At least 46 Palestinians killed by Israeli fire, Gaza hospitals say, as the war drags on

At least 46 Palestinians killed by Israeli fire, Gaza hospitals say, as the war drags on
Palestinians carry humanitarian aid they received at the Rafah corridor as they walk in the Mawasi area of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on July 30, 2025. (Photo by AFP)
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Updated 30 July 2025

At least 46 Palestinians killed by Israeli fire, Gaza hospitals say, as the war drags on

At least 46 Palestinians killed by Israeli fire, Gaza hospitals say, as the war drags on
  • The Israeli military did not immediately comment on any of the strikes, but says it only targets militants and blames civilian deaths on Hamas because the militants operate in densely populated areas

DEIR AL-BALAH: Israeli strikes and gunfire in the Gaza Strip killed at least 46 Palestinians overnight into Wednesday morning, most of them among crowds seeking food, local hospitals said.
The dead include more than 30 people who were killed while seeking humanitarian aid, according to that treated dozens of wounded people.
The Israeli military didn’t immediately comment on any of the strikes, but says it only targets militants and blames civilian deaths on Hamas, because the group’s militants operate in densely populated areas.
The deaths came as the United Kingdom announced that it would recognize a Palestinian state in September, unless Israel agrees to a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war, following a similar declaration by France’s president. Israel’s foreign ministry said that it rejected the British statement.
The Shifa hospital in Gaza City said that it received 12 people who were killed Tuesday night when Israeli forces opened fire toward crowds awaiting aid trucks coming from the Zikim crossing in northwestern Gaza.
Thirteen others were killed in strikes in the Jabaliya refugee camp, and the northern towns of Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun, the hospital said.
In the southern city of Khan Younis, the Nasser hospital said it received the bodies of 16 people who it says were killed Tuesday evening while waiting for aid trucks close to the newly-built Morag corridor, which separates Khan Younis from the southernmost city of Rafah.
The hospital received another body for a man killed in a strike on a tent in Khan Younis, it said.
The Awda hospital in the urban Nuseirat refugee camp said that it received the bodies of four Palestinians who it says were killed Wednesday by Israeli fire close to an aid distribution site run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, or GHF, in the Netzarim corridor area, south of the Wadi Gaza.
In addtion, seven Palestinians, including a child, have died of malnutrition-related causes in the Gaza Strip in the past 24 hours, the territory’s health ministry said on Wednesday. A total of 89 children have died of malnutrition since the war began in Gaza. The ministry said that 65 Palestinian adults have also died of malnutrition-related causes across Gaza since late June, when it started counting deaths among adults.
Israel’s military offensive has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry. Its count doesn’t distinguish between militants and civilians. The ministry operates under the Hamas government. The UN and other international organizations see it as the most reliable source of data on casualties.


Medical charity warns of missing civilians in El-Fasher

Medical charity warns of missing civilians in El-Fasher
Updated 12 sec ago

Medical charity warns of missing civilians in El-Fasher

Medical charity warns of missing civilians in El-Fasher
  • Traumatized people still trapped inside key Darfur city and are being prevented from leaving: Volker TurK

JOHANNESBURG: The medical charity Doctors Without Borders, or MSF, has warned that the fate of hundreds of thousands fleeing ethnically targeted violence from Sudan’s western city of El-Fasher was unknown as satellite images showed suspected mass graves.

“Our main concern is that though we have seen approximately 5,000 people coming out of El-Fasher toward Tawila, we don’t know where the other hundreds of thousands have gone,” newly elected MSF president Javid Abdelmoneim said.
“That is worrying given the ethnic nature of targeting of violence toward civilians by the RSF,” he said in Johannesburg.
The town of Tawila is about 70 km to the west of El-Fasher, and communications remain largely cut off in the region.

I fear that the abominable atrocities such as summary executions, rape and ethnically motivated violence are continuing within the city.

Volker Turk, UN human rights chief

Those who reach shelter in Tawila find themselves stranded in a barren area with barely enough tents, many of them improvised from patched tarps and sheets, according to a video posted by the group Sudan’s IDPs and Refugee Camps. 
It shows children running across the area as a few adults carry a large pot of food, hoping it will be enough to feed the growing crowds of displaced.
Aid groups said tens of thousands of Sudanese had fled to overcrowded camps to escape reported atrocities in El-Fasher, and the UN human rights chief warned that many others are still trapped.
Rapid Support Forces, RSF, last month seized control of El-Fasher in the Darfur region following an 18-month siege. Reports have emerged of executions, sexual violence, and abductions in and around El-Fasher.
Survivors had recounted to MSF “harrowing” stories of “ethnically targeted torture, rape and summary executions,” Abdelmoneim said.
Six out of 10 adults screened had been starved, he added.
“I’ve never seen anything so shocking in all my 15 years of work,” he added. 
The UK-born doctor joined MSF in 2009 and has done missions in Iraq, Haiti, Ethiopia, Syria, Ukraine, and Sierra Leone during the West Africa Ebola epidemic.
The fall of El-Fasher gave the RSF control over all five state capitals in Darfur, raising fears that Sudan would effectively be partitioned along an east-west axis.
Yale University’s Humanitarian Research Lab, or HRL, said on Thursday that it found evidence consistent with “body disposal activities.”
The report identified “at least two earth disturbances consistent with mass graves at a mosque and the former Children’s Hospital.”
The Sudan war has killed tens of thousands of people, displaced millions, and triggered the world’s largest displacement and hunger crisis.
Since the RSF seized El-Fasher on Oct. 26, more than 16,200 people have fled to the camps in Tawila, said Adam Rojal, the spokesperson for the General Coordination for Displaced Persons and Refugees in Darfur.
The displaced in Tawila are in urgent need of food, medicine, shelter materials and psychosocial support, said Rojal. 
He said that families often survive on just two meals a day — and sometimes only one.
The International Organization for Migration estimates that around 82,000 people had fled the city and surrounding areas as of Nov. 4, heading to safe spots including Tawila.
MSF said on Friday that 300 people arrived in Tawila on Thursday alone after fleeing El-Fasher. 
MSF teams reported “extremely high levels of malnutrition among children and adults.”
UN Human Rights Chief Volker Turk warned that those left behind in El-Fasher are at risk.
“Today, traumatized civilians are still trapped inside El-Fasher and are being prevented from leaving,” he said in Geneva.
“I fear that the abominable atrocities such as summary executions, rape and ethnically motivated violence are continuing within the city,” he added. “And for those who manage to flee, the violence does not end, as the exit routes themselves have been the scenes of unimaginable cruelty.”
The fighting has spread across Darfur and to the neighboring Kordofan region, with both emerging as the epicenter of Sudan’s war over the past months. Early this week, a drone attack in El-Obeid, the capital of North Kordofan province, killed at least 40 people and wounded dozens more.
A military official said that the army intercepted two Chinese-made drones that targeted El-Obeid on Saturday morning. 
Jalale Getachew Birru, an analyst for East Africa with Armed Conflict Location and Event Data, said in a statement that the fall of El-Fasher and rising violence in North Kordofan marked a strategic victory for the RSF, but exacerbated human suffering. 
He estimated that at least 2,000 people were killed across Sudan in a single week between Oct. 26 and Nov. 1.
“These events not only deepen Sudan’s humanitarian crisis but also signal the RSF’s growing capacity to expand toward central Sudan, threatening to reverse the success of the Sudanese armed forces and returning the violence to the relatively calm central Sudan,” said Birru.