Gaza families wear ID bracelets to avoid burial in mass graves

Gaza families wear ID bracelets to avoid burial in mass graves
Palestinians inspect the rubble of a building following overnight Israeli strikes on the Rafah refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip on October 25, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 25 October 2023
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Gaza families wear ID bracelets to avoid burial in mass graves

Gaza families wear ID bracelets to avoid burial in mass graves

GAZA STRIP: With so many bodies, Palestinians in Gaza are burying the unidentified dead in mass graves, with a number instead of a name, residents say. Now some families are using bracelets in the hope of finding their loved ones should they be killed.

The El-Daba family has tried to reduce the risk of being struck down during the heaviest-ever Israeli bombardment of Gaza. 

Ali El-Daba, 40, said he had seen bodies ripped apart by the bombing and were unrecognizable.

He said he decided to divide his family to prevent them from all dying in a single strike. 

He said his wife Lina, 42, kept two of their sons and two daughters in Gaza City in the north and he moved to Khan Younis in the south with three other children.

El-Daba said he was preparing for the worst. He bought blue string bracelets for his family members and tied them around both wrists. “If something happens,” he said, “this way I will recognize them.”

Other Palestinian families were also buying or making bracelets for their children or writing their names on their arms. 

Mass burials have been authorized by local Muslim clerics. Before burial, medics keep pictures and blood samples of the dead and give them numbers.

The Israeli military has told people to leave the north of the Gaza Strip, one of the most densely-populated places in the world, and head south because it is safer. But airstrikes have hit across the Hamas-ruled enclave.

An Israeli military spokesperson said: “The IDF has been encouraging residents of the northern Gaza Strip to move southward and not to stay in the vicinity of Hamas terror targets within Gaza City.”

“But, ultimately, Hamas has entrenched itself among the civilian population throughout the Gaza Strip. So wherever a Hamas target arises, the IDF will strike at it in order to thwart the terrorist capabilities of the group, while taking feasible precautions to mitigate the harm to uninvolved civilians.”

Hostages

More than half the estimated 220 hostages held by Hamas have foreign passports from 25 different countries, including 54 Thai nationals, the Israeli government said.

In providing updated figures, the government also said 328 people from 40 countries were confirmed as dead or missing after the surprise Oct. 7 attack by Hamas fighters on southern Israel. In all, an estimated 1,400 people were killed in the assault.

Israel said 138 of the hostages had foreign passports, including 15 Argentinians, 12 Germans, 12 Americans, six French and six Russians.

Many were believed to have had dual Israeli nationality, however some, like the Thais and five Nepalese hostages, almost certainly did not. There was also one Chinese hostage, one Sri Lankan, two from Tanzania and two from the Philippines.

Thais also made up the largest single group of foreign dead and missing, with 24 confirmed killed and 21 unaccounted for.


1.2 mln polio vaccine doses delivered to Gaza ahead of Sept. 1 campaign, WHO says

1.2 mln polio vaccine doses delivered to Gaza ahead of Sept. 1 campaign, WHO says
Updated 17 sec ago
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1.2 mln polio vaccine doses delivered to Gaza ahead of Sept. 1 campaign, WHO says

1.2 mln polio vaccine doses delivered to Gaza ahead of Sept. 1 campaign, WHO says
GAZA: Some 1.2 million vaccine doses have already been delivered to Gaza ahead of a Sept. 1 campaign to vaccinate more than 640,000 children against polio, a WHO official said on Friday.
Some 400,000 additional doses are en route to the territory, said Rik Peeperkorn, the WHO’s representative for the occupied Palestinian territories.

Aid group says Israel hit convoy to hospital in Gaza. Israel says it hit gunmen who seized the car

Aid group says Israel hit convoy to hospital in Gaza. Israel says it hit gunmen who seized the car
Updated 4 min 41 sec ago
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Aid group says Israel hit convoy to hospital in Gaza. Israel says it hit gunmen who seized the car

Aid group says Israel hit convoy to hospital in Gaza. Israel says it hit gunmen who seized the car
  • The strike killed several people employed by a transportation company that the aid group was using to bring supplies to the Emirates Red Crescent Hospital in Rafah
  • Strike happened Thursday on the Salah Al-Din Road in the Gaza Strip and hit the convoy’s first vehicle

DUBAI: An Israeli missile hit a convoy carrying medical supplies and fuel to an Emirati hospital in the Gaza Strip, killing several people from a local transportation company, the American Near East Refugee Aid group said Friday. Israel claimed without immediate evidence that it opened fire after gunmen seized the convoy.
The strike killed several people employed by a transportation company that the aid group was using to bring supplies to the Emirates Red Crescent Hospital in Rafah, said Sandra Rasheed, Anera’s director for the Palestinian territories.
The strike happened Thursday on the Salah Al-Din Road in the Gaza Strip and hit the convoy’s first vehicle.
“The convoy, which was coordinated by Anera and approved by Israeli authorities, included an Anera employee who was fortunately unharmed,” Rasheed said in a statement. “Despite this devastating incident, our understanding is that the remaining vehicles in the convoy were able to continue and successfully deliver the aid to the hospital. We are urgently seeking further details about what happened.”
Anera planned to release more information later Friday.
The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday from The Associated Press. However, Israeli military spokesperson Lt. Col. Avichay Adraee posted to the social platform X that “gunmen seized a car at the head of the convoy (a jeep) and began driving.”
“After the seizure operation and after confirming the possibility of attacking the militants’ vehicle alone, the raid was carried out, as the rest of the convoy vehicles were not harmed and reached their target according to the plan,” Adraee wrote. “The operation to target the militants removed the risk of seizing the humanitarian convoy.”
He added: “The presence of armed men inside a humanitarian convoy in an uncoordinated manner makes it difficult to secure the convoys and their staff and harms the humanitarian effort.”
The United Arab Emirates, which reached a diplomatic recognition deal with Israel in 2020 and has been providing aid to Gaza since the Israel-Hamas war began, did not immediately acknowledge the attack.
Israeli forces have opened fire on other aid convoys in the Gaza Strip. The World Food Program announced Wednesday it is pausing all staff movement in Gaza until further notice over Israeli troops opening fire on one of its marked vehicles, hitting it with at least 10 rounds. The shooting came despite having received multiple clearances from Israeli authorities.
On July 23, UNICEF said two of its vehicles were hit with live ammunition while waiting at a designated holding point. An Israeli attack in April hit three World Central Kitchen vehicles, killing seven people.


