A record 383 aid workers were killed in global hotspots in 2024, nearly half in Gaza, UN says
A record 383 aid workers were killed in global hotspots in 2024, nearly half in Gaza, UN says/node/2612274/middle-east
A record 383 aid workers were killed in global hotspots in 2024, nearly half in Gaza, UN says
Above, Palestinians gather to receive cooked meals from a food distribution center in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on Aug. 18, 2025. A record 383 aid workers were killed in global hotspots in 2024, nearly half of them in Gaza. (AFP)
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Updated 19 August 2025
AP
A record 383 aid workers were killed in global hotspots in 2024, nearly half in Gaza, UN says
âRecord number of killings must be a wake-up call to protect civilians caught in conflict and all those trying to helpâ
Most of the aid workers killed were national staff serving their communities who were attacked while on the job or in their homes
Updated 19 August 2025
AP
UNITED NATIONS: A record 383 aid workers were killed in global hotspots in 2024, nearly half of them in Gaza during the war between Israel and Hamas, the UN humanitarian office said Tuesday on the annual day honoring the thousands of people who step into crises to help others.
UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher said the record number of killings must be a wake-up call to protect civilians caught in conflict and all those trying to help them.
âAttacks on this scale, with zero accountability, are a shameful indictment of international inaction and apathy,â Fletcher said in a statement on World Humanitarian Day. âAs the humanitarian community, we demand â again â that those with power and influence act for humanity, protect civilians and aid workers and hold perpetrators to account.â
The Aid Worker Security Database, which has compiled reports since 1997, said the number of killings rose from 293 in 2023 to 383 in 2024, including over 180 in Gaza.
Most of the aid workers killed were national staff serving their communities who were attacked while on the job or in their homes, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, known as OCHA.
So far this year, the figures show no sign of a reversal of the upward trend, OCHA said.
There were 599 major attacks affecting aid workers last year, a sharp increase from the 420 in 2023, the databaseâs figures show. The attacks in 2024 also wounded 308 aid workers and saw 125 kidnapped and 45 detained.
There have been 245 major attacks in the past seven plus months, and 265 aid workers have been killed, according to the database.
One of the deadliest and most horrifying attacks this year took place in the southern Gaza city of Rafah when Israeli troops opened fire before dawn on March 23, killing 15 medics and emergency responders in clearly marked vehicles. Troops bulldozed over the bodies along with their mangled vehicles, burying them in a mass grave. UN and rescue workers were only able to reach the site a week later.
âEven one attack against a humanitarian colleague is an attack on all of us and on the people we serve,â the UNâs Fletcher said. âViolence against aid workers is not inevitable. It must end.â
According to the database, violence against aid workers increased in 21 countries in 2024 compared with the previous year, with government forces and affiliates the most common perpetrators.
The highest number of major attacks last year were in the Palestinian territories with 194, followed by Sudan with 64, South Sudan with 47, Nigeria with 31 and Congo with 27, the database reported.
As for killings, Sudan, where civil war is still raging, was second to Gaza and the West Bank with 60 aid workers losing their lives in 2024. That was more than double the 25 aid worker deaths in 2023.
Lebanon, where Israel and Hezbollah militants fought a war last year, saw 20 aid workers killed compared with none in 2023. Ethiopia and Syria each had 14 killings, about double the number in 2023, and Ukraine had 13 aid workers killed in 2024, up from 6 in 2023, according to the database.
Who are the prominent Palestinians held in Israeli jails?
Updated 6 sec ago
Reuters
JERUSALEM: A senior Hamas official said on Wednesday that negotiators from his group and Israel had exchanged lists of prisoners and hostages who would be released should a deal be reached during the ongoing Gaza ceasefire talks in Egypt.
Following are some of the most prominent Palestinian prisoners held by Israel. It is not yet clear if any of them will be released:
Abdullah Al-Barghouti: He was sentenced to 67 life terms in 2004 by an Israeli military court for his involvement in a series of suicide attacks in 2001 and 2002 that killed dozens of Israelis.
A father of three, he was born in Kuwait in 1972. In 1996, he moved with his family to live in Beit Rima village near Ramallah in the West Bank.
