2024-02-29 18:06:01
This content was published on February 29, 2024 – 7:06 p.m.
(Keystone-ATS) More than a hundred Palestinians were killed Thursday in Gaza during a humanitarian aid distribution that turned into chaos, Hamas announced. He accuses Israeli soldiers of having opened fire on a hungry crowd.
Israeli sources confirmed that soldiers, feeling “threatened”, had fired live ammunition, but denied that these shots were responsible for this death toll. The army reported “dozens of dead and injured”, pushed or trampled by the crowd who “surrounded the trucks and looted” the cargo.
After almost five months of war between Israel and the Islamist movement, the UN estimates that 2.2 million people, the vast majority of the population, are threatened with famine in the Gaza Strip besieged by Israel, particularly in the north where destruction, fighting and looting make the delivery of humanitarian aid almost impossible.
On Thursday, a doctor at al-Chifa hospital in Gaza City, in the north, announced that soldiers had fired on “thousands of citizens” who were rushing towards aid trucks.
The Hamas Health Ministry announced early Thursday that “more than 30,000” people have been killed in Israeli military operations in Gaza since the start of the war on October 7, following overnight bombings that killed 79 dead.
This war is already, by far, the deadliest of the five conflicts between Israel and the Islamist movement, which took power in Gaza in 2007.
Truce hoped for
The mediating countries have said they hope for a truce before the start of Ramadan, which begins on the evening of March 10 or 11, but without reporting any concrete progress.
“The death toll in Gaza has exceeded 30,000, the vast majority of them women and children. More than 70,000 Palestinians were injured. This appalling violence and suffering must end. Ceasefire,” launched the director general of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, on the social network X.
Across the Gaza Strip, civilians are caught up in daily fighting and bombardments, which have spared no area, devastated entire neighborhoods and forced thousands of families to flee.
“No bread”
“It is a crime and a disaster. Such an unfair world,” he added.
According to the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA), humanitarian needs are “unlimited”. “Famine is looming. Hospitals have turned into battlefields. A million children face daily trauma,” said UNRWA.
During the attack, some 250 people were kidnapped and taken to the Gaza Strip. According to Israel, 130 hostages are still being held there, 31 of whom are believed to have died, following the release of 105 hostages and 240 Palestinian prisoners held by Israel during a first truce in November.
In retaliation, Israel vowed to annihilate Hamas, which it considers, along with the United States and the European Union, to be a terrorist organization. His army relentlessly shelled the Gaza Strip and launched a ground offensive on October 27 in the north of the territory, which gradually extended to the south.
Fights from north to south
Fighting, according to the army, continues to rage in the north in Zeitun, a district of Gaza City, as well as in the center of the territory and in Khan Younes, in the south.
Pushed ever further south as the fighting spread, hundreds of thousands of displaced people reached Rafah, a town stuck once morest the closed border with Egypt.
Nearly a million and a half Palestinians, according to the UN, are now massed, with no escape, in this daily bombarded city, where Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has promised to launch an offensive to defeat Hamas. in its “last bastion”.
Despite multiple international warnings, Mr Netanyahu said a truce would only “delay” such an offensive.
Limited help
Rafah is the main entry point for humanitarian aid into Gaza, subject to the green light from Israel and which arrives in very limited quantities from Egypt.
Qatar, the United States and Egypt are meanwhile trying to reach an agreement, according to a Hamas source, on a six-week truce, during which a hostage, among women, minors and sick elderly people, would be exchanged every day for ten Palestinians detained by Israel.
On Monday, American President Joe Biden spoke of “an agreement by the Israelis according to which they would not engage in operations during Ramadan”, in order to “get all the hostages out”.
But Hamas is demanding in particular a definitive ceasefire before any agreement on the release of the hostages, as well as the lifting of the Israeli blockade imposed on Gaza since 2007 and the entry of increased humanitarian aid.
Israel, for its part, repeats that a truce should be accompanied by the release of all hostages and would not mean the end of the war, promising that it will continue until the total elimination of Hamas.
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