Tag: Gaza

  • Israel set for forced  Gaza City evacuation as its offensive expands

    Israel set for forced  Gaza City evacuation as its offensive expands

     

     

    JERUSALEM:   (Xinhua)/FLOWERBUDNEWS:  — Israel’s military spokesman Avichay Adraee said on Wednesday that the evacuation of Gaza City was “unavoidable,” urging residents to head south ahead of “the next stage of the war.”

    In a video message posted in Arabic on social media platform X, Adraee said, “Every family that relocates to the south will receive the maximum humanitarian assistance currently being prepared.” He claimed that the military was bringing in tents and preparing sites for aid distribution centers, water lines, and other facilities.

    Adraee denied what he called “false rumors” that there was no space left in the south, saying there were “vast empty areas” in central Gaza camps and in al-Mawasi.

    The planned offensive — already in its early stages, according to the military — involves mass displacement and the destruction of Gaza’s main urban center, where famine has already taken hold. Rights groups and aid officials have warned that moving hundreds of thousands of displaced people into the central camps and the narrow coastal strip of al-Mawasi risks extreme overcrowding. The area is only a few square kilometers and lacks basic infrastructure, raising fears of disease outbreaks and worsening hunger.

    Heavy strikes continued overnight in Khan Younis in southern Gaza and in the north. The military said troops from the Givati Brigade were engaged in operations in Jabaliya and on the outskirts of Gaza City to expand its push and prevent militants from regrouping.

    Ten more Palestinians died of starvation in the past 24 hours, including two children, bringing the death toll from famine and malnutrition to 313, among them 119 children, the Gaza health authorities said.

    Israeli strikes and gunfire have killed at least 62,819 people and wounded 158,629 in Gaza since the war began, according to the authorities.

     

  • Gaza attacks: Shiites condemn FG, Israel’s ties on security, economy

    Gaza attacks: Shiites condemn FG, Israel’s ties on security, economy

     

    Members of the Islamic Movement, also known as the Shiites, have condemned the decision by the Federal Government to enter into security and economic pacts with Israel.

    The Shiites, in a press statement signed by Sheikh Sidi Munir Sokoto on Saturday in Abuja on behalf of the group, said the agreement is unacceptable going by the allegations of genocide committed by Israel in Gaza.

    The Islamic group described the cooperation pact as “treacherous and disgraceful.”

    It said “Israel is an illegitimate state, a regime drowning in the blood of innocent Palestinians.”

    According to the Shiites, at a time when Israel is carrying out a full-scale genocide in Gaza, with over 60,000 murdered since October 2023 — including women, children, the elderly, and Christians — the Nigerian government opened its doors to these bloodthirsty criminals.”

    “This is not just betrayal. It is collusion with murderers, and an unforgivable sin against humanity.

    “The Deputy Foreign Minister Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu, by signing this so-called security and economic pact with Israel’s Deputy Foreign Minister Sharren Haskel-Harpaz, has dragged Nigeria into a filthy alliance with war criminals currently on trial at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) for genocide, apartheid, and crimes against humanity.

    “Let us be crystal clear: Israel is not a democracy, not a legitimate state, not a partner for peace. And those who align with it become complicit in its crimes.

    “Even Nigerian officials have previously admitted this truth. In March 2024, Nigeria’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Yusuf Tuggar stated clearly:

    “’There is no justification for the carnage that is going on in Gaza… the complete disregard for the proportionality of force that is being meted out on innocent civilians. This carnage is completely out of hand and totally unacceptable. There is no way to explain the double standards; it has to stop.’

    “Likewise, Vice President Kashim Shettima, addressing the world at the 79th UN General Assembly, said:

    “’Today, we are all witnesses to the heart-wrenching situation in Gaza… Justice is antithetical to revenge. Freedom is an inalienable right and a natural entitlement that cannot be denied to any people. The Palestinian people deserve their independence… on territories already recognised by this very Assembly and by international law, which is being routinely ignored.’

    “How then does the same government turn around and sign deals with those carrying out the very crimes they condemned? This is not foreign policy — it is political prostitution. It is moral collapse. It is a betrayal of Nigeria’s soul.

    “Israel cannot and will never bring security to Nigeria. Its interests in Nigeria are not for peace or stability, but to colonise our intelligence systems, exploit our economy, and expand its reach into Africa by any means necessary.

    “We declare today: The Nigerian government has sold its dignity. It has betrayed the Palestinians. And it has disgraced the Nigerian people.

    “We call on all conscious Nigerians — Muslims, Christians, and those who value justice — to rise and resist this alliance with killers.

