Scorching summer heat deepens Gaza’s daily struggles

Scorching summer heat deepens Gaza’s daily struggles
Issam Abu Hadayed, 28, tries to cool off her 5-month-old baby Amira, with a plastic plate as they sit in their tent at a camp for displaced people in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, Tuesday, July 1, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 03 July 2025

Scorching summer heat deepens Gaza’s daily struggles

Scorching summer heat deepens Gaza’s daily struggles
  • Temperatures are exceeding 30 degrees Celsius with displaced children sweltering inside cramped nylon tents

KHAN YOUNIS: For Rida Abu Hadayed, summer adds a new layer of misery to a daily struggle to survive in the war-ravaged Gaza Strip.

With temperatures exceeding 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit), daybreak begins with the cries of Hadayed’s seven children sweltering inside the displaced family’s cramped nylon tent. Outside, the humidity is unbearable.

The only way the 32-year-old mother can offer her children relief is by fanning them with a tray or bits of paper — whatever she can find. If she has water, she pours it over them, but that is an increasingly scarce resource.

“There is no electricity. There is nothing,” she said, her face beaded with sweat. “They cannot sleep. They keep crying all day until the sun sets.”

The heat in Gaza has intensified hardships for its 2 million residents. Reduced water availability, crippled sanitation networks, and shrinking living spaces threaten to cause illnesses to cascade through communities, aid groups have long warned.

The scorching summer coincides with a lack of clean water for the majority of Gaza’s population, most of whom are displaced in tented communities. Many Palestinians in the enclave must walk long distances to fetch water and ration each drop, limiting their ability to wash and keep cool.

“We are only at the beginning of summer,” Hadayed’s husband, Yousef, said. “And our situation is dire.”

Israel had blocked food, fuel, medicine and all other supplies from entering Gaza for nearly three months. It began allowing limited aid in May, but fuel needed to pump water from wells or operate desalination plants is still not getting into the territory.

With fuel supplies short, only 40 percent of drinking water production facilities are functioning in the Gaza Strip, according to a recent report by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. All face imminent collapse. Up to 93 percent of households face water shortages, the June report said.

The Hadayeds were displaced after evacuation orders forced them to leave eastern Khan Younis.

“Our lives in the tent are miserable. We spend our days pouring water over their heads and their skin,” Yousef Hadayed said. “Water itself is scarce. It is very difficult to get that water.”

UNICEF’s spokesperson recently said that if fuel supplies are not allowed to enter the enclave, children will die of thirst.

“Me and my children spend our days sweating,” said Reham Abu Hadayed, a 30-year-old relative of Rida Abu Hadayed who was also displaced from eastern Khan Younis. She worries about the health of her four children.

“I don’t have enough money to buy them medicine,” she said.

For Mohammed Al-Awini, 23, the heat is not the worst part. It’s the flies and mosquitoes that bombard his tent, especially at night.

Without adequate sewage networks, garbage piles up on streets, attracting insects and illness. The stench of decomposing trash wafts in the air.

“We are awake all night, dying from mosquito bites,” he said. “We are the most tired people in the world.”


Jordanian army foils infiltration attempt on northern border

Jordanian army foils infiltration attempt on northern border
Updated 4 sec ago

Jordanian army foils infiltration attempt on northern border

Jordanian army foils infiltration attempt on northern border
  • The Jordanian Armed Forces thwarted an attempt by an individual to illegally cross the country’s northern border, state news agency Petra reported on Wednesday

DUBAI: The Jordanian Armed Forces thwarted an attempt by an individual to illegally cross the country’s northern border, state news agency Petra reported on Wednesday. 
The suspect was apprehended and referred to the relevant authorities. The incident follows similar infiltration attempts last week on both the eastern and northern borders of the country.


Egyptian FM speaks to Iranian counterpart, IAEA director to promote regional stability

Egyptian FM speaks to Iranian counterpart, IAEA director to promote regional stability
Updated 7 sec ago

Egyptian FM speaks to Iranian counterpart, IAEA director to promote regional stability

Egyptian FM speaks to Iranian counterpart, IAEA director to promote regional stability

DUBAI: Egypt’s Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty conducted several phone discussions with his Iranian counterpart Abbas Araqchi alongside Rafael Grossi, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).

The Egyptian foreign ministry said in a statement Wednesday that the two phone calls held fall within Egypt’s sustained efforts to promote regional stability, reduce tensions, and support the resumption of negotiations on the Iranian nuclear file within a peaceful and diplomatic framework.

During his call with the Iranian foreign minister, Abdelatty emphasized the importance of adhering to diplomatic channels and reengaging with the IAEA, steps he noted are essential to restoring confidence and fostering a climate of security and stability in the region.


