Int'l pressure mounts for probe into Gaza aid convoy massacre by Israel

Several countries back a UN call for an inquiry into the deaths of Palestinians in an incident where Israeli soldiers fired at a crowd queuing for aid, intensifying pressure on Israel.

Israel's closest ally, the United States, has also urged a thorough investigation. / Photo: Reuters
Reuters

Israel's closest ally, the United States, has also urged a thorough investigation. / Photo: Reuters

Pressure has mounted on Israel over the deaths of Palestinians queuing for aid in an incident during which Israeli soldiers fired at the crowd, with several countries backing a UN call for an inquiry.

Health ministry in Gaza has said Israeli forces had killed more than 100 people trying to reach a relief convoy near Gaza early on Thursday, with famine looming nearly five months into the war that began after a Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7.

Israel blamed most of the deaths on crowds that swarmed around aid trucks, saying victims had been trampled or run over. An Israeli official also said troops had "in a limited response" later fired on crowds they felt had posed a threat.

The incident has underscored the collapse of orderly aid deliveries in areas of Gaza occupied by Israeli forces with no administration in place and the main UN agency UNRWA hamstrung by an inquiry into alleged links with Hamas.

According to Israeli allegations, the Hamas attack on 7 October killed 1,200 people and took 253 hostages.

Israel's military campaign has since killed more than 30,000 Palestinians in Gaza, mostly women and children, health authorities in besieged Gaza say.

With a humanitarian catastrophe unfolding in Gaza, many countries have urged a ceasefire, but US President Joe Biden said Thursday's incident will complicate talks for a deal involving a truce and hostage release.

France and Germany have backed a call for an international inquiry. The US has also urged an inquiry. India said it was "deeply shocked" at the deaths and Brazil said the incident was beyond "ethical or legal limits".

South Africa, which has brought a genocide case against Israel at the International Court of Justice, condemned the deaths.

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'Deep indignation'

French President Emmanuel Macron voiced "deep indignation" and the "strongest condemnation of these shootings".

Germany said: "the Israeli army must fully explain how the mass panic and shooting could have happened."

Israel's closest ally, the United States, has also urged a thorough investigation, saying the incident shows the need for "expanded humanitarian aid to make its way into Gaza".

In Israel, ultra-right-wing security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir urged "total support" to Israeli soldiers who had "acted excellently against a Gazan mob that tried to harm them".

However, a piece on the N12 online news site said the incident showed the lack of any civil administration or rule of law in Gaza, and that this "may place Israel in a difficult position in terms of legitimacy for continuing the fighting".

A columnist in the biggest daily newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth said the incident would "create a turning point in the war" and could "exert international pressure that Israel will not be able to withstand, including from the White House," it said.

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Obstacles to aid delivery

A humanitarian disaster is unfolding in Gaza, particularly the north, after nearly five months of an Israeli air and ground offensive that has killed more than 30,000 Palestinians (mostly women and children), ruined the crowded coastal enclave and pushed it to the edge of famine.

With people eating animal feed and even cactuses to survive, and with medics saying children are dying in hospitals from malnutrition and dehydration, the UN has said it faces "overwhelming obstacles" getting in aid.

The UN humanitarian agency OCHA said obstacles included "crossing closures, restrictions on movement and communications, onerous vetting procedures, unrest, damaged roads and unexploded ordnance."

Last week the UN said aid flows into Gaza were drying up and it was becoming increasingly hard to distribute aid within the enclave because of a collapse in security, with most residents hemmed into makeshift camps.

OCHA spokesperson Jens Laerke said the delivery was made without any coordination with the UN.

The war has driven out the Hamas-run government that previously administered Gaza and rendered municipal police helpless, while the work of the main UN agency operating in the enclave has been constrained by Israeli accusations it was complicit in the Oct. 7 attack, which it denies.

"This tragic massacre, as some are calling it, is an illustration of why UNRWA needs to be distributing aid in Gaza to stave off mass starvation, which has already begun," said Chris Gunness, a former UNRWA spokesperson.

"It's an illustration that you cannot leave the protection of the Palestinians in Gaza in terms of food security to the Israelis," he added.

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Israeli right-wing activists prevent humanitarian aid from entering Gaza

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