    “The Islamic movement will never accept Israeli presence in Nigeria in any form. We will never normalise genocide. And we will never be silent.

    “Natanyahu is comiting crime in Gaza. Nigeria must not be his puppet.”

  • Scorched lands, scarred souls — Mideast’s agonies spotlighted on World Humanitarian Day

    Scorched lands, scarred souls — Mideast’s agonies spotlighted on World Humanitarian Day

     

    –  Across Gaza, Sudan, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen, armed conflict rages on amid hunger, diseases and collapsing water systems. * The UN has long emphasized that these disasters are not inevitable. Behind each emergency lies a more complicated truth: Political factors — more than poverty or natural hazards — are driving the region’s humanitarian collapse.

    CAIRO:  (Xinhua)/FLOWERBUDNEWS :– As the World Humanitarian Day is marked across countries on Tuesday, the Middle East and North Africa remain mired in some of the world’s gravest crises, especially humanitarian ones.

    Across Gaza, Sudan, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen, armed conflict rages on amid hunger, diseases and collapsing water systems. The daily struggles to survive, of finding food, getting medicine or drawing water, now carry the risk of death.

    The pattern is consistent: Where war persists, hunger and disease follow. Humanitarian relief supplies may slow the pace, but without the political will to end the fighting, such critical aid falls drastically short.

     

    GAZA: WHEN FOOD CAN KILL

    Gaza demonstrates the crisis in its sharpest form. In the besieged coastal enclave, searching for food can be deadly.

    With international aid tightly restricted, residents face two risky options: lining up at distribution points run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation backed by Israel and the United States, or rushing toward airdropped supplies. Both have led to deaths.

    “They lied to us,” said Abu Mohammed. “They tell us to get food, but then the army kills us.”

    He told Xinhua that his son died while trying to get flour. “He left early in the morning so that his children wouldn’t go hungry. They killed him. This is non-justice.”

    Since late May, more than 1,800 people have been killed and over 13,000 wounded in or near the foundation sites in incidents involving Israeli forces, contractors, or armed groups, Gaza health officials say. Witnesses and medical workers call some locations “death traps.”

    The Israeli military disputes the figures and denies targeting civilians. The Foundation says the worst violence happened outside its compounds and rejects claims about its operations. The aid group was set up as an alternative to United Nations channels and has faced criticism over unclear finances and alleged breaches of humanitarian standards.

    Its first executive director, Jake Wood, resigned weeks after it launched operations in Gaza, citing concerns over contradictions on “humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence.”

    Under pressure to address hunger, Israel recently allowed foreign airdropped supplies into Gaza. Aid agencies say the airdrops were inefficient and dangerous. Pallets weighing up to one metric ton sparked chaotic scramblings, often among hundreds of people, including children, sometimes with fatal results.

    Aid through international organizations remains sharply limited. Relief groups say denials and delays have stalled their work. In July alone, they reported the Israeli blocking of more than 60 requests, causing food and medicine worth millions of U.S. dollars to be stuck in Jordan and Egypt.

    The starvation toll is rising. Health officials have reported more than 220 deaths linked to hunger. Since January, 340 children have been treated for acute malnutrition, with nearly 50 deaths, mostly under five.

     

    RAGING CIVIL WAR

    Beyond Gaza, the crises elsewhere in the region festered, but away from the spotlight. The UN calls the civil war in Sudan one of the worst humanitarian catastrophes of this century. More than two years of fighting have displaced millions and shattered basic services.

    In El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, the siege by the Rapid Support Forces since May 2024 has cut off food and medical supplies for hundreds of thousands trapped, while hyperinflation wiped out savings and forced people to live on “umbaz” — the residue from peanuts and sesame seeds after oil extraction, usually used as animal feed.

    “We’re eating what even animals wouldn’t touch in normal times,” a resident said, as doctors report increasing cases of ulcers and bloody diarrhea linked to such diets.

    In Yemen, a brutal civil war is now in its second decade, and two-thirds of the poor Arab country’s population — more than 24 million people — need help. Economic collapse, climate shocks, and restricted aid have exacerbated the urgency.

    Syria offers perhaps the starkest portrait of a conflict turned permanent. Since the civil war erupted in 2011, waves of violence have battered the country, prompting mass displacements with consequences that extend far beyond its borders — from Lebanon and Türkiye to Europe.

    The UN reported that more than 14 million Syrians have been forced to flee their homes in search of safety since the war began. Of them, 7.4 million remain displaced inside Syria, where 70 percent of the population requires humanitarian assistance and 90 percent live below the poverty line. More than 6 million others live as refugees in neighboring countries, including Türkiye, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq, or farther abroad.

