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Israeli gunfire and strikes kill at least 42 in Gaza as many of the dead sought aid

Update Israeli gunfire and strikes kill at least 42 in Gaza as many of the dead sought aid
Palestinians mourn during the funeral of people who were killed while trying to reach aid trucks entering northern Gaza through the Zikim crossing with Israel on July 26, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 26 July 2025

Israeli gunfire and strikes kill at least 42 in Gaza as many of the dead sought aid

Israeli gunfire and strikes kill at least 42 in Gaza as many of the dead sought aid
  • Majority of victims were killed by gunfire as they waited for aid trucks close to the Zikim crossing with Israel
  • Israel’s army did not respond to request for comments about the latest shootings

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip: Israeli airstrikes and gunshots killed at least 42 people in Gaza overnight and into Saturday, according to Palestinian health officials and the local ambulance service, as starvation deaths continued and ceasefire talks appear to have stalled.

Gunfire killed at least a dozen people waiting for aid trucks close to the Zikim crossing with Israel in the north, said staff at Shifa hospital, where bodies were taken. Israel’s military said it fired warning shots to distance a crowd “in response to an immediate threat” and it was not aware of any casualties.

A witness, Sherif Abu Aisha, said people started running when they saw a light that they thought was from aid trucks, but as they got close, they realized it was Israel’s tanks. That’s when the army started firing, he told The Associated Press. He said his uncle was among those killed.

“We went because there is no food ... and nothing was distributed,” he said.

Elsewhere, those killed in strikes included four people in an apartment building in Gaza City, hospital staff and the ambulance service said. Another Israeli strike killed at least eight people, including four children, in the crowded tent camp of Muwasi in the city of Khan Younis in the south, according to the Nasser hospital, which received the bodies.

Also in Khan Younis, Israeli forces opened fire and killed at least nine people trying to get aid entering Gaza through the Morag corridor, according to the hospital’s morgue records. There was no immediate comment from Israel’s military.

Stalled ceasefire talks

Ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas were at a standstill after the US and Israel recalled negotiating teams on Thursday.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Friday his government was considering “alternative options” to ceasefire talks. A Hamas official, however, said negotiations were expected to resume next week and described the recall of the Israeli and US delegations as a pressure tactic.

Egypt and Qatar, which mediate alongside the United States, called the pause temporary and said talks would resume. They did not say when.

“Our loved ones do not have time for another round of negotiations, and they will not survive another partial deal,” said Zahiro Shahar Mor, nephew of hostage Avraham Munder, one of 50 still in Gaza from Hamas’ attack on Oct. 7, 2023, that sparked the war. Mor spoke at a weekly rally in Tel Aviv.

Children starving to death

The United Nations and experts say Palestinians in Gaza are at risk of famine. And now children with no preexisting conditions have begun to starve to death.

“We only want enough food to end our hunger,” said Wael Shaaban at a charity kitchen in Gaza City as he tried to feed his family of six.

While Israel’s army says it’s allowing aid into the enclave with no limit on the trucks that can enter, the UN says it is hampered by military restrictions on its movements and incidents of criminal looting. The Hamas-run police had provided security for safe aid delivery, but it has been unable to operate after being targeted by airstrikes.

Israel on Saturday said over 250 trucks carrying aid from the UN and other organizations entered Gaza this week. About 600 trucks entered per day during the latest ceasefire that Israel ended in March.

The Zikim shootings came days after at least 80 Palestinians were killed trying to reach aid entering through the crossing, one of the deadliest days for aid-seekers in the war.

Israel faces growing international pressure. More than two dozen Western-aligned countries and over 100 charity and human rights groups have called for an end to the war, harshly criticizing Israel’s blockade and a new aid delivery model it has rolled out.

More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces since May while trying to get food, mostly near the new aid sites run by an American contractor, the UN human rights office says.

The charities and rights groups said even their own staff were struggling to get enough food.

“Stand for Gaza, for silence is a crime, and indifference is a betrayal of humanity,” said Father Issa Thaljieh, a Greek Orthodox priest at the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, as religious figures and the mayor gathered to call for prayers to end the war.

Turning to airdrops, with a warning

For the first time in months, Israel said it is allowing airdrops, requested by neighboring Jordan. A Jordanian official said the airdrops mainly will be food and milk formula.

Britain plans to work with partners such as Jordan to airdrop aid and evacuate children requiring medical assistance, Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s office said Saturday. The office did not give details.

