44 killed in Israel attacks in Gaza, after food warehouse looted

44 killed in Israel attacks in Gaza, after food warehouse looted
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An injured child receives medical care at the Al-Awda Hospital in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, following an Israeli strike, on Thursday. (AFP)
44 killed in Israel attacks in Gaza, after food warehouse looted
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Smoke billows in the background during an Israeli strike, as pictured from the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, on Thursday. (AFP)
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Updated 29 May 2025

44 killed in Israel attacks in Gaza, after food warehouse looted

44 killed in Israel attacks in Gaza, after food warehouse looted
  • Israeli strike on home in Al-Bureij kills 23 people, while another two are killed by gunfire near an aid distribution point
  • Jordan says Israel's systematic starvation tactics 'crossed all moral and legal boundaries'

GAZA CITY: At least 44 people were killed in Israeli attacks across the Gaza Strip on Thursday, rescuers said, a day after a World Food Programme warehouse in the center of the territory was looted by desperate Palestinians.

After a more than two-month blockade, aid has finally begun to trickle back into Gaza, but the humanitarian situation remains dire after 18 months of devastating war. Food security experts say starvation is looming for one in five people.

The Israeli military has also recently stepped up its offensive in the territory in what it says is a renewed push to destroy Hamas, whose October 7, 2023 attack triggered the war.

Gaza civil defense official Mohammad Al-Mughayyir told AFP “44 people have been killed in Israeli raids,” including 23 in a strike on home in Al-Bureij.

“Two people were killed and several injured by Israeli forces’ gunfire this morning near the American aid center in the Morag axis, southern Gaza Strip,” he added.




Smoke billows in the background during an Israeli strike, as pictured from the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, on Thursday. (AFP)

The center, run by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), is part of a new system for distributing aid that Israel says is meant to keep supplies out of the hands of Hamas, but which has drawn criticism from the United Nations and the European Union.

“What is happening to us is degrading. The crowding is humiliating us,” said Gazan Sobhi Areef, who visited a GHF center on Thursday.

“We go there and risk our lives just to get a bag of flour to feed our children.”

The Israeli military said it was looking into the reported deaths in Al-Bureij and near the aid center.

Separately, it said in a statement that its forces had struck “dozens of terror targets throughout the Gaza Strip” over the past day.

In a telephone call Thursday with EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas, Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi said Israel’s “systematic starvation tactics have crossed all moral and legal boundaries.”

On Wednesday, thousands of desperate Palestinians stormed a World Food Programme (WFP) warehouse in central Gaza, with Israel and the UN trading blame over the deepening hunger crisis.

AFP footage showed crowds of Palestinians breaking into the WFP facility in Deir Al-Balah and taking bags of emergency food supplies as gunshots rang out.


“Hordes of hungry people broke into WFP’s Al-Ghafari warehouse in Deir Al-Balah, central Gaza, in search of food supplies that were pre-positioned for distribution,” the UN agency said in a statement.

The issue of aid has come sharply into focus amid starvation fears and intense criticism of the GHF, which has bypassed the longstanding UN-led system in the territory.

Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations Danny Danon told the Security Council that aid was entering Gaza by truck — under limited authorization by Israel at the Kerem Shalom crossing — and accused the UN of “trying to block” GHF’s work through “threats, intimidation and retaliation against NGOs that choose to participate.”

The UN has said it is doing its utmost to facilitate distribution of the limited assistance allowed by Israel’s authorities.

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The world body said 47 people were wounded Tuesday when crowds of Palestinians rushed a GHF site. A Palestinian medical source reported at least one death.

GHF, however, alleged in a statement that there had been “several inaccuracies” circulating about its operations, adding “there are many parties who wish to see GHF fail.”

But 60-year-old Abu Fawzi Faroukh, who visited a GHF center Thursday, said the situation there was “so chaotic.”

“The young men are the ones who have received aid first, yesterday and today, because they are young and can carry loads, but the old people and women cannot enter due to the crowding,” he told AFP.

Negotiations on a ceasefire, meanwhile, have continued, with US envoy Steve Witkoff expressing optimism and saying he expected to propose a plan soon.

But Gazans remained pessimistic.

“Six hundred days have passed and nothing has changed. Death continues, and Israeli bombing does not stop,” said Bassam Daloul, 40.

The Gaza war was sparked by Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel that killed 1,218 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.

Out of 251 hostages seized during the attack, 57 remain in Gaza including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.

The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said Thursday that at least 3,986 people had been killed in the territory since Israel ended the ceasefire on March 18, taking the war’s overall toll to 54,249, mostly civilians.


