Sabtu, 23 Desember 2023

Israel-Gaza war live: UN chief says Israeli offensive creating ‘obstacles’ to aid distribution as strikes reported across Gaza - The Guardian

The UN security council has called for boosting humanitarian assistance for Gaza, but the UN chief said the way Israel was conducting its military operation was creating “massive obstacles” to aid distribution inside the battered territory.

After days of wrangling to avert a threatened US veto, the security council passed a resolution on Friday urging steps to allow “safe, unhindered and expanded humanitarian access” to Gaza and “conditions for a sustainable cessation” of fighting.

But Reuters reports UN secretary general António Guterres said after the vote that the way Israel was conducting its operation is “creating massive obstacles to the distribution of humanitarian assistance” in Gaza, where the UN says the aid available is just 10% of what is needed.

Israel says 5,405 aid trucks – bearing food, water and medical supplies - have entered Gaza since the war started.

A drone strike damaged a “Israel-affiliated” merchant ship off the coast on India on Saturday, but caused no casualties, according to maritime agencies.

The attack caused a fire on board, according to the British military’s UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO).

Ambrey, a maritime security firm, said the “Liberia-flagged chemical/products tanker... was Israel-affiliated” and had been on its way from Saudi Arabia to India.

Both agencies said the attack occurred 200 nautical miles southwest of Veraval, India.

UKMTO said the “authorities were investigating”, and noted the fire had been extinguished. Ambrey said the Indian navy was responding.

There was no immediate claim of responsiblity for the strike which came amid a flurry of drone and missile attacks by Yemen’s Iran-backed Huthi rebels on a vital shipping lane in the Red Sea.

Iran has also been accused of carrying out attacks near its waters.

Last month, an Israeli-owned cargo ship was hit in a suspected drone attack by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in the Indian Ocean, according to a US official.

An Israeli airstrike has killed 76 members of an extended family in Gaza, Associated Press reported rescue officials as saying on Saturday.

Friday’s strike on a building in Gaza City was among the deadliest of the Israel-Gaza war, Mahmoud Bassal, a spokesperson for Gaza’s civil defence department said.

Bassal provided a partial list of the names of those killed, according to AP – 16 heads of households from the al-Mughrabi family – and said the dead included women and children.

Among the dead was Issam al-Mughrabi, a veteran employee of the UN Development Programme, his wife and their five children.

“The loss of Issam and his family has deeply affected us all. The UN and civilians in Gaza are not a target,” said Achim Steiner, the head of the agency. “This war must end.”

Thomas White, director of UNRWA affairs, has criticised a decision by Israeli authorities to issue evacuation orders for people in central Gaza to move to Deir al Balah.

He said on X that 150,000 people would be impacted, while the area was “already overwhelmed with displaced including UNRWA shelters.”

He added that people in Gaza were “not pieces on a checkerboard”.

The spokesperson for the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has said it attacked a number of Hezbollah “terrorist targets” overnight and on Saturday morning “including operational infrastructures, terrorist infrastructures and a military compound”.

Daniel Hagari added that the attacks took place in “Lebanese territory”.

You can read more about fears over the involvement of Hezbollah in the conflict here:

Israeli strikes on Gaza continued on Saturday, with Hamas authorities reporting heaving shelling in several cities, reports the AFP news agency.

The Hamas-controlled health ministry said 18 people were killed in a house in Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza.

One boy lies on a bench behind another boy holding his leg, his head wrapped in a bandage and his face covered in grey dust

António Guterres said on X this morning that 136 United Nations colleagues in Gaza had died in 75 days, something the global organisation had “never seen” in its history.

The UN chief added: “Most of our staff have been forced from their homes.

“I pay tribute to them and the thousands of aid workers risking their lives as they support civilians in Gaza.”

António Guterres speaking

The US president, Joe Biden, has said he is “heartbroken” by the news that an American named Gadi Haggai is believed to have been killed by Hamas on 7 October when it attacked Israel.

Haggai, a 73-year-old Israeli-American man, was previously thought to have been taken hostage in the militants’ attack, along with his wife. A group representing hostages’ families had said earlier on Friday that Haggai died in captivity.

Biden said in a statement released by the White House on Friday:

Jill [Biden, the first lady] and I are heartbroken by the news that American Gadi Haggai is now believed to have been killed by Hamas on October 7. We continue to pray for the wellbeing and safe return of his wife, Judy.

Reuters also reports that Judith Weinstein, the wife of Haggai, is still being held hostage in Gaza, according to the Israeli media outlet Haaretz.

The Biden statement gave no further details about what happened to Haggai.

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An Israeli airstrike on a house in Nusseirat refugee camp in central Gaza killed three people including a journalist of Hamas’s Aqsa TV channel and two relatives, Palestinian health officials and Hamas media said.

The reporter’s death would bring to at least 69 the number of journalists killed in the conflict, according to a tally by the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Reuters also reports that in Gaza’s south, at least four civilians died in an airstrike on a car in Rafah, a Palestinian rescue worker said. A boy, his face covered in blood, and a girl, were carried away, video showed.

Palestinians mourn the death of relatives amid the rubble after an Israeli strike on a house in Rafah

There was no immediate Israeli comment. Its military has expressed regret for civilian deaths but blamed the militant Hamas for operating in densely populated areas or using civilians as human shields, an allegation the group denies.

The Hamas-affiliated Shehab news agency reported heavy shelling and airstrikes on Jibaliya al-Balad and Jibaliya refugee camp, in northern Gaza, and said Israeli vehicles were trying to advance from the western side of Jibaliya amid the sound of gunfire.

