Dozens said they killed Gaza while desperate crowds rush for the help of air and earth

Dozens of Palestinians were killed or injured on Monday while desperate crowds were heading for food distribution points and parcels extinguished in the Gaza Strip, according to local witnesses and health officials.
The blockade of Israel and the military offensive made almost impossible to provide safe help, contributing to the sliding of the territory towards famine almost 22 months after the war with Hamas. Help groups say that the older measures of Israel to allow more help are far from sufficient. The hostage families in Gaza fear that famine also affects them, but blame Hamas.
Several hundred Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fires since May while heading for food distribution sites and assistance convoys, according to witnesses, local health officials and the United Nations Human Rights Office. The army says that it only pulled warning fire and challenges the toll.
While the international alarm has set up, several countries have been broadcast on Gaza, including Canada. The United Nations and aid groups call these expensive and dangerous drops for residents and say they offer much less help than trucks.
Many food plots fallen by air have splashed in the Mediterranean Sea or landed in so -called red areas from which the Israeli soldiers ordered people to evacuate. In both cases, the Palestinians risk their lives to obtain flour and other basic goods.
Aircraft from several countries – especially for the first time a plane from the Canadian Armed Forces – were broadcast in Gaza in Gaza on Monday in order to relieve the hunger crisis in the Palestinian territory. The main CBC correspondent Susan Ormiston, reports on a Jordanian military plane.
The Palestinians applauded on Monday while aid palettes were parachuted on Zuweida in the center of Gaza. Associated press sequences have shown a desperate rush when the packages have touched the ground, with hundreds of people who go to them. Fistfights broke out and some men have exercised batons.
“I want them to deliver it through (terrestrial) crossings,” said Rabah Rabah earlier while waiting for the air card. “It’s inhuman.”
At least one package came across a tent where displaced people had absent, injuring a man who was taken to the hospital. His condition was not immediately known.
At least 16 people were killed late Sunday near the crossing of Zikim on Israeli control, the main entry point for help in Northern Gaza, according to files from the SHIFA hospital in Gaza City, which showed that more than 130 people were injured.

The circumstances were not immediately clear, but the crossing has seen several shots in recent days that witnesses and health officials have blamed the Israeli forces. There was no immediate comment from the army.
At least 10 people were killed because thousands of people were waiting for aid trucks in the Morag corridor, which the Israeli army has cut between the southern cities of Khan Younis and Rafah.
Mohammed Al-Masri, who was part of the crowd, said the Israeli forces opened fire when a group of young men was trying to go to the front. “The occupation forces have shot many people in the head and back,” he said, adding that he had seen four injured, a motionless on the ground.

The Nasser Hospital of Khan Younis said that he had received 10 corps from Morag and five others that were killed near a help site in the south of Gaza led by Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), an American entrepreneur supported by Israelis.
The GHF said there were no violent incidents on or near its sites. He indicated that a new United Nations route takes place nearly two of its sites in the South and has attracted large crowds of people who unleash convoys. The GHF said that its entrepreneurs had used peppery gas or from warning fire on a few occasions to prevent deadly overcrowding because it opened four sites in May.
‘It’s a death trap’
Al-Awda Hospital, in the center of Gaza, said that he had received the bodies of eight people killed near a GHF site in the Israeli netzarim corridor and that 50 other people were injured. Witnesses and health officials said the Israeli forces had fired towards the crowd.
A photo associated with the press showed a man carrying a body far from the site, because others transported bags of food.
“It’s like yesterday and the day before,” said Ayman Ruqab, a young Palestinian who had tried without success to reach the site in the last three days. “It is a death trap.”
The Israeli army said it had shot warning on people who were approaching “in a way that posed a threat to the troops”, without elaborating. He said he was not aware of any victim.
The war was ignited when activists led by Hamas killed around 1,200 people, mainly civilians, and removed 251 during an attack on October 7, 2023, according to Israeli accounts. They still hold 50 hostages, including twenty who are alive, after most of the others have been released in ceasements or other transactions.
The military reprisal offensive of Israel killed more than 60,900 Palestinians, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health, which says that the majority of the dead have been women and children. Israel challenged the figures but did not provide his.
The talks of a cease-fire contract of Gaza and hostage remain at a standstill while the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu plans to develop military action and Hamas asked for humanitarian improvements before returning to negotiations.
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