Deadly Strikes Hit Gaza as Israel Mulls Truce Talks

AFP/APP

Gaza: At least 61 Palestinians were killed in overnight Israeli bombardment, the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said Sunday, as Israel was preparing to send negotiators to new truce talks in Qatar.

Israel’s security cabinet and the smaller war cabinet were to meet to “decide on the mandate of the delegation in charge of the negotiations before its departure for Doha,” the prime minister’s office said.

Its statement did not specify when the delegation would leave for the latest round of talks, which comes after Hamas submitted a new proposal for a pause in fighting and hostage release.

More than five months of war and an Israeli siege have led to dire humanitarian conditions in the Gaza Strip, where the United Nations has repeatedly warned of a looming famine for the coastal territory’s 2.4 million people.

As the flow of aid trucks into Gaza has slowed, a second ship is due to depart from Cyprus along a new maritime corridor to bring food and relief goods, Cypriot officials said.

On Saturday, the US charity World Central Kitchen said its team had finished unloading supplies from a barge towed by the Spanish aid vessel Open Arms, which had pioneered the sea route.

The United Nations has reported particular difficulty in accessing north Gaza, where residents say they have resorted to eating animal fodder and where some have stormed the few aid trucks that have made it through.

Shelling and clashes were reported in south Gaza’s main city of Khan Yunis and elsewhere. 

The territory’s health ministry said 12 members of the same family, whose house in Deir al-Balah was hit, were among those killed overnight.

Most Gazans displaced by the fighting have sought refuge in Rafah on the Egyptian border, where Israel has threatened to launch a ground offensive without giving a timeline.

The head of the UN’s World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, appealed to Israel “in the name of humanity” not to launch an assault on Rafah.

Humanitarian catastrophe

An evacuation planned by the Israeli army ahead of launching its assault was not a practical solution, Tedros argued, noting that Palestinians there do not “have anywhere safe to move to.”.

“This humanitarian catastrophe must not be allowed to worsen,” he said on social media platform X.

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