But the head of the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees, Philippe Lazzarini, warned on social media that airdrops are “expensive, inefficient and can even kill starving civilians” and won’t reverse the increasing starvation or prevent aid diversion.

More than 59,700 Palestinians have been killed during the war, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry. Its count doesn’t distinguish between militants and civilians, but the ministry says that more than half of the dead are women and children. The ministry operates under the Hamas government. The UN and other international organizations see it as the most reliable source of data on casualties.


11 children killed in El-Fasher drone strike, UN says

11 children killed in El-Fasher drone strike, UN says
Updated 23 sec ago

11 children killed in El-Fasher drone strike, UN says

11 children killed in El-Fasher drone strike, UN says
  • Executive director of UN children’s agency calls the attack in besieged city ‘shocking and unconscionable’

CAIRO: At least 11 children were killed in a drone strike that hit a mosque in the besieged city of El-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, the UN children’s agency said on Monday.
Local aid groups, activists, and the Sudanese army accused the Rapid Support Forces of launching the drone that struck the mosque during Fajr prayers early on Friday, killing at least 70 people.
UNICEF’s Executive Director Catherine Russell, in the Monday statement, called the attack “shocking and unconscionable.” 
Russell said initial reports indicated that at least 11 children between the ages of 6 and 15 were killed and “many more” were injured in the attack, which also damaged nearby homes.
The strike in the besieged city of El-Fasher destroyed the mosque, and many bodies were trapped under rubble, said a worker with the local aid group Emergency Response Rooms on Friday. 
The strike comes as the army and the RSF are fighting increasingly intense battles as part of the country’s ongoing civil war. 
The war has killed at least 40,000 people, according to the World Health Organization, displaced as many as 12 million others, and pushed many to the brink of famine.
Three doctors also died in the attack, according to the Preliminary Committee of Sudan’s Doctors Trade Union and Sudan Doctors Network. 
They were among 231 medical personnel killed since the war in Sudan broke out, according to Sudan Doctors Network.
“The latest attack has torn apart families and shattered any sense of safety for children who have already suffered so much,” said Russell, adding that the RSF’s siege of El-Fasher has trapped children who endure violence and have little access to food, clean water, and health care while being “forced to witness horrors no child should ever see.”
Antoine Gerard, Sudan deputy humanitarian coordinator with the UN, said on Monday that they were seeing more attacks on civilians now inside El-Fasher, who are also struggling to seek safety outside the city due to the siege and lack of safe routes.
“We are quite concerned about targeting civilians, targeting the population and particularly hospitals, mosques and schools, and any other civilian premises,” he said.
In a statement on Sunday, Egypt condemned the drone strike on the mosque. 
It said the attack “constitutes a blatant violation of international humanitarian law, denouncing the targeting of places of worship and innocent civilians in the conflict.”
Fighting over the control of El-Fasher and surrounding areas in North Darfur intensified by early April, and more than 400 civilians have been killed in RSF attacks in the region since April 10, according to a Friday report by the UN’s human rights office. 
The majority were killed in a major offensive that seized the nearby Zamzam displacement camp. 
The camp was turned into an RSF military base used to launch assaults on El-Fasher, according to the report.

 


Israel says will not allow Gaza-bound aid flotilla to break its blockade

Israel says will not allow Gaza-bound aid flotilla to break its blockade
Updated 43 min 35 sec ago

Israel says will not allow Gaza-bound aid flotilla to break its blockade

Israel says will not allow Gaza-bound aid flotilla to break its blockade
  • Israel Foreign Ministry: ‘Israel will not allow vessels to enter an active combat zone and will not allow the breach of a lawful naval blockade’
  • Global Sumud Flotilla, carrying prominent pro-Palestinian advocates including Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, set sail for Gaza earlier this month from Tunisia

JERUSALEM: Israel vowed on Monday that it would not allow a Gaza-bound flotilla carrying aid to break its blockade of the Palestinian territory.
“Israel will not allow vessels to enter an active combat zone and will not allow the breach of a lawful naval blockade,” the foreign ministry said in a statement, accusing Hamas of organizing the flotilla to serve the militant group’s purpose.
The ministry said the vessels would be allowed to dock at Ashkelon from where the aid could be delivered to Gaza.
“If the flotilla participants’ genuine wish is to deliver humanitarian aid rather than serve Hamas, Israel calls on the vessels to dock at the Ashkelon marina and unload the aid there, from where it will be transferred promptly in a coordinated manner to the Gaza Strip,” the ministry said.
The Global Sumud Flotilla, also carrying prominent pro-Palestinian advocates including Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, set sail for Gaza earlier this month from Tunisia after repeated delays.
It aims to break Israel’s seige of Gaza and deliver aid to the territory.
Prior to its departure it said that two of its boats were targeted by drone attacks.
Israel blocked two earlier attempts by activists to reach Gaza by sea in June and July.


