United Nations: UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres described the situation in Gaza as “horrific.”

“What we are witnessing in Gaza is a level of death and destruction that has no parallel in recent times,” he told reporters.

There were reports of more civilian casualties over the weekend, including children, during attacks that felled people seeking aid, Xinhua news agency reported.

Guterres said the violence undermines the most basic conditions of human dignity for the population of Gaza, “independently of the enormous suffering that they are having.”

The UN chief reiterated his plea for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza.

“I hope that the parties are able to overcome … the difficulties that they still find for that ceasefire to take place,” he said. “But the ceasefire is not enough. It is essential that that ceasefire leads to a solution, and that solution can only be possible if both Palestinians and Israelis can have a state where they can exercise their rights.”

The secretary-general said the condition of Palestinians living “in their own lands, without any rights is something that is totally against humanity and totally against international law.”

UN humanitarians have called recent attacks in Gaza, where women and children were killed while seeking water and food, an “outrage.”

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said that over the weekend, strikes and shelling intensified across Gaza, resulting in mass casualties.

OCHA said seven children reportedly were killed while waiting for water at a distribution site in Nuseirat. The latest incident followed one on Thursday, when several children and women were killed while waiting for nutrition supplies.

The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) called such slayings an outrage that must end, and said civilians must be protected and treated with dignity, adding that no one, including children, should risk their lives to get food, water or any other aid.

OCHA said the health system caring for casualties from the hostilities has been decimated, and that despite being on the brink of collapse, hospitals continue to respond to mass casualty incidents as much as they can.

The humanitarian office said health teams in Gaza continue to suffer some of the worst impacts of hostilities. The Ministry of Health in Gaza reported that a specialist in surgery and endoscopy was killed over the weekend.

UN agencies warned that the fuel shortage in Gaza has reached critical levels and that without adequate fuel, they will likely be forced to stop their operations entirely, directly impacting all essential services in Gaza, putting more people closer to death, with no health services, no clean water and no capacity to deliver aid.

OCHA said the small quantities of fuel allowed to enter Gaza last week were barely enough to support essential service operations for even a single day.

UN agencies and partners repeated that fuel must be allowed into Gaza in sufficient quantities and consistently to sustain life-saving operations.

UNICEF also reminded that the risk of famine remains. More than 5,800 children were diagnosed with malnutrition last month in Gaza, including more than 1,000 children with severe acute malnutrition, an increase for the fourth month in a row.

OCHA said the small quantities of aid and critical supplies that have entered Gaza so far are nowhere near enough to meet the needs of 2.1 million people. The Israeli authorities must permit the urgent entry of large-scale aid through all possible routes and corridors.

The humanitarian office said Israeli authorities have continued to issue displacement orders amid the violence. On Friday, they put out an evacuation order for the Rimal area of Gaza City, where about 70,000 people were staying at a dozen displacement sites. More than 86 per cent of Gaza is either under displacement orders or located within Israeli-militarized zones.

In the West Bank, OCHA said high levels of violence continue.

On Friday, two Palestinian men in their early 20s were killed near Ramallah during a settler attack, the office said.

According to OCHA, in the first half of 2025, more than 700 attacks by settlers against Palestinians were recorded, affecting more than 200 communities across the West Bank, primarily in Ramallah, Nablus and Hebron governorates, and resulting in casualties and property damage.

IANS

 

Nimisha Priya’s execution temporarily frozen, talks on ‘blood money’ underway: Counsel

New Delhi: In a significant development in the Nimisha Priya case, the scheduled execution of the Indian nurse in Yemen has been temporarily halted, her legal counsel Subhas Chandren confirmed...

Israel strikes Syrian forces in Sweida, citing protection of Druze community

Jerusalem: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defence Minister Israel Katz said on Tuesday they have instructed the military to strike Syrian forces in the southern Syrian province of Sweida,...

Gold, silver prices decline amid global tariff uncertainty

New Delhi: The gold and silver prices declined on Tuesday after having an upward rally for the past two days, amid escalating uncertainties around the US tariffs. The price of...

‘While Babri mosque was being demolished, the then PM was offering prayers’, discloses Rajasthan Governor

New Delhi: Rajasthan Governor Haribhau Bagade on Tuesday made some startling and shocking disclosures on the Babri mosque demolition in 1992, taking the lid off ‘many secrets’ that remained buried...

EAM Jaishankar meets Chinese President Xi Jinping, discusses India-China ties

Beijing: External Affairs Minister (EAM) S. Jaishankar on Tuesday met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing and discussed the trajectory of India-China bilateral relations. Jaishankar conveyed warm greetings from President...

89 killed in continued Druze-Bedouin clashes in Syria’s Sweida: War monitor

Damascus: At least 89 people were killed and some 200 others injured over the past two days in escalating clashes between Druze militias and Bedouin tribes in southern Syria's Sweida...

Iran vows fitting response to E3 threat of nuclear sanctions snapback

Tehran : Iran will deliver "a proportionate and appropriate response" if France, Britain and Germany, collectively known as the E3, trigger sanctions snapback mechanisms, Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei warned...

I-T Department cracks down on bogus claims of deductions and exemptions: Centre

New Delhi: The government on Monday said that the Income Tax Department initiated a large-scale verification operation across multiple locations in the country, targeting individuals and entities facilitating fraudulent claims...

EAM Jaishankar meets SCO chief in Beijing, discusses efforts to modernise organisation

Beijing:: External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar met Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) Secretary-General Nurlan Yermekbayev in Beijing on Monday. The two leaders discussed the SCO's growing importance and ongoing efforts to...

Lightning strikes kill nine in Bihar, IMD issues alert

Patna: At least nine people lost their lives due to lightning strikes across Bihar in the past 24 hours as sudden weather changes brought thunderstorms and rain to multiple districts,...

Mobile internet services suspended in Haryana’s Nuh owing to Jalabhishek Yatra

Chandigarh: Ahead of the Braj Mandal Jalabhishek Yatra, the Haryana government on Sunday suspended mobile internet services, bulk SMS, excluding banking and mobile recharge, and all dongle services provided on...

Yunus follows Hasina’s ‘mango diplomacy’ to extend hand of friendship

New Delhi: Following in the footsteps of deposed Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, the Chief Advisor of the Bangladesh interim government, Mohammed Yunus, has now embarked upon what can be dubbed...

Read Previous

US Supreme Court allows Trump to shrink Education Department

Read Next

EAM Jaishankar meets Chinese President Xi Jinping, discusses India-China ties

WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com