Dozens of injured Palestinian children set to arrive in UK for treatment

Palestinian children hold out their pans in front of a charity kitchen in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on Sunday. (AFP)
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Updated 14 September 2025
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Dozens of injured Palestinian children set to arrive in UK for treatment

  • Dozens of injured Palestinian children set to arrive in UK for treatment
  • Red tape blamed for children’s late arrival 

LONDON: Dozens of sick and injured children from Gaza are expected to arrive for treatment in the UK in the coming days.

They will be the first beneficiaries of a government scheme to provide healthcare via the National Health Service.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said in July that the children would be evacuated “urgently,” with reports blaming red tape for the delay in their arrival.

More than 50,000 children have been killed or injured in Gaza since Israel’s military operation began in October 2023, according to UNICEF.

UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper told the Daily Mirror newspaper that the first group of children had left Gaza and were “traveling now to the UK.”

“It’s a lot of diplomatic work in order to help them actually leave Gaza and then also travel through other countries in order to be able to get to the UK. But that work is underway and I’m determined to make sure that we can do our bit to help those injured families,” she said.

The BBC reported that the group numbers between 30 and 50 Palestinian children. Each would be accompanied by family members if necessary, the reports said.

The children have been receiving care in another country in the Middle East before traveling to Britain.

While this is the first time the government has arranged for children to be treated in the UK, a small number have been transferred privately as part of an initiative by Project Pure Hope.

Starmer said in July that the UK was “urgently accelerating efforts to evacuate children from Gaza” who needed critical medical assistance.

The transfer appears to have been delayed by the government insisting that the children’s relatives must travel with visas containing biometric data, The i Paper reported last week.

Hospitals across the UK are ready to admit the children but some in the most serious condition have had to be sent to other countries.

Nearly 100 UK lawmakers last month called on the government to speed up the evacuation. Labour member of parliament Dr. Simon Opher told The i Paper that the delay was “unacceptable” and that the need for biometric visas should be “scrapped without delay.”

Omar Din, co-founder of PPH, which has been advising the government on the transfer, said that while he welcomed the evacuation, the UK should be doing more.

“We appeal to the UK government to look to its European neighbors and to take in more children comparable to our counterparts,” he said.

By comparison, Italy has carried out 14 missions to evacuate more than 180 Palestinian children from Gaza for treatment.

Israel’s near two-year onslaught on the territory has destroyed the healthcare system and had a devastating impact on children there.

More than half of the territory’s hospitals are no longer operating and those that are are close to collapse, aid agencies have warned.


India says accomplice of Delhi car blast ‘suicide bomber’ arrested

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India says accomplice of Delhi car blast ‘suicide bomber’ arrested

NEW DELHI: Indian authorities said on Sunday that a deadly car blast in New Delhi earlier this week was an attack carried out by a “suicide bomber,” announcing the arrest of an accomplice.
The National Investigation Agency (NIA), the country’s counter-terrorism law enforcement body, said the alleged attacker and the second suspect were both from Indian-administered Kashmir, where police have carried out sweeping raids in recent days.
Announcing “a breakthrough” in the investigation, the NIA said in a statement it had arrested Amir Rashid Ali, “in whose name the car involved in the attack was registered.”
He had “conspired with the alleged suicide bomber, Umar Un Nabi, to unleash the terror attack,” it added, without specifying any possible motive.
Nabi, a resident of Kashmir, was an assistant professor in general medicine at a university in the northern state of Haryana, according to the counter-terrorism agency, which said it had seized a vehicle belonging to him.
Ali had come to Delhi to “facilitate the purchase of the car which was eventually used as a vehicle-borne Improvised Explosive Device (IED) to trigger the blast,” the NIA said.
The explosion on Monday took place near a busy metro station close to the landmark Red Fort in the capital’s Old Delhi quarter, where the prime minister delivers the annual Independence Day address.
A hospital official has said the blast killed 12 people. It was unclear whether the toll included Nabi.
The NIA’s statement said the attack “claimed 10 innocent lives and left 32 others injured.”
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has called the attack a “conspiracy,” and his government vowed to bring the “perpetrators, their collaborators and their sponsors” to justice.
It was the most significant security incident since April 22, when 26 mainly Hindu civilians were killed at the tourist site of Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir, triggering clashes with Pakistan.
Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since their independence from British rule in 1947, and both claim the Himalayan territory in full. Tensions remain high between New Delhi and Islamabad.
On Friday, nine people were killed when confiscated explosives blew up at a police station in Indian-administered Kashmir, in what authorities said was an accident.
Local media reported that a militant organization had claimed responsibility for it, which police dismissed.
The explosives had been recovered from Haryana state just before the powerful car blast in Delhi, according to the police.
Indian media have widely connected the Delhi blast with a string of arrests just hours prior.
Police said those arrested were linked with Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), a Pakistan-based and Al-Qaeda-linked group, as well as a Kashmiri offshoot linked to it.
The group that claimed the police station blast is considered close to JeM.