UAE president to visit Russia on Thursday

UAE president to visit Russia on Thursday
Updated 59 min 12 sec ago

UAE president to visit Russia on Thursday

UAE president to visit Russia on Thursday

DUBAI: UAE's President Mohamed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan is set to go on an official state visit to Russia on Thursday reported state news agency WAM.
During the visit, Al-Nahyan and Russian President Vladimir Putin are expected to discuss strategic partnership between the two countries and ways to enhance it, especially in the economic, trade, investment, energy and other fields.


Iran executes man accused of spying for Israel and another for planning IS group sabotage

Iran executes man accused of spying for Israel and another for planning IS group sabotage
Updated 06 August 2025

Iran executes man accused of spying for Israel and another for planning IS group sabotage

Iran executes man accused of spying for Israel and another for planning IS group sabotage
  • Iran has executed two men in separate cases, accusing one of spying for Israel and another of being a member of the Daesh group. State media says the two men were hanged Wednesday

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates: Iran executed two men in separate cases Wednesday, accusing one of spying for Israel and another of being a member of the Daesh group, state media reported.
A report by the judiciary news website Mizanonline identified the alleged spy as Rouzbeh Vadi, who was accused of relaying classified information to Israel’s intelligence service, the Mossad.
Authorities said Vadi provided information about an Iranian nuclear scientist who was killed during Israel’s June airstrikes on Iran, according to the report, which did not identifying the scientist or the time and place of Vadi’s arrest.
Vadi met the Mossad officers five times in Vienna, Austria, the report said.
Israel’s ambassador to France, Joshua Zarka, said in June that Israel’s 12-day war on Iran included targeted strikes that killed at least 14 physicists and engineers involved with Iran’s nuclear program.
Iran has hanged seven people for espionage during the conflict with Israel, sparking fears from activists that the government could conduct a wave of executions.
Iran separately hanged a member of Daesh group on Wednesday after he was convicted of plotting sabotage, Mizanonline reported.
Officials accused Mehdi Asgharzadeh of being a member of the Daesh group who participated in military training in Syria and Iraq before illegally entering Iran with a four-member team who were killed in a fight with Iranian security, the news site reported.
Authorities said Iran’s Supreme Court upheld the sentences of lower courts and followed full legal procedures before executing both men, Mizanonline reported.


End of era as Beirut renames Assad avenue after late music legend

End of era as Beirut renames Assad avenue after late music legend
Updated 06 August 2025

End of era as Beirut renames Assad avenue after late music legend

End of era as Beirut renames Assad avenue after late music legend
  • Lebanon has decided to rebaptise a thoroughfare named after former Syrian president Hafez Assad in favor of late Lebanese musician and playwright Ziad Rahbani

BEIRUT: Lebanon has decided to rebaptise a thoroughfare named after former Syrian president Hafez Assad in favor of late Lebanese musician and playwright Ziad Rahbani, a move many welcomed on Wednesday.
The decision marks the end of an era and a rupture with the authoritarian rule of former Syrian leaders Hafez Assad and his son Bashar — close allies of Lebanon’s Hezbollah militant group — who from Damascus held Lebanon in a stranglehold for almost three decades.
Islamist forces ousted Bashar Assad in December, ending five decades of one-family rule, further weakening Hezbollah after a war with Israel and helping to change the balance of power in Lebanon.
“Hafez Assad into the dustbin of history, Ziad Rahbani is the name of the airport road forever!” independent lawmaker Mark Daou who opposes Hezbollah wrote on X.
The government on Tuesday announced the renaming of the avenue, which runs to the international airport through south Beirut, where Hezbollah enjoys strong support.
Lebanese actor Ziad Itani welcomed the move, telling AFP that the former Syrian leader was associated with “dark periods in Lebanese history, marked by massacres, abuses and assassinations.”
The Syrian army entered Lebanon in 1976 as part of an Arab force that was supposed to put an end to the country’s civil war which began a year earlier.
Troops only withdrew in 2005 under enormous pressure after the assassination of Lebanese ex-prime minister Rafic Hariri, which was widely blamed on Syria and Hezbollah.
The Lebanese army dismantled a number of monuments paying homage to the Assad family following the pullout.
The government announced the street’s name change as it said it had tasked the army with developing a plan to disarm Hezbollah by the end of the year, an unprecedented step since civil war factions gave up their weapons decades ago.
The road’s renaming “is the decision that made me the happiest,” said Hassan Roumani near the avenue.
“Each time I passed along the Assad road, I felt like Hafez Assad and the Syrian army were still in Lebanon. Now psychologically I feel relieved — that period is over, and for the best,” he told AFP.
Not all welcomed the renaming however, particularly Hezbollah supporters.
Faysal Abdelsater, an analyst close to the Iran-backed group, said the move was “the result of political malice” and urged the local council to reject it.
Rahbani, son of iconic singer Fairuz, died last month aged 69 after a decades-long career that revolutionized the country’s artistic scene.