Airstrike kills 76 members of the same family in Gaza, rescue officials say

An Israeli airstrike killed 76 members of an extended family, rescue officials said Saturday, a day after the UN’s chief warned again that nowhere is safe in Gaza and that Israel’s ongoing offensive is creating “massive obstacles” to the distribution of humanitarian aid. Friday’s strike on a building in Gaza City was among the deadliest of the Israel-Hamas war, now in its 12th week, said Mahmoud Bassal, a spokesperson for Gaza’s Civil Defence Department. He provided a partial list of the names of those killed —16 heads of households from the al-Mughrabi family — and said the dead included women and children.

Among the dead were Issam al-Mughrabi, a veteran employee of United Nations Development Program, his wife and their five children. “The loss of Issam and his family has deeply affected us all. The UN and civilians in Gaza are not a target,” said Achim Steiner, the head of the agency. “This war must end.”  Israel declared war after Hamas militants stormed across the border on Oct. 7, killing some 1,200 people and taking some 240 hostages. Israel has vowed to keep up the fight until Hamas is destroyed and removed from power in Gaza and all the hostages are freed.

More than 20,000 Palestinians have since been killed and more than 53,000 have been wounded, according to health officials in Gaza, a besieged territory ruled by the Islamic militant group Hamas for the past 16 years. Israel blames Hamas for the high civilian death toll, citing the group’s use of crowded residential areas for military purposes and its tunnels under urban areas. The Israeli military has unleashed thousands of airstrikes since Oct. 7, and has largely refrained from commenting on specific attacks, including discussing the intended target.

UN Security Council passes resolution on aid for Gaza

On Friday, the UN Security Council adopted a watered-down resolution that calls for immediately speeding up aid deliveries to desperate civilians in Gaza.  The United States won the removal of a tougher call for an “urgent suspension of hostilities” between Israel and Hamas. It abstained in the vote, as did Russia, which wanted the stronger language. The resolution was the first on the war to make it through the council after the U.S. vetoed two earlier ones calling for humanitarian pauses and a full ceasefire. 

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres reiterated his longstanding call for a humanitarian ceasefire. He expressed hope that Friday’s resolution may help this happen but said “much more is needed immediately” to end the ongoing “nightmare” for the people in Gaza.  He told a news conference that it’s a mistake to measure the effectiveness of the humanitarian operation in Gaza by the number of trucks.

“The real problem is that the way Israel is conducting this offensive is creating massive obstacles to the distribution of humanitarian aid inside Gaza,” he said. He said the prerequisites for an effective aid operation don’t exist — security; staff that can work in safety; logistical capacity, especially trucks; and the resumption of commercial activity.

Israel’s aerial and ground offensive has displaced nearly 85 per cent of Gaza’s 2.3 million people and levelled wide swaths of the tiny coastal enclave. More than half a million people in Gaza — a quarter of the population — are starving, according to a report this week from the United Nations and other agencies. Shielded by the Biden administration in the U.S., Israel has so far resisted international pressure to scale back. Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said late Friday that Israeli forces are widening the ground offensive “to additional areas of the strip, with a focus on the south.”

He said operations were also continuing in the northern half of Gaza, including Gaza City, the initial focus of Israel’s ground offensive.  The army also said Saturday that it has transferred more than 700 alleged militants from Gaza to Israel for further questioning, including more than 200 over the past week, providing rare details on a controversial policy that involves mass roundups of Palestinian men.

Palestinians have reported such roundups in areas of northern Gaza, where ground troops are in control, saying this typically involves all teenage boys and men found in a location being searched by troops. Some of the released detainees have said they were stripped to their underwear, beaten and held for days with minimal water. The military has denied abuse allegations and said those without links to militants were quickly released.

Not clear how and when more aid will reach Gaza

The army said Saturday that it carried out airstrikes against Hamas fighters in several locations of Gaza City. The military says it has killed thousands of Hamas militants, including about 2,000 in the past three weeks, but it has not presented any evidence to back up the claim. It says 139 of its soldiers have been killed in the ground offensive.  In the aftermath of the UN resolution, it was not immediately clear how and when aid deliveries would accelerate. Currently, trucks enter through two crossings — Rafah on the border with Egypt and Kerem Shalom on the border with Israel. Israel’s ambassador to the UN, Gilad Erdan, thanked the U.S. for its support and sharply criticized the UN for its failure to condemn Hamas’s Oct. 7 attacks.

The U.S. vetoed a resolution in October that would have included a condemnation because it didn’t also underline Israel’s right to self-defence.  Hamas said in a statement that the UN resolution should have demanded an immediate halt to Israel’s offensive, and it blamed the U.S. for pushing “to empty the resolution of its essence” before Friday’s Security Council vote. 


Source: https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/israel-hamas-war-airstrikes-family-1.7068862?cmp=rss

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