    Years of bombardment, economic isolation, and the destruction of infrastructure have gutted basic services. The slow relaxation of partial sanctions still does not make a recovery more likely.

    MAN-MADE DISASTERS, POLITICAL ROOTS

    The UN has long emphasized that these disasters are not inevitable. Behind each emergency lies a more complicated truth: Political factors — more than poverty or natural hazards — are driving the region’s humanitarian collapse.

    Analysts point to protracted wars, deliberate obstruction of aid, and above all, an erosion of the multilateral order by the United States and its unilateral actions as major forces that have stripped civilians of any safety net.

    “The United States has not only contributed to these crises but has actively created and sustained them,” said Esmat Mansour, a political analyst based in Ramallah.

    The United States spent 17.9 billion U.S. dollars in military aid to Israel from October 2023 to October 2024, according to the Costs of War Project at Brown University. In addition, it vetoed UN Security Council resolutions urging a cease-fire and an end to the blockade on Gaza.

    In July, Washington imposed sanctions on Palestinian Authority officials and members of the Palestine Liberation Organization, citing payments it said supported terrorism and efforts to bring the conflict to international courts. The U.S. move drew shrill criticism from the international community.

    “The biggest failure (of the United States) lies in the inability to bring about an end to the war in Gaza and initiate a political process for implementing the two-state solution alongside the rest of the international community,” said Roee Kibrik, head of research at Mitvim, the Israeli Institute for Regional Foreign Policies.

    Critics also contend that broad, unilateral sanctions have deepened the economic collapse in both Syria and Yemen.

    “The United States stands behind all the wars that prevail today in the world, particularly in the Middle East, whether directly or indirectly,” said Mazen Chendeb, an expert on international relations in Lebanon.

    Khalid Ahmed, a political scientist in Qatar, says that Washington’s pursuit of regional dominance has undermined sovereignty and stability, and calls for “genuine multilateralism” in which states act as equal partners.

    World Humanitarian Day, observed annually on Aug. 19, honors the 22 humanitarian workers killed in the 2003 bombing of the UN headquarters in Baghdad, Iraq, including then UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and UN Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello. More than two decades later, Iraq is still healing.

    Experts say breaking the cycle requires more than emergency relief. It demands politics that is independent, inclusive, and dedicated to ending wars rather than managing them.

    “The only way forward is to consolidate democracy and expand the role of people and youth in shaping their futures,” Mansour said.

    “Peace can only be built when peoples are empowered to make decisions that serve their countries, not the agendas of others,” Mansour added.

     

  • Palestinian death toll from Israeli attacks surpasses 62,000 in Gaza: health authorities

    Palestinian death toll from Israeli attacks surpasses 62,000 in Gaza: health authorities

     

    GAZA,  (Xinhua) /FLOWERBUDNEWS:  — Gaza-based health authorities announced on Monday that the death toll from ongoing Israeli attacks on the coastal enclave since Oct. 7, 2023, has risen to more than 62,000, amid worsening humanitarian and health conditions.

    In a press statement, the health authorities reported that 60 people were killed and 344 others injured over the past 24 hours. It added that many victims remain trapped under the rubble, as ambulance and civil defense crews face difficulties reaching them due to continued bombardment and limited resources.

    The health authorities noted that among the casualties, 27 people were killed and 281 others injured while trying to obtain humanitarian aid.

    According to the statement, the total number of deaths since the onset of the conflict has reached 62,004, with 156,230 individuals injured.

    Meanwhile, five people, including two children, died in past 24 hours as a result of starvation and malnutrition, raising the total number of such deaths to 263, including 112 children, since October 2023.

    The health authorities stressed that hospitals in Gaza are operating under extremely difficult conditions due to shortages of fuel, medicines, and medical supplies, warning that the continued deterioration of the humanitarian situation could lead to further civilian deaths.

    By Mohammed Odwan

     

  • Mideast in Pictures: Gaza’s displaced live in tents amid ruins

    Mideast in Pictures: Gaza’s displaced live in tents amid ruins

     

    (Tents for displaced Palestinians are seen at a temporary shelter in Gaza City, on Aug. 4, 2025. (Photo by Rizek Abdeljawad/Xinhua)

    GAZA, Aug. 5 (Xinhua) /FLOWERBUDNEWS:  — Israel’s war on Gaza has killed at least 61,020 people and wounded 150,671. Nearly the entire 2 million population in Gaza has been displaced since the war began in Oct. 7, 2023.