Wafa reported that Israeli shelling destroyed a water desalination plant in Jibaliya by the al-Amal hospital.

Airstrikes, artillery bombardments and fighting were reported across Gaza late into Friday night.

Israel’s military ordered residents of al-Bureij, in central Gaza, to move south immediately, Reuters reports. The directive signalled a new focus of the ground assault that has devastated the territory’s north and made a series of incursions in the south.

Some residents packed up donkey carts and left. But there was no immediate sign of large numbers from al-Bureij joining the hundreds of thousands fleeing other areas.

Palestinians including children leaving their homes in al-Bureij.

Ziad, a medic and father of six, said:

Where should we go to? There is no place safe. They ask people to head to [the central Gaza city of] Deir al-Balah, where they bomb day and night.

The official Palestinian news agency Wafa said at least 18 Palestinians were killed and dozens others wounded in an airstrike on a house in Nuseirat, central Gaza, late on Friday night.

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The UN security council has called for boosting humanitarian assistance for Gaza, but the UN chief said the way Israel was conducting its military operation was creating “massive obstacles” to aid distribution inside the battered territory.

After days of wrangling to avert a threatened US veto, the security council passed a resolution on Friday urging steps to allow “safe, unhindered and expanded humanitarian access” to Gaza and “conditions for a sustainable cessation” of fighting.

But Reuters reports UN secretary general António Guterres said after the vote that the way Israel was conducting its operation is “creating massive obstacles to the distribution of humanitarian assistance” in Gaza, where the UN says the aid available is just 10% of what is needed.

Israel says 5,405 aid trucks – bearing food, water and medical supplies - have entered Gaza since the war started.

Welcome back to our live coverage of the Israel-Gaza war. It’s nearing 9am and Gaza City and Tel Aviv on this 23 December and here’s an overview of the latest to bring you up to speed.

The United Nations security council has backed a resolution calling for a major boost in humanitarian assistance for the Gaza Strip but the UN secretary general has said the way Israel is conducting its military operation there is creating “massive obstacles” to aid distribution.

António Guterres’s comments after the UN vote came as airstrikes, artillery bombardments and fighting were reported across Gaza late into Friday night, with at least 18 people killed, according to Palestinian media.

Israel’s military ordered residents of al-Bureij in central Gaza to move south immediately, in a directive signalling a new focus of the ground assault that has devastated the territory’s north and made incursions in the south.

More on those stories soon as well as below, along with a recap of other key developments.

  • The UN security council, after days of delay, passed its new resolution on Gaza aid delivery with 13 votes in favour, no votes against and abstentions by the US and Russia. Although abstaining, it was pivotal for Gaza that the US did not veto and therefore block the resolution. A vote had originally been expected on Monday but was delayed day after day as negotiations went on to try to get the pieces in place for the resolution to pass when it did finally come to the vote.

Member countries voting during the UN security council vote in New York
  • António Guterres said after the vote that he hoped aid delivery would improve “but a humanitarian ceasefire is the only way to begin to meet the desperate needs of people in Gaza and end their ongoing nightmare”. The UN chief added: “As difficult as it might appear today, the two-state solution – in line with UN resolutions, international law and previous agreements – is the only path to sustainable peace.”

  • The Palestinian Authority and Hamas issued different responses towards the UN vote. The Palestinian foreign ministry, which is part of the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority, called the resolution “a step in the right direction” and said it would help “end the aggression, ensure the arrival of aid and protect the Palestinian people”. But Hamas, the militants who run Gaza, called the resolution an “insufficient step” for meeting the impoverished territory’s needs.

  • The International Rescue Committee, the global humanitarian organisation, lamented the lack of a UN security council (UNSC) resolution demanding a ceasefire in Gaza, even as it welcomed the resolution on aid. It also welcomed the call for the unconditional release of remaining hostages held by Hamas after they were snatched from southern Israel during the 7 October attack that triggered the war. “From a humanitarian point of view, the failure of the UNSC to demand an immediate and sustained ceasefire is unjustifiable,” the committee said.

Smoke billows above buildings following an Israeli airstrike at the al-Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza on Friday.
  • The European Commission said it had adopted a €118m ($130m) aid package to support the Palestinian Authority. The EC said on Friday the aid would help pay salaries and pensions of civil servants in the West Bank, social allowances for vulnerable families and the payment for medical referrals to East Jerusalem hospitals.

  • Gaza health officials say more than 20,000 people have been killed in the war. Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry said on Friday that it had documented 20,057 deaths in the fighting. It does not differentiate between combatant and civilian deaths. It has previously said that roughly two-thirds of the dead were women or minors.

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2023-12-23 09:53:00Z
CBMifmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnRoZWd1YXJkaWFuLmNvbS93b3JsZC9saXZlLzIwMjMvZGVjLzIzL2lzcmFlbC1nYXphLWhhbWFzLXdhci1sYXRlc3QtdXBkYXRlcy11bi1zZWN1cml0eS1jb3VuY2lsLXJlc29sdXRpb24tdXMtbGl2ZdIBfmh0dHBzOi8vYW1wLnRoZWd1YXJkaWFuLmNvbS93b3JsZC9saXZlLzIwMjMvZGVjLzIzL2lzcmFlbC1nYXphLWhhbWFzLXdhci1sYXRlc3QtdXBkYXRlcy11bi1zZWN1cml0eS1jb3VuY2lsLXJlc29sdXRpb24tdXMtbGl2ZQ

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