Ibrahim Hamed: He was handed 54 life terms after he was arrested in 2006 in Ramallah. He is accused by Israel of planning suicide attacks that killed dozens of Israelis.
Hamed, who had been on Israelâs wanted list for eight years before his arrest, was the top West Bank commander of the Izz El-Deen Al-Qassam Brigades, the Hamas military wing.
Hassan Salama: Born in Gazaâs Khan Younis refugee camp in 1971, Salama was convicted of orchestrating a wave of suicide bombings in Israel in 1996 that killed dozens of Israelis and wounded hundreds more.
He was sentenced to 48 life terms in jail. Salama said the attacks were a response to the assassination of Hamas bombmaker Yahya Ayyash in 1996. Salama was arrested in Hebron in the West Bank later that year.
Marwan Al-Barghouti: A leading member of the Fatah movement that controls the Palestinian Authority, Barghouti is seen as a possible successor to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.
He made his name as a leader and organizer in both of the Intifadas, or uprisings, waged by the Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip since 1987.
He was arrested in 2002, charged with orchestrating gun ambushes and suicide bombings and sentenced to five life terms in 2004.
Ahmed Saadat: Saadat, leader of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, was accused by Israel of ordering the assassination of Israeli Tourism Minister Rehavam Zeevi in 2001.
Pursued by Israel, he took shelter at the Ramallah headquarters of Arafat. Under a deal with the Palestinian Authority in 2002, Saadat stood trial in a Palestinian court and was incarcerated at a Palestinian Authority jail, where he was held under international supervision.
The Israeli military seized Saadat in 2006 following the withdrawal of the foreign monitors, and put him on trial in a military court. He was sentenced to 30 years in jail in 2008.
How Gazaâs children keep learning amid the destruction
Over half a million children in the Palestinian enclave remain out of school for a third year as the war grinds on
With schools destroyed, volunteers offer hungry and traumatized children improvised lessons among the rubble
Updated 23 min 6 sec ago
ANAN TELLO
LONDON: For the third consecutive year, as students elsewhere grab their backpacks and return to class, children in Gaza carry what little they have left, fleeing from one danger zone to another, their futures uncertain.
Some 660,000 school-age children in Gaza have been deprived of formal education since Oct. 7, 2023, when a Hamas-led attack on southern Israel triggered Israelâs retaliatory war in Gaza, according to the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA.
For most Gazan families, survival has eclipsed every other concern. âFamilies have been uprooted 10, even 15 times. Their main focus is on food, water, clothing and sleep,â Issa Saaba, director of the Canaan Institute of New Pedagogy in Gaza, told Arab News.
More than 90 percent of Gazaâs 2.2 million residents have been displaced multiple times, forced to seek shelter in tents, UNRWA schools, and hospitals â almost all of which have suffered some form of war damage.
Yet amid the devastation, Gazaâs children continue to cling to whatever schooling they can get. âHealth and education have never been abandoned,â Saaba said.
A girl runs from the scene after Israeli strikes on a school sheltering displaced people at the Bureij refugee camp in the central Gaza. (Reuters)
âOnce there was even a fleeting sense of stability; whether in open fields, partially destroyed homes, or tents along streets and yards, families and local initiatives sought to provide children with some form of schooling.â
Education has long been a cornerstone of Palestinian identity. In 2022, literacy in Palestine surpassed 97 percent, with near parity between men and women, according to Statista.
âEducation is prized by Palestinians as a route to a future theyâre being denied,â Iyas Al-Qasem, founder and trustee of the UK charity Hope and Play, told Arab News. âBut when the genocide intensified, schools were destroyed, robbing children of both education and hope.â
Since the start of the war, Israeli strikes and ground operations have damaged or destroyed more than 95 percent of Gazaâs school buildings, UN figures show.
âGaza is in ruins. So is its education system,â UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini wrote in a Sept. 1 post on X. He described Israelâs targeting of educational facilities as âscholasticide.â
Satellite imagery analysis by the UN Satellite Centre in July found that 91.8 percent of Gazaâs schools â 518 out of 564 â will need complete reconstruction or major repairs. Nearly three-quarters have suffered direct hits.