Israel to skip UN Security Council meeting on Gaza

Palestinians displaced by conflict from Gaza City rest by their belongings outside a damaged building.
Palestinians displaced by conflict from Gaza City rest by their belongings outside a damaged building.
Updated 40 min 1 sec ago

Israel to skip UN Security Council meeting on Gaza

Palestinians displaced by conflict from Gaza City rest by their belongings outside a damaged building.
  • “I wish to inform you that the delegation of Israel will not participate in this meeting, as it coincides with Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year,” Danon said

UNITED NATIONS: Israel will skip an emergency UN Security Council meeting on Gaza scheduled for Tuesday because of the Jewish New Year, its envoy to the UN said calling the timing “regrettable.”
As a country directly affected by the deliberations of the UN’s top security body, Israel had been invited to address the Council’s discussion of the devastating conflict in Gaza on the sidelines of the UN’s high-level week.
Israeli troops are pressing a major ground offensive to capture Gaza’s largest urban center, with AFP footage showing plumes of smoke rising over Gaza City Monday as Palestinians carrying their belongings fled southwards.
“I wish to inform you that the delegation of Israel will not participate in this meeting, as it coincides with Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year,” Ambassador Danny Danon said in a separate letter to the rotating Security Council president.
“Despite Israel’s request to the Presidency and Council members to reschedule, the meeting remains set for that date — one of the most significant in the Jewish calendar, marking the start of the High Holy Days.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to address the UN General Assembly on Friday amid a slew of recognitions of a Palestinian state by Western countries. Israel has angrily denounced these big policy changes.
“It’s unfortunate that the Security Council will meet without Israel,” Danon in a video statement issued Monday.


Israel to demolish homes of Palestinians who killed six in Jerusalem bus stop attack

Israeli security forces gather by a body next to a bus at the scene of a shooting at the Ramot Road junction.
sraeli security forces gather by a body next to a bus at the scene of a shooting at the Ramot Road junction.
Updated 22 September 2025

Israel to demolish homes of Palestinians who killed six in Jerusalem bus stop attack

Israeli security forces gather by a body next to a bus at the scene of a shooting at the Ramot Road junction.
  • Israel says demolishing the homes of relatives of attackers and their fellow villagers is a deterrent to future attacks
  • Palestinians and human rights groups say it is a form of collective punishment prohibited by international law

JERUSALEM: Israel’s military said on Monday it will demolish the homes of two Palestinian gunmen who shot and killed six people at a bus stop in Jerusalem earlier this month in one of the deadliest attacks in the city in the past few years.

The shooting took place against the backdrop of nearly two years of war in Gaza that has devastated the enclave, and amid a surge in attacks by Jewish settlers on Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
The Jerusalem attackers were shot dead at the scene. Israel says demolishing the homes of relatives of attackers and their fellow villagers is a deterrent to future attacks.
Palestinians and human rights groups say it is a form of collective punishment prohibited by international law.
Earlier this month, Israel ordered the demolition of all homes built without permits in Qatanna and Qubeiba — the hometowns of the attackers, and said 750 people from the town would have their work permits revoked.


Bedouin face eviction as Israeli settlement spreads near Jerusalem

A Palestinian Bedouin man leads animals home, as the communities of Jabal Al-Baba face displacement.
A Palestinian Bedouin man leads animals home, as the communities of Jabal Al-Baba face displacement.
Updated 22 September 2025

Bedouin face eviction as Israeli settlement spreads near Jerusalem

A Palestinian Bedouin man leads animals home, as the communities of Jabal Al-Baba face displacement.
  • Palestinians around Jerusalem say they are watching their land vanish under the advance of Israeli cranes and bulldozers