Paramilitary force pushes east in new escalation of Sudan’s war

Paramilitary force pushes east in new escalation of Sudan’s war
Updated 10 sec ago

Paramilitary force pushes east in new escalation of Sudan’s war

Paramilitary force pushes east in new escalation of Sudan’s war
  • The RSF started moving on Kordofan at the same time as it took Al-Fashir late last month
  • According to Amy Pope, head of IOM, up to 50,000 people have been displaced from Kordofan

KHARTOUM: The paramilitary force battling the army in Sudan’s civil war is shifting its focus eastward after consolidating its grip over Darfur last month, reigniting violence and launching drone attacks across the country’s oil-producing southern areas.
Escalating drone strikes and new deployments of troops and weapons by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and the army suggest both sides are now centring their efforts on Kordofan, a region comprised of three states that serves as a buffer between the RSF’s western Darfur strongholds and the army-held states in the east.
The RSF accepted a ceasefire proposal by the United States last week after an international outcry over accounts that it had killed large groups of civilians as it overran Al-Fashir, the army’s last significant holdout in Darfur.
The army has not agreed to the ceasefire, which could provide a window for more deliveries of desperately needed humanitarian aid after 2-1/2 years of conflict, and fighting has not abated.

WITNESS ACCOUNTS OF REVENGE ATTACKS
The RSF started moving on Kordofan at the same time as it took Al-Fashir late last month, seizing the town of Bara in North Kordofan state, a crucial strategic link between Darfur and central Sudan. The army had recaptured the town just two months earlier.
According to Amy Pope, head of the International Organization for Migration, up to 50,000 people have been displaced from Kordofan since then.
Echoing reports from Al-Fashir, where tens of thousands were also displaced but many more are unaccounted for, survivors from Bara, who gave only their first names for fear of retribution against their families, described revenge attacks and summary executions against those accused of supporting the army.
“They said you celebrated with the army ... we have to kill you,” said one escapee, Khalil, speaking to Reuters with his arm in a sling in army-controlled Omdurman, part of Sudan’s capital. He said he had sat in a row with eight other men, two of whom were killed, as an RSF soldier fired on them.
Another man, Ismail, described hiding inside a house as men were shot in the street, until he was able to pay a fighter to escort him and his family out of the city.
A third man, Mohamed, said that when RSF troops arrived at his house he could hear his father fighting back and being fatally shot outside the door. Bands of RSF fighters entered the house, beat him and others, and demanded money and gold, he said. He left the city on foot, hiding from fighters and vehicles. Emergency Lawyers, a Sudanese activist group, said hundreds were killed in Bara.
Reuters could not independently verify the accounts of the violence.
Asked for comment, the RSF said the army had blocked every attempt for peace. “Any place where the army is present is a legitimate target and we will attack in any area in Kordofan, Khartoum, or Port Sudan,” an RSF leader said.
The RSF did not address a request for comment on the accounts of killings in Bara. The RSF says reports of widespread abuses in Al-Fashir and elsewhere are exaggerated and that it is investigating any that may have happened.

SIGNS OF A MILITARY BUILD-UP
Fighting may now turn to North Kordofan’s capital, El Obeid, one of Sudan’s largest cities. Two eyewitnesses told Reuters they saw the army and allied forces amassing troops and equipment in the city earlier this week, while the RSF was deployed to the east.
The town of Babanusa in West Kordofan state, home to a major army base, is also surrounded by RSF soldiers, residents told Reuters. Civilians mostly fled the city during earlier fighting.
In South Kordofan, the RSF and allied fighters in the SPLM-N armed group are surrounding the army in the cities of Kadugli and nearby Al-Dalanj and fighting has escalated, according to an SPLM-N source.
A global hunger monitor assessed last week that Kadugli was experiencing famine as of September, and that Al-Dalanj was likely also in famine, mirroring the impact of the siege on Al-Fashir.
Witnesses and sources have reported signs of a broader military build-up. An army source and a source close to the SPLM-N said the armed group had received new weapons via South Sudan.
A witness in the army’s wartime capital of Port Sudan, on the Red Sea coast, reported an increase in cargo plane arrivals. Two army sources said the planes carried military cargo. Reuters could not independently verify the claims.
The war, which erupted out of a power struggle, has caused ethnically-charged bloodletting, widespread destruction and mass displacement, drawing in foreign powers and threatening to split Sudan. Both sides have increasingly relied on drone strikes in recent months, leading to heavy civilian casualties.
On November 3, a drone attack in Sheikan locality in North Kordofan killed 49 people, including women and children, Emergency Lawyers said, without naming who was behind the attack.
“Developments on the ground indicate clear preparations for intensified hostilities, with everything that implies for its long-suffering people,” UN human rights chief Volker Turk said on Friday.