Despite the destruction, grassroots educators have created improvised classrooms. In March 2024, Saabaâs Canaan Institute and Hope and Play established three makeshift schools in Al-Zawaida of the Deir Al-Balah governorate, in Rafah, and in Al-Mawasi, western Khan Younis.
Palestinian teacher Doha al-Attar, 30 runs a class for children in a heavily damaged classroom in Khan Yunis. (AFP/File)
âWhen some displaced families returned north, a school was set up in tents in northern Gaza City,â Saaba said. âAltogether, we reached 610 students at the elementary level.â
Al-Qasem said such initiatives make a difference. âNone of these children live in the conditions we wish for them, but we can still make things better,â he said.
Beyond traditional lessons, the groups launched creative learning programs, including puppet theater, storytelling, sports, and community play days, to offer both education and psychological relief.
âThe big mouth puppet theater shows took nearly a month to develop and prepare, with the team working under some of the harshest conditions in a city devastated by destruction,â Saaba said.
âThe plays promote values such as tolerance, love, cooperation, honesty, and respect for parents, while also warning children about the dangers of playing with remnants of war.â
INNUMBERS
âą 660k+ Children deprived of formal education since Oct. 2023.
âą 97% School buildings that have sustained some level of damage.
âą 92% That require major repairs or complete reconstruction.
âą 76% That have suffered direct hits.
(Source: UNRWA, UNOSAT)
He added that the showâs main song âis about rebuilding our destroyed homes with our own hands, full of excitement, fun, and music.â
About 60 performances were held in displacement camps, shelters, courtyards, and streets, reaching roughly 10,000 children and many parents. Another 80 shows, featuring clowns, stilt walkers, and bear mascots, brought laughter and lessons to devastated neighborhoods.
One unlikely initiative even introduced a rollerblading academy in central Gaza.
âThey managed to get rollerblades and put a couple of hundred children through the academy,â Al-Qasem said. âYou look at their faces and thereâs joy â itâs bizarre and powerful to see joy in the midst of whatâs going on.â
Amid rubble and ongoing Israeli strikes that reportedly hit school buildings in Gaza, educators and aid groups worked together to create makeshift schools. (Reuters/File)
Such activities, he added, gave both children and instructors âa sense of agencyâ in a situation where little else was under their control. âThey werenât just at the behest of the bombs; they were actually doing things.â
The courage and dedication of volunteers, Saaba said, was âremarkable.â Despite bombings, famine, and loss, âthey showed rare commitment, solidarity and selflessness â examples rarely seen in history.â
In August 2024, the groups held a graduation ceremony in northern Gaza. âKids waving their certificates in the air amid bombing â an act of both defiance and celebration,â Al-Qasem said.
By then, about 1,000 informal learning centers across Gaza were serving roughly 250,000 students. Many hosted more than 1,000 children each.
But even these acts of hope have not been spared from the violence. In March, 28-year-old artist Dorgham Quraiqi was killed alongside his wife and brothers when an explosion tore through the ruins of their home in Gaza Cityâs Shujaâiya neighborhood.
âHe was our first team member to be killed,â said Al-Qasem. âWe also lost a 20-year-old stilt-walking clown who was killed while driving back from a show for kids.
âEverything they do takes place under that shadow. Itâs heartbreaking to think about how many of the children who joined our workshops are still alive â and, if alive, what life they now face.â
Save the Children and UN agencies report that more than 20,000 children have been killed since October 2023, with at least 42,000 injured and 21,000 permanently disabled.
More than 90 percent of Gazaâs 2.2 million residents have been displaced multiple times. (Reuters/File)
James Elder, spokesperson for the UN childrenâs fund, UNICEF, described witnessing children killed near Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir Al-Balah. âIt was a room full of children, four or five children, all whoâd been shot by quadcopters,â he told the news website Zeteo in early October.
The loss of routine, safety and learning has deep psychological impacts on children.
âSchools are one of the strongest protective factors (in war),â Jeeda Alhakim, a specialist counseling psychologist at City, University of London, told Arab News.
âThey offer routine, a sense of normalcy, and safe spaces where children can build supportive relationships with teachers and peers.