JABAL Al-BABA, West Bank: The land available to Atallah Al-Jahalin’s Bedouin community for grazing livestock near Jerusalem has steadily shrunk, as expanding Jewish settlements on Israeli-occupied territory encircle the city and push deeper into the West Bank.
Now, the group of some 80 families faces eviction from the last patches of valley and scrubland they have called home for decades.
Their predicament is tied to an Israeli settlement project that would slice through the West Bank, sever its connection to East Jerusalem, and — according to Israeli officials — “bury” any remaining hope of a future Palestinian state.
As more Western powers move to recognize a Palestinian state amid frustration over the war in Gaza, Palestinians around Jerusalem say they are watching their land vanish under the advance of Israeli cranes and bulldozers. Settlements now form an almost unbroken ring around the city.
“Where else could I go? There is nothing,” said Jahalin, seated beneath a towering cedar tree near Maale Adumim, a settlement that has already grown into a Jewish suburb of Jerusalem on Israeli-occupied Palestinian land.
The so-called E1 project, recently greenlit by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, will fill the last major gap in the settlement belt — an area that, until now, had remained untouched by construction.
“This actually cuts the possibility of a viable Palestinian state,” said Hagit Ofran, of Peace Now, an Israeli anti-settlement group. “The territorial continuity from North to South is going to be totally cut.”
Israel previously froze construction plans at Maale Adumim in 2012 and again in 2020, following objections from the US, European allies and other powers who viewed the project as a threat to any future peace deal with the Palestinians.
But in August, Netanyahu and far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich announced that work would begin. Smotrich declared the move would “bury” the idea of a Palestinian state.
“Whoever in the world is trying to recognize a Palestinian state today will receive our answer on the ground,” Smotrich said. “Not with documents nor with decisions or statements, but with facts. Facts of houses, facts of neighborhoods.”
Settlement growth defies diplomatic pressure
The move was condemned by Australia, Britain, Canada, the European Union and Japan as a breach of international law.
Palestinian presidential spokesperson Nabil Abu Rudeinah condemned the announcement, calling it a violation of international law.
The offices of Netanyahu and Smotrich did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
Reflecting growing criticism of the Gaza war — which has devastated much of the enclave on Israel’s southern border — Australia, Britain, Canada and Portugal recognized a Palestinian state on Sunday, joining about 140 other countries that have already done so.
But the timing highlights a stark contrast between diplomatic gestures and the reality on the ground, where Israeli settlements continue to expand rapidly across the occupied West Bank.
Most world powers consider all the settlements illegal under international law, although Israel says it has historical and biblical ties to the area that it calls Judea and Samaria.
A UN report says Israel has significantly expanded settlements in the West Bank in breach of international law.
Today, about 700,000 Israeli settlers live among 3.4 million Palestinians in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, according to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics.
Last month, Jahalin’s community was served demolition orders for their homes and told they had 60 days to tear them down themselves. Israeli security forces accompanied by dogs have repeatedly raided their homes at night, acts the community views as intimidation.
“When a child wakes up and sees a dog in his face, he gets frightened, it’s a disaster,” said Mohammed Al-Jahalin, Atallah’s brother.
Mohammed Al-Jahalin said they used to challenge the demolition notices in court, but since the Gaza war, “if you reach out to the court it will give you an immediate evacuation order.”
Part of the E1 project includes the so-called “Fabric of Life Road,” which would create separate roads for Israelis and Palestinians, cutting off Palestinian access to large swathes of the West Bank. The road would also sever a vital link between Bedouin communities — like the 22 families living in Jabal Al-Baba — and the nearby Palestinian village of Al-Eizariya.
Bedouin fear a new cycle of dispossession
As children, the Jahalin brothers walked down the stony hill to attend school in the bustling town below, and their grandchildren follow the same path today.
“We are dependent on Al-Eizariya for education as the children go to school there, for health, for everything, our economic situation is also tied to Al-Eizariya,” said Atallah.
A few hills over across a highway, the settlement of Maale Adumim is poised to expand under the E1 plan.
“I do feel for the Palestinians,” said Shelly Brinne, a settler living in Maale Adumim, citing their struggles with checkpoints and limited work opportunities. “But unfortunately as an Israeli citizen I feel like I have to worry about my security first.”
A spokesperson for the Maale Adumim settlement did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Bedouin community came to Jabal Al-Baba after what Palestinians call the “Nakba” or catastrophe, when hundreds of thousands were dispossessed in the war at the birth of the state of Israel.
“Our forefathers lived the Nakba, and today, we go through all the struggle, which we wish our children do not have to go through,” said Atallah, who is the leader of the community.
In the evening one of the men made coffee over an open flame while the rest of the community lounged on cushions and traded jokes as the sun dipped behind the hills.
Across the highway, the lights of Maale Adumim’s white high-rises glittered.
“There is no place for us to go,” said Mohammed, sipping his coffee. “To leave the land that we were born in, and so were our fathers and forefathers, if we have to leave it, it would be like dying.”