrikes in central Gazaās Deir Al-Balah killed 13 including the four children, officials at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital said. Fifteen others were killed in Khan Younis in the south, according to Nasser Hospital. Israelās military did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Intense airstrikes continued Saturday evening in the area of Beit Hanoun in northern Gaza.
Israelis rallied yet again for a ceasefire deal. āArrogance is what brought the disaster upon us,ā former hostage Eli Sharabi said of Israeli leaders.
Teenās first attempt to pick up food ends in death
The 21-month war has left much of Gazaās population of over 2 million reliant on outside aid while food security experts warn of famine. Israel blocked and then restricted aid entry after ending the latest ceasefire in March.
āAll responsive individuals reported they were attempting to access food distribution sites,ā the Red Cross said after the shootings near Rafah, noting the āalarming frequency and scaleā of such mass casualty incidents.
Israelās military said it fired warning shots toward people it said were behaving suspiciously to prevent them from approaching. It said it was not aware of any casualties. The GHF said no incident occurred near its sites.
Abdullah Al-Haddad said he was 200 meters from the aid distribution site run by the GHF close to the Shakoush area when an Israeli tank started firing at crowds of Palestinians.
āWe were together, and they shot us at once,ā he said, writhing in pain from a leg wound at Nasser Hospital.
Mohammed Jamal Al-Sahloo, another witness, said Israelās military had ordered them to proceed to the site when the shooting started.
Sumaya Al-Shaāerās 17-year-old son, Nasir, was killed, hospital officials said.
āHe said to me, āMom, you donāt have flour and today Iāll go and bring you flour, even if I die, Iāll go and get it,āā she said. āBut he never came back home.ā
Until then, she said, she had prevented the teenager from going to GHF sites because she thought it was too dangerous.
Witnesses, health officials and UN officials say hundreds have been killed by Israeli fire while heading toward GHF distribution points through military zones off limits to independent media. The military has acknowledged firing warning shots at Palestinians who it says approached its forces in a suspicious manner.
The GHF denies there has been violence in or around its sites. But two of its contractors told The Associated Press that their colleagues have fired live ammunition and stun grenades as Palestinians scramble for food, allegations the foundation denied.
In a separate effort, the UN and aid groups say they struggle to distribute humanitarian aid because of Israeli military restrictions and a breakdown of law and order that has led to widespread looting.
The first fuel ā 150,000 liters ā entered Gaza this week after 130 days, a joint statement by UN aid bodies said, calling it a small amount for the āthe backbone of survival in Gaza.ā Fuel runs hospitals, water systems, transport and more, the statement said.
Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people in their Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel that sparked the war and abducted 251. Hamas still holds some 50 hostages, with at least 20 believed to remain alive.
Israelās retaliatory offensive has killed over 57,800 Palestinians, more than half of them women and children, according to Gazaās Health Ministry. The ministry, under Gazaās Hamas-run government, doesnāt differentiate between civilians and combatants in its count. The UN and other international organizations see its figures as the most reliable statistics on war casualties.