âWhen we think about childrenâs mental health in war, psychologists often talk about risk factors, things like exposure to violence, hunger, or displacement that increase distress, and protective factors â things that buffer against harm.â
Education, Alhakim said, âgives children hopeâ and reminds them âthey are more than the war they are living through.â
But this is the same reason âschools are often deliberately targeted in war â precisely because they symbolize continuity and possibility.â
Attacks on schools ânot only disrupt learning but also strip children of a key source of stability and resilience,â she said. âThatâs why protecting education in conflict isnât just about learning, itâs about safeguarding childrenâs mental health and well-being.â
Save the Children and UN agencies report that more than 20,000 children have been killed since October 2023. (Reuters/File)
Alhakim warned that Gazaâs children face overlapping traumas that âdonât just add up, they multiply.â Hunger weakens concentration; displacement severs social ties; disability isolates.
âEach one strains a childâs ability to cope, and when they overlap, the burden becomes much heavier,â she said.
In August, famine was officially declared in parts of Gaza, including Gaza City. More than half a million people are now trapped in conditions of starvation and destitution, according to an Integrated Food Security Phase Classification analysis released in August.
âA child who is hungry, displaced, and living with a disability isnât just facing three separate problems, theyâre facing a web of challenges that reinforce each other,â Alhakim said. âThey may be cut off from school, miss out on food support, or find it harder to access safe spaces.â
She cautioned that âthis cumulative risk makes mental health difficulties far more likely.â
Hundreds of UN-run schools and learning centers, many used as shelters, have been struck by Israeli airstrikes, according to Human Rights Watch. Israeli officials claim Hamas militants use civilian buildings to stash weapons and to mount attacks but have provided little evidence.
At least 42,000 children have been injured with 21,000 permanently disabled. (Reuters)
In July, Israeli outlets +972 Magazine and Local Call reported that the Israeli military had formed a âspecial strike cellâ to identify and target schools labeled as âcenters of gravity,â allegedly housing Hamas operatives.
The reports described âdouble tapâ strikes â secondary attacks on the same site â as increasingly common.
HRW said it investigated Israeli strikes on the Khadija Girlsâ School in Deir Al-Balah on July 27, 2024, which reportedly killed at least 15 people, and on the Al-Zeitoun C School in Gaza City on Sept. 21 that same year, which killed at least 34.
The New York-based rights monitor found no evidence of military activity at either site. It found that in only seven cases did Israel publish the names and photos of alleged combatants said to be present at targeted schools.
After the June 6, 2024, strike on Al-Sardi School, the Israeli military named 17 alleged fighters, but HRW found that three of those individuals had already been reported killed in earlier attacks.
While schools lose protection under international law if used for military purposes, HRW stressed that even then, attacks must not cause disproportionate civilian harm.
UNRWAâs Lazzarini warned that the longer Gazaâs children âstay out of school with their trauma, the higher the risk they become a lost generation, sowing the seeds for more hatred and violence.â
Al-Qasem echoed the concern. âMy ambition when I founded Hope and Play was that the charity would cease to function because it was no longer needed â that Palestinian children would have their rights respected and be cared for by the institutions that should be there,â he said. âSadly, I now think this will be a lifetimeâs work.â
The loss of routine, safety and learning has deep psychological impacts on children. (Supplied)
He said the groupâs next step is to shift âfrom emergency response to long-term rebuilding,â once the war ends. âA child who has lived through two years of this needs sustained support to create a future.â
Yet peace remains elusive. As Israel tightens its siege on Gaza City, ordering Palestinians on Oct. 1 to evacuate south or be labeled âterrorists and supporters of terror,â the dream of normal classrooms feels further away than ever.
On Oct. 4, US President Donald Trump urged Israel to âimmediately stop bombing Gaza,â saying Hamas was âready for a lasting peace.â The announcement came after the militant group said it had agreed to âimmediatelyâ enter negotiations for the release of all hostages.
However, at least 20 Palestinians were killed in Israeli strikes within 12 hours of Trumpâs announcement, according to Gaza hospital reports cited by CNN.
Macron, Jordanian crown prince discuss partnerships in Paris
Meeting addressed support for Syria and Lebanon to maintain their stability, sovereignty and territorial integrity
Princess Rajwa, Brigitte Macron attended part of the meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris
Updated 08 October 2025
Arab News
LONDON: French President Emmanuel Macron met Jordanian Crown Prince Hussein at the Elysee Palace on Wednesday to discuss ties between France and Jordan, along with recent regional developments.