    (Tents for displaced Palestinians are seen at a temporary shelter in Gaza City, on Aug. 4, 2025. (Photo by Rizek Abdeljawad/Xinhua)

    (Tents for displaced Palestinians are seen at a temporary shelter in Gaza City, on Aug. 4, 2025. (Photo by Rizek Abdeljawad/Xinhua)

    Tents for displaced Palestinians are seen at a temporary shelter in Gaza City, on Aug. 4, 2025. (Photo by Rizek Abdeljawad/Xinhua)

    Tents for displaced Palestinians are seen at a temporary shelter in Gaza City, on Aug. 4, 2025. (Photo by Rizek Abdeljawad/Xinhua)

    Tents for displaced Palestinians are seen at a temporary shelter in Gaza City, on Aug. 4, 2025. (Photo by Rizek Abdeljawad/Xinhua)

    Tents for displaced Palestinians are seen at a temporary shelter in Gaza City, on Aug. 4, 2025. (Photo by Rizek Abdeljawad/Xinhua)

     

  • 83 Palestinians killed by Israeli attacks across Gaza: civil defense

    83 Palestinians killed by Israeli attacks across Gaza: civil defense

     

    GAZA,  (Xinhua)/FLOWERBUDNEWS :  — At least 83 Palestinians were killed by Israeli shelling and gunfire across Gaza on Tuesday, according to the Gaza Civil Defense.

    Mahmoud Basal, spokesperson for the Civil Defense, told Xinhua that among the dead were 58 people waiting for aid in northern, central, and southern Gaza.

    Gaza hospitals received dozens with varying health conditions as a result of Israeli attacks, Basal added.

    There was no immediate comment from the Israeli army on these incidents.

    Meanwhile, the Al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, said in a statement that it “targeted several Israeli soldiers and vehicles north of Khan Younis, south of the Gaza Strip, with mortar shells, in conjunction with the Al-Quds Brigades and the Nasser Brigades.”

    At least 9,519 Palestinians have been killed and 38,630 others injured since Israel renewed its intensive strikes in Gaza on March 18, bringing the total death toll since October 2023 to 61,020, and injuries to 150,671, Gaza-based health authorities said Tuesday.

    Eight new deaths due to starvation and malnutrition were recorded in the past 24 hours, bringing the overall death toll of that kind since October 2023 to 188, including 94 children, the authorities said.

    Also on Tuesday, multiple Israeli media reported that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is set to announce plans to fully occupy Gaza.

     

  • 29 Palestinians killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza: civil defense

    29 Palestinians killed in Israeli airstrikes on Gaza: civil defense

     

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    GAZA, April 24 (Xinhua)/FLOWERBUDNEWS:  – At least 29 Palestinians were killed on Thursday in multiple Israeli airstrikes across the Gaza Strip, according to Gaza’s civil defense.

    “Among the victims were 10 police officers who died in an airstrike targeting a police station in Jabalia refugee camp in the northern part of the Gaza Strip,” Mahmoud Basal, the spokesperson of the civil defense, told Xinhua.

    He said that the attack also caused injuries among Palestinians and damage to houses.

    “The casualties were transferred to Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City,” he added, noting that the civil defense teams face severe challenges in removing the victims due to the lack of equipment.

    Meanwhile, the Israeli army said in a press statement that it targeted a facility that served as a command-and-control center for Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ).

    Israeli army spokesperson Avichay Adraee said the compound “was used to coordinate attacks against Israeli civilians and military personnel,” adding that “steps were taken to reduce civilian casualties, including the use of precision-guided munitions and aerial surveillance.”

    Neither Hamas nor the PIJ commented on the attack yet.

    Other Israeli strikes were reported in the southern city of Khan Younis, around Gaza City, and in the Deir al-Balah area of the central Gaza Strip.

    At least 1,978 Palestinians have been killed and 5,207 others injured since Israel renewed its intensive strikes on March 18 across the Gaza Strip, while the total Palestinian death toll since October 2023 has risen to 51,355, Gaza-based health authorities said on Thursday.

     

  • Israel cuts electricity supply to Gaza: minister

    Israel cuts electricity supply to Gaza: minister

     

    JERUSALEM, (Xinhua)/Flowerbudnews:  — Israel is cutting power supply to the Gaza Strip, Israeli Energy Minister Eli Cohen said on Sunday.

