More Than
20 Killed Near Aid Distribution Site in Gaza, Health Officials Say
The
Palestinians were shot and scores wounded as huge crowds assembled to try and
get food from a new aid distribution center. An Israeli military official said
soldiers fired warning shots.
By Aaron
Boxerman and Ameera Harouda
Reporting
from Jerusalem
June 1, 2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/01/world/middleeast/gaza-aid-distribution-site-attack.html
More than 20
people were killed on Sunday and more than 100 wounded when Palestinians who
had gathered overnight in the hope of obtaining food from an aid distribution
center in Gaza came under fire, according to local health officials.
The incident
was the latest episode to ensnarl the Israeli-backed initiative to establish
aid distribution sites run by American security contractors in the enclave. The
Israeli military initially said it was unaware of any injuries from Israeli
fire at the site, but a military official later briefed reporters that troops
had fired warning shots toward “suspects” who approached them about a kilometer
away.
Palestinian
paramedics evacuated the bodies of at least 23 people from the vicinity of the
distribution center in the southern Gazan city of Rafah, according to the
Palestine Red Crescent Society. The International Committee of the Red Cross
said its field hospital in Rafah had received 179 cases, the majority with
gunshot or shrapnel wounds, and said 21 people had been declared dead on
arrival. Gaza’s health ministry said 31 had been killed.
“All
patients said they had been trying to reach an aid distribution site. This is
the highest number of weapon-wounded in a single incident since the
establishment of the field hospital over a year ago,” the Red Cross said in a
statement.
Speaking on
condition of anonymity to comply with military protocol, the military official
said soldiers had acted to prevent several people from approaching the troops
when the aid point was not operating, including with “warning shots.”
Israeli
officials had said the new system of four sites in southern Gaza would prevent
Hamas from seizing the food, fuel and other goods, but aid agencies have
criticized the initiative.
Huge crowds
of Gazans have headed for the new aid sites, to try and obtain a box of food
since the program started last week. While some days have gone relatively
smoothly, there have also been chaotic scenes, including one instance in which
Israeli forces fired what they described as warning shots.
The United
Nations and other major humanitarian relief groups have boycotted the
operation, and accused Israel of wielding aid as part of its military strategy.
U.N. officials said there was little evidence that Hamas systematically
diverted relief. Critics in Israel have warned the effort could be the first
step toward establishing formal Israeli rule over Gaza.
Israeli
military officials and some of their business associates drew up plans for the
new aid program, which stipulates that Israeli forces secure the perimeter of
the sites. U.S. security contractors are overseeing the distribution of boxes
of food as part of the newly created Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
For
Palestinians facing widespread hunger after Israel blocked food from entering
Gaza two months ago, the procedures for getting the aid have often been
unclear. Many have sought to beat the massive crowds flooding the aid sites by
arriving as early as possible, often walking long distances, in an attempt to
get a prized carton of basic staples.
Abdulrahman
Odeh, 21, described walking in a big crowd before dawn on Sunday to try to
reach the distribution site in Rafah’s Tel al-Sultan neighborhood. He said he
saw Israeli forces, including a tank and a military jeep, along the roughly
three-mile route.
At
approximately 4:30 a.m., before he had reached the distribution point, the
shooting started, said Mr. Odeh.
A second
witness, who spoke anonymously for fear of retribution from Israel or Hamas,
described a massive burst of gunfire at around the same time, forcing him to
drop to the ground. He said he ultimately fled home empty-handed.
Mr. Odeh
said he saw several bodies carted away after the shooting, but was able to
eventually reach the distribution site and obtain a carton of aid. “There’s no
system or order to receive it,” he said. “It’s survival of the fittest.”
On Sunday,
the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation said that it was unaware of any attacks in or
around its distribution sites and that the aid was distributed between 5 a.m.
and 6 a.m. “Our aid was again distributed today without incident,” it said.
Cindy
McCain, executive director of the United Nations’ World Food Program, disputed
the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation’s assessment. Appearing on ABC’s “This Week
with George Stephanopoulos,” Ms. McCain said her organization’s personnel in
Gaza were similarly reporting that people had been killed on Sunday morning.
She added
that aid agencies need “unfettered access,” to feed people and the World Food
Program had not seen any plan from the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
The violence
took place a day after the Trump administration rejected Hamas’s response to
its latest cease-fire proposal. Israel and Hamas have held numerous rounds of
indirect cease-fire talks that have foundered over terms for ending the war,
brokered by the likes of Qatar and Egypt.
Benjamin
Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, has said he is ready for a temporary
truce. But he has refused to end the war unless Hamas puts down its weapons and
sends its leaders into exile. The Palestinian group has repeatedly rejected
those demands.
On Saturday,
the United States suggested a two-month truce in return for the freeing by
Hamas of some of the hostages seized in the Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct.
7, 2023. Hamas officials argued that the proposal did not go far enough to
ensure that cease-fire would lead to an end to the war — an issue that has
remained a key sticking point over the past few months — and said it had made
suggestions to achieve a permanent resolution.
Steve
Witkoff, President Trump’s Mideast envoy, called Hamas’s counteroffer “totally
unacceptable,” saying it “only takes us backward.”
Both Israel
and Hamas have faced rising pressure to reach a compromise, however. Israel has
faced increasing international anger, including from its allies, over the
widespread hunger and deprivation in Gaza. Palestinians in Gaza have held rare
protests against Hamas, calling for the group to end the war and leave the
enclave which it has ruled since 2007.
For more
than two months, the Israeli authorities imposed a near-total blockade on Gaza,
stopping shipments of food, fuel and medicine from entering the enclave in what
they called an attempt to pressure Hamas over stalled cease-fire talks.
Since the
restrictions were imposed, many Gazans have gone hungry as stockpiles of food
dwindled and aid agencies warned that Gazans were on the brink of famine.
Communal soup kitchens closed and doctors have reported increasing amounts of
malnutrition, including among children. Israel began relaxing the ban on
humanitarian aid in mid-May.
On Tuesday,
the first full day of operation for the new aid program, chaos erupted at one
of the distribution sites in Rafah’s Tel al-Sultan neighborhood. Large groups
of Palestinians who were forced to crowd into small, fenced-in corridors burst
through barriers into the area.
The Israeli
military said soldiers fired “warning shots in the area outside the compound”
in an effort to restore control. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation denied any
“civilians or individuals involved with the distribution of aid” were harmed in
the incident.
The Red
Cross later reported that its nearby field hospital had received about 48
people, including women and children, suffering from gunshot wounds on Tuesday
night. The organization did not say whether the two incidents were connected.
Reporting
was contributed by Gabby Sobelman in Rehovot, Israel, Rawan Sheikh Ahmad in
Haifa, Israel, Iyad Abuheweila in Istanbul, Turkey, Myra Noveck in Jerusalem,
and Steven Moity in Washington.
Aaron
Boxerman is a Times reporter covering Israel and Gaza. He is based in
Jerusalem.
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