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Home News

‘I’ll Never Try Again’: For Some Gazans, Seeking Aid Is Just Too Risky

June 17, 2025
in News
As World Turns Focus to Iran, Lethal Violence Flares Again at Gaza Aid Sites.
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Saleem Abdul Kareemwalked for hours just to get food aid Tuesday morning at a traffic circle in the city of Khan Younis. He came upon a scene of carnage.

“I saw so many dead and injured, all I could think about was running,” Mr. Kareem, 32, told The New York Times in a telephone interview. “This was my second attempt to get aid. I got nothing either time, and after what I saw, I’ll never try again.”

More than 50 Palestinians were killed near the aid distribution site in Khan Younis, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health, which blamed Israel for the deaths. The Israeli military said that a crowd had gathered near a stranded truck and that it was aware of reports that people had been wounded by Israeli fire when they approached the truck.

In a similar incident on Monday, the health ministry said, at least 20 Palestinians were killed by Israeli forces and more than 200 wounded when a crowd gathered early near an aid distribution site in southern Gaza. Israel said it was still looking into those reports.

Nearly every day, large crowds of desperate and hungry Palestinians flock to the few aid distribution points left in Gaza, waiting for hours and jostling for a place in the line to get food before it runs out.

Some of the aid sites began operating a few weeks ago under a controversial new Israeli-backed system run by an American-led company, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. It replaces a system overseen by the United Nations, and Israel says its aim is to provide food to civilians without it falling into the hands of Hamas militants.

The United Nations and other international groups have said the amount of aid getting through is woefully inadequate. They have also condemned the new system for forcing civilians to pass Israeli soldiers on the perimeter of the sites to reach the food, putting them in greater danger.

In recent weeks, Israeli forces have repeatedly used deadly force to control crowds on the approaches to the aid sites, forcing many Gazans to choose between letting their families go hungry or risking getting shot.

“The danger is too high for me to go to these centers,” Awni Abu Hassira, 38, from Gaza City, said in a phone interview. “I don’t want to face death this way.”

Videos shared on social media and verified by The Times showed the aftermath of the violence on Tuesday in Khan Younis, where crowds of people had gathered around the Tahlia traffic circle to wait for aid early in the day.

In one video by a local photographer, at least 20 bodies are visible on darkened ground where blood is pooling. Two of the bodies are severely mangled, and two other people have bleeding head wounds.

Other footage circulating on social media and reviewed by The Times shows people screaming and yelling as crowds run through the area.

The Israeli military said that “a gathering was identified adjacent to an aid distribution truck that got stuck in the area of Khan Younis” near Israeli forces operating in the area.

The United Nations and other aid groups are still sending some aid into Gaza and it was not immediately clear which aid group the truck was linked to.

Asked about the deadly incidents on Monday and Tuesday, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation said in a statement that its distribution sites were not involved. Other aid organizations, the statement said, “struggle to deliver aid safely” and are at risk of looting.

The Israeli statement, using the abbreviation for the Israel Defense Forces, said it was “aware of reports regarding a number of injured individuals from I.D.F. fire following the crowd’s approach.” It said the military “regrets any harm to uninvolved individuals.” Israel also said that two of its soldiers had been killed in combat in southern Gaza in recent days.

On both Monday and Tuesday, some victims were taken to a hospital in the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis.

On Monday, Naseem Hassan, a medic at a hospital in Khan Younis, described the difficulty of aiding people who were shot as they tried to collect food from a nearby aid distribution point. He said scores of Palestinian victims had been rushed to his hospital.

“People who are injured have to crawl or be carried for over a kilometer to reach us,” said Mr. Hassan, who works at Nasser Hospital. “We couldn’t reach the aid centers, ambulances can’t get there,” he said.

The International Committee of the Red Cross said on Monday that one of its field hospitals had treated more than 200 people after the shootings near the aid site.

The United Nations has warned that Gaza’s population is on the brink of famine, with thousands of children already severely malnourished.

“The facts speak for themselves,” said Volker Türk, the U.N. human rights chief. Speaking in Geneva on Monday, he called Israel’s military campaign in Gaza a source of “horrifying, unconscionable suffering.”

“All those with influence must exert maximum pressure on Israel and Hamas to put an end to this unbearable suffering,” he said.

Ameera Harouda, Nick Cumming-Bruce and Sanjana Varghese contributed reporting.

The post ‘I’ll Never Try Again’: For Some Gazans, Seeking Aid Is Just Too Risky appeared first on New York Times.

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