  • Arabs back Egypt’s Gaza plan in rare unity, reject Trump’s relocation push

    Arabs back Egypt’s Gaza plan in rare unity, reject Trump’s relocation push

     

    –  The adoption of Egypt’s reconstruction plan signals a unified Arab stance against Trump’s displacement proposal. Analysts say the plan serves both practical and political objectives. It reaffirms Gaza’s place within the Palestinian state while offering an Arab-led solution that aligns with international legitimacy resolutions.

     

    CAIRO,  (Xinhua)/Flowerbudnews:   — At their recent emergency summit in Cairo on Tuesday, Arab leaders embraced Egypt’s Gaza non-displacement reconstruction plan as a “unified Arab plan” and a practical alternative to U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposal to relocate Gazans.

    They dismissed Trump’s suggestion, and opposed U.S. and Israeli anti-Palestinian policies.

    They rejected any form of displacement of the Palestinians, starvation policies and scorched earth tactics, attempts to alter the demographic makeup of Palestinian land, halting humanitarian aid to Gaza or closing relief crossings, Israeli aggression in the West Bank, as well as annexing parts of the West Bank under any guise.

    Despite broad Arab and international support, the plan faces real challenges given the U.S.-Israeli stance and the massive 53 billion dollars in required funding.

    STRUCTURED PLAN, STRATEGIC SHIFT

    Egypt’s reconstruction roadmap for Gaza is structured into three phases over five years, with an estimated total cost of 53 billion U.S. dollars.

    The adoption of Egypt’s reconstruction plan signals a unified Arab stance against Trump’s displacement proposal. Analysts say the plan serves both practical and political objectives.

    It reaffirms Gaza’s place within the Palestinian state while offering an Arab-led solution that aligns with international legitimacy resolutions.

    “Egypt’s plan confirms that Gaza is an integral part of the Palestinian state and will be rebuilt in accordance with international legitimacy resolutions,” said Ezzat Saad, director of the Egyptian Council for Foreign Affairs.

    He stressed that the plan does not ignore Gaza’s deteriorating security, as it includes training for Palestinian security cadres for stability in Gaza and requires a UN Security Council resolution to deploy peacekeeping forces.

    The plan also enjoys rare Arab unity, with all 22 nations standing against Trump’s displacement proposal.

    Hani Al-Masri, director of the Ramallah-based Masarat Center for Research and Studies, called the plan “a positive step” in practically opposing displacement and offering a clear alternative to U.S.-Israeli proposals.

    MULTIPLE CHALLENGES

    While the Egyptian plan offers a structured alternative to forced displacement, its success depends on international political will, as Arab states alone cannot implement it, said experts.

    Saad explained that the 53-billion-dollar funding estimate aligns with UN projections, and that resources will be raised at an international donor conference in Cairo next month.

    The reconstruction cost reflects the extent of devastation in Gaza. Although Arab and European nations are expected to contribute, experts say that securing funding remains uncertain.

    Jordanian lawyer and writer Muhammad al-Subaihi warned that financing would likely fall solely on Gulf states as Europe and the United States remain financially strained due to the Ukraine crisis.

    The plan assumes a ceasefire, but Israel appears set to escalate rather than withdraw. Without firm guarantees to halt displacement and secure a lasting ceasefire, implementation faces significant hurdles.

    “Therefore, any discussion of reconstruction remains meaningless without addressing the core issue — ending the war and lifting the siege on Gaza,” said Al-Masri, Masarat’s director.

    “There is no sign that Arab backing for the plan will change Washington or Tel Aviv’s stance. Trump has not retracted his displacement plan; rather, his administration and Israel quickly opposed the Egyptian proposal,” he noted.

    HAMAS’S ROLE

    One of the most contentious issues surrounding the plan is Hamas’s role in Gaza’s future governance.

    Egypt’s proposal envisions a technocratic administration overseeing reconstruction, signaling a potential power shift in Gaza’s leadership.

    “I believe the Egyptian plan will succeed in the absence of Hamas, which has issued clear statements indicating that it doesn’t mind withdrawing from the political scene,” Saad told Xinhua.

    However, Israel’s demand for Hamas’s disarmament remains a major sticking point.

    “Hamas will not leave Gaza or surrender its weapons, as that would mean its elimination,” Al-Subaihi, the Jordanian lawyer and writer, argued.

    While Hamas’s exclusion may simplify diplomatic efforts, ignoring its influence on the ground complicates long-term political arrangements.

    Echoing Al-Subaihi, Al-Masri said that Hamas is an active force on the ground, and any future arrangements in Gaza cannot take place without an understanding of it. “Hamas may not be part of a new government, but it cannot simply be ignored or eliminated,” he added.