The Palestine Red Crescent said five people were killed and dozens wounded by gunfire and a stampede during an aid delivery Saturday in Gaza, where famine is looming.
AFP video footage shows a convoy of trucks moving quickly past burning debris near the distribution point in predawn darkness as people shout and gunfire echoes – some of which were warning shots, witnesses said.
The Red Crescent said it happened after thousands of people gathered for the arrival of around 15 trucks of flour and other food, which was supposed to be handed out at Gaza City’s Kuwait roundabout, in the territory’s north.
The roundabout has been the scene of several chaotic and deadly aid distribution incidents, including one on March 23 in which the Hamas-run government said 21 people were killed by Israeli fire – a charge Israel denied.
The Red Crescent said three of the five killed early on Saturday had been shot.
Eyewitnesses told AFP that Gazans overseeing the aid delivery shot in the air, but Israeli troops in the area also opened fire and some moving trucks hit people trying to get the food.
AFP contacted the Israeli military for comment.
A UN-backed report warned on March 19 that half of Gazans are experiencing “catastrophic” hunger, with famine projected to hit the north of the territory unless there is urgent intervention.
The report estimated that 1.1 million people – half the population, according to UN data – were facing catastrophic conditions.
The situation is particularly dire in the north of Gaza, where the United Nations says there are about 300,000 people – and where the report said famine was “imminent … projected to occur anytime between mid-March and May”.
Israel’s Netanyahu approves new Gaza ceasefire talks with Hamas ‘in coming days’
Israel’s Netanyahu approves new Gaza ceasefire talks with Hamas ‘in coming days’
Israeli strike wounds UN observers in Lebanon
Meanwhile, in a separate incident, an Israeli strike on Saturday hit a vehicle carrying United Nations technical observers outside the southern Lebanese border town of Rmeish, wounding several observers, two security sources told Reuters.
The Israeli military’s spokesman Avichay Adraee denied that Israeli forces hit a vehicle belonging to the UN peacekeeping mission in southern Lebanon, UNIFIL.
There was no immediate comment from UNIFIL or from the UN technical observer mission, UNTSO.
One of the security sources said the car carried three UN technical observers and one Lebanese translator. That source, and a second security source, said that the Israeli strike had left several of those in the car wounded.
Israel has been trading fire with the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah in southern Lebanon for nearly six months in parallel with the Gaza War.
Israel’s shelling of Lebanon has killed nearly 270 Hezbollah fighters, but has also killed around 50 civilians – including children, doctors and journalists – and hit both UNIFIL and the Lebanese army.
In November, UNIFIL said one of its patrols was hit by Israeli gunfire in southern Lebanon, without leaving casualties.
UNIFIL last month said that the Israeli military violated international law by firing on a group of clearly identifiable journalists, killing a Reuters journalist.