Gulf Today

Charity suspends Gaza aid work after staff killed

A Us-based charity said it was pausing its Gaza aid operations ater seven of its staff were killed in a ‘targeted Israeli strike’ as they unloaded desperatel­y needed food aid delivered by sea from Cyprus

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A Us-based charity said on Tuesday it was pausing its Gaza aid operations ater seven of its staff were killed in a “targeted Israeli strike” as they unloaded desperatel­y needed food aid delivered by sea from Cyprus.

Monday’s deaths came as the Israeli army wrapped up a two-week military operation in and around the Al Shifa Hospital which reduced the besieged territory’s largest medical complex to charred ruins.

“World Central Kitchen is devastated to confirm seven members of our team have been killed in an IDF strike in Gaza,” the Us-based charity said in a statement.

It said those killed were “from Australia, Poland, United Kingdom, a dual citizen of the US and Canada, and Palestine” and announced that it was “pausing our operations in the region” in response.

The aid group said its team was travelling in a “de-conflicted” area in a convoy of “two armoured cars branded with the WCK logo and a sot skin vehicle” at the time of the strike.

“Despite coordinati­ng movements with the (Israeli army), the convoy was hit as it was leaving the Deir Al Balah warehouse, where the team had unloaded more than 100 tonnes of humanitari­an food aid brought to Gaza on the maritime route,” it said.

The aid had reached Gaza earlier on Monday aboard a barge and two salvage vessels which made the crossing from Cyprus in the second run for a much discussed maritime aid corridor from the European Union member state.

The Israeli military said it was “conducting a thorough review at the highest levels to understand the circumstan­ces of this tragic incident,” adding it had been “working closely with WCK” in the effort to provide aid to Palestinia­ns.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese confirmed one of the killed aid workers was Australian national Zomi Frankcom. “This is completely unacceptab­le,” Albanese said.

The bodies were taken to a hospital mortuary in the central town of Deir Al Balah, an AFP photograph­er reported.

One of them was laid on the floor on a makeshit stretcher, still wearing a top clearly emblazoned with the World Central Kitchens name and logo. Three foreign passports lay nearby.

US National Security Council spokespers­on Adrienne Watson said the White House was “heartbroke­n and deeply troubled by the strike.”

“Humanitari­an aid workers must be protected as they deliver aid that is desperatel­y needed,” she wrote on X.

Israel has come under immense pressure to increase the flow of humanitari­an aid into Gaza which has dwindled to a trickle ater almost six months of war. A Un-backed report warned on March 19 that half of Gazans were feeling “catastroph­ic” hunger and projected imminent famine in the territory’s north.

The world’s top court has ordered Israel to “ensure urgent humanitari­an assistance” in Gaza without delay, saying “famine is seting in.”

Foreign government­s have ramped up deliveries by air and sea, although UN agencies have said repeatedly that road convoys are the only way of supplying food in the volume needed.

The airdrops have proved deadly in some cases, leading to chaotic stampedes for food.

On Monday, the Israeli army pulled out of Al Shifa Hospital in Gaza City ater an intensive, two-week military operation against Hamas.

There were “more terrorists in the hospital than patients or medical staff,” Israeli army spokesman Daniel Hagari said.

He added that 900 suspects had been apprehende­d at the sprawling complex, with over 500 of them “definitely” militants.

A spokesman for Gaza’s civil defence agency said Israeli forces had killed about 300 people in and around the hospital during the operation.

Medics evacuating patients from the destroyed complex had to manoeuvre stretchers between mounds of rubble.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is under rising pressure from the families of hostages aswellasan­ti-government­protesters,whosenight­ly rallies have drawn thousands onto the streets.

The war in Gaza has raised fears of a wider regional conflagrat­ion, with repeated violence linked to the conflict in Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and Yemen.

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Palestinia­ns react near the site of an Israeli air strike on a building in Rafah on Tuesday.
Reuters ↑ Palestinia­ns react near the site of an Israeli air strike on a building in Rafah on Tuesday.

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