Current:Home > MyIsrael accused of opening fire on Gaza civilians waiting for food as Hamas says war death toll over 30,000 people -Mastery Money Tools
Israel accused of opening fire on Gaza civilians waiting for food as Hamas says war death toll over 30,000 people
View
Date:2025-04-17 21:27:06
Tel Aviv — Witnesses and medics said Israeli forces opened fire Thursday on thousands of Palestinians who had gathered in an open area of Gaza City hoping to receive food and other desperately needed humanitarian aid. Hamas, which controlled the Gaza Strip for almost two decades before it sparked the current war with its Oct. 7 terror attack on Israel, said Israeli forces "targeted a gathering of thousands of citizens while they were waiting to receive food aid."
Gaza's Hamas-run Ministry of Health said at least 104 people were killed and more than 750 others wounded.
The Israel Defense Forces said the casualties were the result of "a violent gathering of Gazan residents" around aid trucks, during which it said dozens of people were "injured as a result of being crushed and trampled."
An IDF official said later that after the chaos, at a nearby crossing point between north and south Gaza, Israeli forces first fired warning shots and then opened fire on civilians who rushed toward aid trucks and an IDF tank with forces helping to secure the aid convoy. The official said IDF forces had "fired at those who posed a threat," and stressed that the incident remained under review.
The head of one hospital in the decimated Palestinian territory said at least 10 bodies were brought in from the scene, along with dozens of wounded.
"We don't know how many there are in other hospitals," the Reuters news agency quoted the Kamal Adwan hospital's manager Hussam Abu Safieyah as saying.
At Gaza City's biggest hospital, Al Shifa, which was already barely functioning, doctors were struggling to cope with large numbers of wounded coming through the door.
"We mourn the loss of innocent life and recognize the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza, where innocent Palestinians are just trying to feed their families," a White House National Security Council spokesperson said in a statement Thursday, according to the Reuters news agency. "This underscores the importance of expanding and sustaining the flow of humanitarian assistance into Gaza, including through a potential temporary cease-fire."
The IDF released black and white video from a drone showing the chaotic scenes below as thousands of people clambered around the convoy of aid trucks on Thursday.
Avi Hyman, a spokesperson for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office, was quoted by the French news agency AFP as saying the aid convoy was "overwhelmed by people trying to loot and drivers ploughed into the crowd of people, ultimately killing tens of people."
Gaza City, where Hamas had its headquarters, was an early focus of the IDF's offensive against the group. Much of the fighting and bombardment has shifted further south, however, ahead of an expected Israeli ground offensive in Rafah, right on Gaza's southern border with Egypt.
Israel has been warned by the U.S. not to launch that incursion without a credible plan to evacuate the roughly 1.5 million Palestinians who've poured into Rafah from across Gaza since the war began. But with fighting between Israeli forces and Hamas militants continuing and Israel still hammering locations across Gaza with missiles and artillery, the death toll has climbed steadily.
Families destroyed as Gaza death toll reportedly tops 30,000
According to the enclave's Hamas-run Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between civilian and combatant casualties, as of Thursday at least 30,035 people have been killed in Gaza since the war started, and more than 70,400 others injured.
In the central city of Dier El Balah, an Israeli attack on a crowded building very nearly killed an entire extended family earlier this week — 36 people in all — according to survivors who spoke with CBS News.
Mohammad Hamad, 9, was the only member of his immediate family to escape from the wreckage of their home. He keeps telling his aunt, who also survived the strike, that all he wants is to see his mother's face again.
Rajaa Hamad told CBS News that her nephew "had seen horror in that half an hour. He said it [debris] was raining down on him and he was under the rubble and was in pain, but he wanted to live, because his mother asked him to one day become a doctor."
She said the young boy was "tired mentally, and he asks for his mother every day… the Israelis took his family away from him, the entire family."
Hamad said her nephew had two uncles living outside of Gaza who want to help look after him, but she feared there was no way for her to get him out of the territory.
U.S. considering humanitarian airdrops in Gaza
Amid the unrelenting violence and increasing scenes of starvation, negotiations in Qatar between Israel and Hamas over a new cease-fire and hostage release agreement continue, but there has been no breakthrough despite mounting pressure from the Biden administration for a deal.
"We have to do everything in our power," Meerav Ben Ari, an Israeli opposition politician, told CBS News. "Everything."
Ben Ari said the next week or so would be crucial in the talks. The Muslim holy month of Ramadan starts on March 10, and she said if a deal isn't in place before then, it could inflame tensions not only in Israel, Gaza and the occupied West Bank, but across the Middle East.
Asked Thursday whether he thought the shooting incident in Gaza would complicate the ongoing negotiations for a cease-fire, President Biden told reporters in Washington: "I know it will."
Humanitarian conditions across Gaza, but particularly in central and southern parts of the enclave where hundreds of thousands of people have sought shelter, have been deteriorating steadily, with aid organizations accusing Israel of constraining the delivery of aid materials.
Shortages of food, medicines and other essentials have grown so dire that Jordan unilaterally carried out airdrops of humanitarian aid packages earlier this week, sending packages parachuting down just off Gaza's Mediterranean coast for desperate people to wade or row out to collect.
A Canadian government minister said Wednesday that Canada was also working to coordinate aid airdrops in Gaza as soon as possible, and on Thursday, a U.S. official confirmed that the Pentagon was actively planning airdrops of aid packages, which would use GPS-guided parachutes, though no decision had been made on when they might commence.
- In:
- War
- Hamas
- Israel
- Palestinians
- Gaza Strip
- War Crimes
- Benjamin Netanyahu
Imtiaz Tyab is a CBS News correspondent based in London.
TwitterveryGood! (5)
Related
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Michael Jackson accusers' sexual abuse lawsuits revived by California appeals court
- Stock market today: Asian stocks mixed as traders await Fed conference for interest rate update
- Spanish singer Miguel Bosé robbed, bound along with children at Mexico City house
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Maryland man charged with ISIS-inspired plot pleads guilty to planning separate airport attack
- Judge blocks Georgia ban on hormone replacement therapy for transgender minors
- Japan to start releasing Fukushima plant’s treated radioactive water to sea as early as Thursday
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Texas court offers rehabilitation program to help military veterans who broke the law
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Miley Cyrus Is Giving Fans the Best of Both Worlds With Hannah Montana Shout-Out
- ‘Barbie’ for $4? National Cinema Day is coming, with discounted tickets nationwide
- Nissan recalls more than 236,000 cars over potential steering issues
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Shirtless Chris Hemsworth Shows How He's Sweating Off the Birthday Cake
- Immigrant workers’ lives, livelihoods and documents in limbo after the Hawaii fire
- Djokovic outlasts Alcaraz in nearly 4 hours for title in Cincinnati; Coco Gauff wins women’s title
Recommendation
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
Frustrated by a Lack of Details, Communities Await Federal Decision on Protecting New York From Coastal Storm Surges
As Tropical Storm Hilary shrinks, desert and mountain towns dig themselves out of the mud
Teva to pay $225M to settle cholesterol drug price-fixing charges
Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
Alabama Barker Shares Struggle With Thyroid and Autoimmune Disease Amid Comments on Her Weight
Tropical Storm Hilary moves on from California, leaving a trail of damage and debris
Kansas newspaper reporter had 'every right' to access business owner's driving record, attorney says