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Israel-Hamas War Live News: Many Are Killed and Wounded in Gaza as Israelis Open Fire

Israeli forces opened fire on Thursday as a crowd gathered near a convoy of trucks carrying desperately needed aid in Gaza City, part of a chaotic scene in which scores of people were killed and injured, according to Gazan health officials and an Israeli military official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The details of what happened were unclear, with officials from both sides offering starkly different accounts of the event. The Gazan health ministry said in a statement that more than 100 people were killed and more than 700 injured in a “massacre.” The Israeli official acknowledged that troops had opened fire, but said most of the people had been killed or injured in a stampede several hundred yards away.

Gazans, especially in the north of the territory, have become increasingly desperate for food. The United Nations and other relief groups are struggling to deliver supplies amid Israel’s nearly five-month-old military offensive, as law and order breaks down and Israel imposes restrictions on deliveries.

The official Palestinian Authority news agency, Wafa, reported that “Israeli tanks had opened fire with machine guns at thousands” waiting for aid to arrive.

Around 100 people with gunshot wounds were brought to Kamal Adwan Hospital in Gaza City, according to its director, Husam Abu Safiya, and injured people were being brought to other hospitals in the north. Mr. Abu Safiya said that the hospital had also received 12 bodies of people killed by gunfire.

According to an Israeli military official, some 30 trucks ferrying humanitarian aid traveled from the Kerem Shalom crossing between southern Israel and Gaza along the coastal road into northern Gaza.

As they neared Gaza City at around 4 a.m., thousands of people surrounded the trucks in an attempt to take supplies, leading to a stampede in which dozens were injured and killed, in some cases run over by aid trucks seeking to extricate themselves, said the official, who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity.

The official said that several hundred meters farther south — at the tail end of the convoy — dozens of civilians who had rushed trucks in the area then approached Israeli troops and a tank securing the road. Israeli soldiers fired warning shots in the air before firing at “those who posed a threat and did not move away,” the official said.

He did not elaborate on whether any people were killed or injured in the shooting and declined to provide a precise timeline.

Neither the Palestinian account nor the Israeli account could be confirmed. At least one witness at the scene, Yehia Al Masri, a doctor, said that he saw dozens of people with gunshot wounds, as well as bodies in the street of people who appeared to have died in a stampede or to have been hit by aid trucks.

It was unclear who was overseeing the convoy on Thursday. Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the main U.N. aid group that serves Palestinians, said on Thursday that neither his agency, UNRWA, nor any other U.N. body “were involved in this distribution.”

Palestinian leaders, Arab officials and international aid groups issued condemnations after the shooting and chaos at the convoy, and a Hamas official warned that the killings could derail talks aimed at reaching a cease-fire.

A body of a Palestinian in Gaza City on Thursday, after Israeli soldiers opened fire near a convoy of aid trucks in which dozens were killed and injured.Credit…Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

President Biden on Thursday said that while he was still learning details of what happened, he also thought the deaths could jeopardize the diplomatic talks. Asked whether the shooting would complicate negotiations, he said, “I know it will.”

Gaza has been under an almost complete siege since the war began on Oct. 7 with an attack on Israel led by Hamas, the armed Palestinian group that had long controlled Gaza. Aid supplies became absolutely critical for them as Israel began a bombardment and then invaded the territory.

The United Nations recently warned that at least a quarter of Gaza’s population is “one step away from famine,” and the Gazan health ministry said on Wednesday that at least six children had died in the territory from dehydration and malnutrition.

The ministry said that the death toll from the site of the convoy on Thursday was expected to rise as wounded Palestinians arrived at Al-Shifa Hospital, where medical staff were “unable to deal with the volume and type of injuries” amid a lack of medical supplies and staff.

Late last month, a strike hit a crowd of people waiting for aid trucks in Gaza City, killing multiple people and injuring scores of others, Gazan health authorities said.

The World Food Program said last week that it has paused food deliveries to isolated northern Gaza aid the challenges of safely delivering aid there. Mr. Lazzarini, the head of UNRWA said on Sunday that the agency was last able to deliver aid to northern Gaza over a month ago.

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Nathan
Nathan

Nathan is an experienced journalist. He's covered a broad spectrum of topics, including politics, culture, and human interest stories, always aiming to engage and inform his audience. Nathan has a degree in Journalism and upholds the highest standards of integrity and accuracy in his work.

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