MSF says Israel creating conditions for ‘eradication of Palestinian lives’ in Gaza

Palestinians wait to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen, in Jabalia, in the northern Gaza Strip, May 14, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 14 May 2025
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MSF says Israel creating conditions for ‘eradication of Palestinian lives’ in Gaza

  • MSF: ‘We are witnessing, in real time, the creation of conditions for the eradication of Palestinian lives in Gaza’
  • MSF: ‘Gaza has become a hell on earth for Palestinians’

GENEVA: Doctors Without Borders slammed Israel Wednesday for creating a “deliberate humanitarian catastrophe” in Gaza and accused it of trying to make aid conditional on forced displacement of Palestinians.

“We are witnessing, in real time, the creation of conditions for the eradication of Palestinian lives in Gaza,” the medical charity, known by its French acronym MSF, said in a statement.

“Gaza has become a hell on earth for Palestinians.”

Israel imposed an aid blockade on the Gaza Strip on March 2 after talks to prolong a January 19 ceasefire broke down.

The resulting shortages of food and medicine have aggravated an already dire situation in the Palestinian territory, although Israel has dismissed UN warnings that a potential famine looms.

MSF warned that its medical teams on the ground had “seen a 32-percent increase in the number of patients presenting with malnutrition over the past two weeks.”

“Dwindling fuel stocks are limiting the ability to desalinate and distribute water,” it said in its statement.

“Those health facilities that still function — already critically inadequate in number and capacity for the population — are still being attacked and are suffering from rapidly diminishing stocks of medications and other essential supplies.”

MSF highlighted that its “teams in Gaza have received no supplies for 11 weeks and face critical shortages of essential medical items such as sterile compresses and sterile gloves.”

The organization flatly rejected a US proposal, backed by Israel, for the creation of a new foundation to lead aid distribution in Gaza, in an overhaul seen sidelining the UN and existing aid organizations and essentially handing control to Israel.

“The US-Israel proposition to control the distribution of supplies under the guise of humanitarian aid raises grave humanitarian, ethical, security and legal concerns,” MSF said.

“Making aid conditional on forced displacement and vetting of the population is another tool in the ongoing campaign of ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian population,” it said.

“MSF firmly rejects and condemns any plan that further reduces availability of aid and subjugates it to Israeli military occupation objectives.”

The organization called on the “UN, EU member states, and all those with influence over Israel” to “urgently use their political and economic leverage to stop the instrumentalization of aid.”

“Israeli’s plan to instrumentalize aid is a cynical response to the very humanitarian crisis they created,” it said.

“If they wished, Israel and its allies could lift the blockade today and let humanitarian aid reach all those in Gaza whose survival depends on it.”


US launches new retaliatory strikes against Daesh in Syria after deadly ambush

Updated 11 January 2026
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US launches new retaliatory strikes against Daesh in Syria after deadly ambush

  • CENTCOM said operation ordered by President Donald Trump
  • Launched in response to the deadly Dec. 13 Daesh attack in Palmyra

WASHINGTON: The US has launched another round of retaliatory strikes against the Daesh in Syria following last month’s ambush that killed two US soldiers and one American civilian interpreter in the country.
The large-scale strikes, conducted by the US alongside partner forces, occurred around 12:30 p.m. ET, according to US Central Command. The strikes hit multiple Daesh targets across Syria.
Saturday’s strikes are part of a broader operation that is part of President Donald Trump’s response to the deadly Daesh attack that killed Sgt. Edgar Brian Torres-Tovar, Sgt. William Nathaniel Howard, and Ayad Mansoor Sakat, the civilian interpreter, in Palmyra last month.
“Our message remains strong: if you harm our warfighters, we will find you and kill you anywhere in the world, no matter how hard you try to evade justice,” US Central Command said in a statement Saturday.
A day earlier, Syrian officials said their security forces had arrested the military leader of Daesh’s operations in the Levant.
The US military said Saturday’s strikes were carried out alongside partner forces without specifying which forces had taken part.
The Trump administration is calling the response to the Palmyra attacks Operation Hawkeye Strike. Both Torres-Tovar and Howard were members of the Iowa National Guard.
It launched Dec. 19 with another large-scale strike that hit 70 targets across central Syria that had Daesh infrastructure and weapons.
The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces has for years been the US’s main partner in the fight against Daesh in Syria, but since the ouster of former Syrian President Bashar Assad in December 2024, Washington has increasingly been coordinating with the central government in Damascus.
Syria recently joined the global coalition against Daesh.