‘Heinous’: Deadly Israeli attack on Gaza aid seekers condemned
Leaders from Palestine and neighbouring countries
speak out against the ‘massacre’ of more than 100 people seeking aid.
29 Feb 2024
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/2/29/heinous-deadly-israeli-attack-on-gaza-aid-seekers-condemned
Palestinian leaders and neighbouring countries have
condemned Israel’s targeting of unarmed Palestinians collecting aid in Gaza, in
an attack that has killed more than 100 people.
The office of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud
Abbas said an “ugly massacre conducted by the Israeli occupation army” had
taken place, following reports on Thursday that Israeli forces opened fire on people receiving aid southwest of Gaza City.
The Gaza Ministry of Health said at least 112 people were killed and more than 750 wounded, and called on the international community to “urgently
intervene” to forge a ceasefire as “the only way to protect civilians”.
“The killing of this large number of innocent civilian
victims who risked their livelihood is an integral part of the genocidal war
committed by the occupation government against our people,” Abbas’s office was
quoted by the Wafa news agency as saying.
“Israeli occupation authorities bear full
responsibility and will be held accountable before international courts.”
Palestinian group Hamas called the attack “a heinous
massacre added to the long series of massacres committed by the criminal
Zionist entity against our Palestinian people”.
In a statement, the group, which is fighting Israel in
Gaza, said the deadly attack on aid seekers was “unprecedented in the history
of war crimes” and was part of Israel’s “war of starvation” against
Palestinians in the enclave.
It called on the United Nations Security Council and
Arab states to make decisions obligating Israel to stop its mass killings,
ethnic cleansing, genocide and violations of international law in Gaza.
Hamas also said it holds Israel and the administration
of US President Joe Biden responsible for the escalation of the war.
Western ‘complicity’
After news of the attack, the Israeli army claimed
that civilians in Gaza had attacked the aid trucks and dozens of people had
been trampled – although this was disputed by witness accounts.
“At some point, the trucks were overwhelmed and the
people driving the trucks, which were Gazan civilian drivers, ploughed into the
crowds of people, ultimately killing, my understanding is, tens of people,”
Israeli government spokesman Avi Hyman told reporters.
“It’s obviously a tragedy, but we’re not sure of the
specifics quite yet.”
Palestinian novelist Yusri al-Ghoul, who witnessed the
incident, spoke to Al Jazeera from Gaza City’s Shati refugee camp.
“They [Israel] are always saying their propaganda … I
heard them when they are insulting us and shouting at the Palestinians, even
the children … [saying] we will kill you every day,” he said.
“[If it was because of overcrowding], why were the
knees and elbows being shot? … Why did the Israeli tanks target the Palestinian
civilians?”
The White House said it was looking into reports of
Israeli fire on Palestinians, describing it as a “serious incident”.
“We mourn the loss of innocent life and recognise the
dire humanitarian situation in Gaza, where innocent Palestinians are just
trying to feed their families,” a White House National Security Council
spokesperson said in a statement on Thursday.
Biden later said that Washington was checking “two
competing versions of what happened”, before adding that the killings would
make negotiations over a ceasefire in Gaza more difficult. State Department
spokesman Matthew Miller said the US has asked Israel to provide answers.
The United Nations’ aid chief Martin Griffiths said he
was appalled at the “reported killing and injury of hundreds of people”.
“Even after close to five months of brutal
hostilities, Gaza still has the ability to shock us,” Griffiths said. “Life is
draining out of Gaza at terrifying speed.”
International condemnation
Egypt, which neighbours Israel and the southern Gaza
Strip, meanwhile condemned the attack.
“We condemn the inhumane Israeli targeting of …
unarmed Palestinian civilians in the Nabulsi roundabout in the northern Gaza,”
Egypt’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement. “We consider targeting
peaceful citizens rushing to pick up their share of aid a shameful crime and a
flagrant violation of international law.”
Jordan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs also released a
statement, saying: “We condemn the Israeli occupation forces’ brutal targeting
of the gathering of Palestinians who were waiting for aid on the Nabulsi
roundabout near Al-Rashid Street in Gaza.”
Saudi Arabia also joined in the condemnation. A
Foreign Ministry statement said Riyadh rejected “violations of international
humanitarian law from any side and under any circumstance”, and called for the
international community to compel Israel to open secure humanitarian corridors
into Gaza.
For her part, the Belgian deputy prime minister, Petra
De Sutter, said she was “horrified by the news of today’s massacre”.
“Murdering people queueing for essential humanitarian
aid?” De Sutter wrote in a social media post. “This is a flagrant violation of
international humanitarian law and fully goes against the [International Court
of Justice’s] provisional measures.”
Following suit, European Union foreign affairs chief
Josep Borrell said the deaths were “totally unacceptable”.
“I am horrified by news of yet another carnage among
civilians in Gaza desperate for humanitarian aid,” he wrote on X.
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni expressed “deep
dismay and concern,” while Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares wrote
on X that the “unacceptable nature” of the Gaza killings “underlines the
urgency of a ceasefire”.
Meanwhile, Yemen has said the killings amount to “war
crimes and the collective punishment of innocent people”.
In a statement, the Yemeni Ministry of Foreign Affairs
said the “crimes and massacres against defenceless Palestinian people kill
peace every day and foster terrorism and extremism in the region”
China, too, has expressed shock at Thursday’s
killings.
“China urges the relevant parties, especially Israel,
to cease fire and end the fighting immediately, earnestly protect civilians’
safety, ensure that humanitarian aid can enter, and avoid an even more serious
humanitarian disaster,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Chinese Mao Ning said.
Mustafa Barghouti, the secretary-general of the
Palestinian National Initiative, called the attack another “horrible crime”
committed by Israel.
“These were civilians who are starving because Israel
has been depriving them from food for months and does not allow any supplies to
them for more than a month now,” he told Al Jazeera from Moscow.
“And then they try to justify it by saying that
Palestinians are responsible for being killed by the same Israeli soldiers?
It’s unbelievable.”
Barghouti also decried “the silence” of Western
countries and blamed their governments for being “complicit with these crimes
and allow them to happen”.
“This should stop immediately,” he said. “It cannot
stop without an immediate, permanent, complete and total ceasefire.”
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