Israeli military says it killed local Hamas commander in West Bank

Israeli military says it killed local Hamas commander in West Bank
Updated 24 min 54 sec ago
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Israeli military says it killed local Hamas commander in West Bank

Israeli military says it killed local Hamas commander in West Bank
  • Airstrikes while common over the months-long Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip have been rare in the West Bank

JERUSALEM: Israeli border police killed a senior commander of the Islamist movement Hamas in the West Bank on Friday, the military said.
It said Wassem Hazem, identified as the commander of Hamas in the volatile city of Jenin, was killed in a car it said contained weapons, ammunition and large quantities of cash. Two other Hamas gunmen were killed by a drone while trying to escape from the vehicle, it said.

The Israeli military conducted an airstrike in the West Bank city of Jenin amid days of heavy fighting in the Palestinian territory, authorities said Friday.
The Israeli military said in a brief statement that a military aircraft “struck a terrorist cell during an encounter with security forces in a counterterrorism operation in the area of Jenin.” It did not immediately elaborate.
Such airstrikes, while common over the months-long Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip, have been rare in the West Bank in the time since.
Israel says the raids across the northern West Bank — which have killed 16 people, nearly all militants, since late Tuesday — are aimed at preventing attacks. The Palestinians see them as a widening of the war in Gaza and an effort to perpetuate Israel’s decades-long military rule over the territory.
The Palestinian Health Ministry says over 650 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank since the start of the war.
Israel captured the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem in the 1967 Mideast war, and the Palestinians want all three territories for their future state.


Libya central bank governor, other bankers flee to avoid militias, FT says

Libya central bank governor, other bankers flee to avoid militias, FT says
Updated 30 August 2024
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Libya central bank governor, other bankers flee to avoid militias, FT says

Libya central bank governor, other bankers flee to avoid militias, FT says
  • The crisis over the control of the Central Bank of Libya creates yet another level of instability in the country

Libya’s central bank governor Sadiq Al-Kabir said he and other senior bank staff had been forced to leave the country to “protect out lives” from potential attacks by armed militia, the Financial Times reported on Friday.
“Militias are threatening and terrifying bank staff and are sometimes abducting their children and relatives to force them to go to work,” Kabir told the newspaper via telephone.
He also said attempts by interim Prime Minister Abdulhamid Al-Dbeibah to replace him were illegal, and contravened UN negotiated accords on control of the central bank.
The crisis over the control of the Central Bank of Libya creates yet another level of instability in the country, a major oil producer that is split between eastern and western factions that have drawn backing from Turkiye and Russia.
The UN Support Mission in Libya early this week called for the suspension of unilateral decisions, the lifting of force majeure on oil fields, the halting of escalations and use of force, and the protection of central bank employees.


Israel agrees ‘humanitarian pauses’ in Gaza to allow polio vaccinations

Israel agrees ‘humanitarian pauses’ in Gaza to allow polio vaccinations
Updated 30 August 2024
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Israel agrees ‘humanitarian pauses’ in Gaza to allow polio vaccinations

Israel agrees ‘humanitarian pauses’ in Gaza to allow polio vaccinations
  • First case of polio in Gaza in 25 years was confirmed this month in an unvaccinated 10-month-old baby
  • UN plans to provide oral vaccines against type-2 poliovirus to more than 640,000 children in the territory

GAZA: Israel has agreed to a series of three-day “humanitarian pauses” in Gaza to allow UN health officials to administer polio vaccinations in the territory, the World Health Organization said Thursday.
“The way we discussed and agreed, the campaign will start on the first of September, in central Gaza, for three days, and there will be a humanitarian pause during the vaccination,” said Rik Peeperkorn, the agency’s representative for Palestinian territories.
The vaccination rollout will also cover southern and northern Gaza, which will each get their own three-day pauses, Peeperkorn told reporters, adding that Israel had agreed to allow an additional day if required.
Israeli authorities did not immediately respond to AFP’s request for comment, but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday night the new measures were “not a ceasefire.”
Hamas said it supports the “UN humanitarian truce.”
The United States and European Union have both voiced concern over polio in Gaza, after the first case there in 25 years was confirmed this month in an unvaccinated 10-month-old baby.
UN agencies have said they plan to provide oral vaccines against type-2 poliovirus (cVDPV2) to more than 640,000 children in the territory.
Poliovirus is highly infectious and most often spread through sewage and contaminated water — an increasingly common problem in Gaza with much of the territory’s infrastructure destroyed by Israel in its war against Hamas.
The disease mainly affects children under the age of five. It can cause deformities and paralysis, and is potentially fatal.