The two sides discussed ways to enhance cooperation and reviewed existing partnerships, according to Petra news agency.
The crown prince relayed King Abdullahâs gratitude for French efforts to end the war in Gaza and its role in rallying international support for the recognition of the state of Palestine.
He highlighted Franceâs role in fostering partnerships between the private sectors of both countries and its support for the Aqaba-Amman Water Desalination Project.
The meeting also addressed support for Syria and Lebanon to maintain their stability, sovereignty and territorial integrity, promoting calm in the region and reaching comprehensive peace between Palestinians and Israelis.
Princess Rajwa and French First Lady Brigitte Macron attended part of the meeting, Petra added.
Number of Palestinian detainees in Israeli custody surpasses 11,100
It is the highest number of prisoners since the outbreak of the Al-Aqsa Intifada in 2000 and nearly twice the figure prior to October 2023
Among the long-term prisoners are 17 individuals incarcerated since before the 1993 Oslo Accord
Updated 08 October 2025
Arab News
LONDON: The total number of Palestinian detainees in Israeli custody exceeded 11,100 in October, as reported by prisonersâ institutions on Wednesday.
It is the highest number since the outbreak of the Al-Aqsa Intifada in 2000 and nearly twice the figure prior to October 2023, when there were about 5,250 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.
Among the long-term prisoners are 17 individuals incarcerated since before the 1993 Oslo Accords. This group includes Ibrahim Abu Mokh, Ibrahim Bayadseh, Ahmad Abu Jaber and Samir Abu Naâmeh, all detained since 1986, the Wafa news agency reported.
There are 350 prisoners serving life sentences or awaiting verdicts for life terms. Among them, Abdullah Al-Barghouthi is serving the longest sentence, with 67 life terms, followed by Ibrahim Hamed who has 54 life terms.
There are 131 prisoners serving sentences of 10 to 20 years and 166 prisoners serving sentences of 21 to 30 years. Among the prisoners, there are 53 females, including three from Gaza and two girls. Additionally, more than 400 child prisoners are being held in Ofer and Megiddo prisons.
The Israeli Prison Service reports that about 3,380 prisoners are detained without trial as of October. Additionally, there are 3,544 individuals held under administrative detention, which allows Israeli authorities to imprison people without charge or trial for a six-month period that can be renewed indefinitely.
Israeli forces close Ibrahimi Mosque during Jewish holiday
Authorities forced some markets in Hebron to close, imposed a curfew for 3rd consecutive day on several neighborhoods
More than 50 Palestinians were detained in the Al-Arroub refugee camp
Updated 08 October 2025
Arab News
LONDON: Israeli forces closed the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron to Palestinian worshipers until Thursday evening due to the Jewish holiday of Sukkot, which lasts for a week.
Amjad Karajeh, director of Hebron Endowments Department, condemned the measure as âa blatant violation of its (the mosqueâs) sanctity and a provocative assault on the right of Muslims to access their places of worship,â according to Wafa news agency.
Karajeh added that Israeli forces increased military measures, closing all checkpoints and electronic gates to the Ibrahimi Mosque to secure settlers during the Sukkot celebration.
On Wednesday, Israeli authorities forced some markets in the Old City to close. They imposed a curfew for the third consecutive day on the Jaber, Salaymeh, Ghaith and Wadi Al-Hussein neighborhoods, which are close to the Kiryat Arba settlement.
Israeli military measures blocked Palestinian students from reaching school in Tel Rumeida, Shuhada Street and Jabal Al-Rahma, Wafa added.
Jewish holidays consistently create challenges for Palestinians in Hebron, a city located in the southern part of the occupied West Bank, as Israeli military closures limit their movement.
The Ibrahimi Mosque, situated in Hebronâs Old City, is surrounded by about 400 settlers who are guarded by about 1,500 Israeli soldiers, along with numerous roadblocks.
On Wednesday, Israeli forces detained more than 50 people in the Al-Arroub refugee camp, located north of Hebron, including 14 who were classified as âwanted.â