Aid trucks enter Gaza
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A limited amount of food was delivered to desperate Gazans for the first time since early March on Wednesday, but senior United Nations officials warned the supply was “nowhere near enough” to forestall the worsening humanitarian crisis.
The limited aid entering Gaza isn’t nearly enough, humanitarian groups say, warning that Israeli authorities' new rules have complicated distribution efforts.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Thursday that Gaza's health system is at a breaking point as Israel's intensified military operations continue, amidst worsening mass population displacement and acute shortages of basic necessities.
Outside a Jewish museum, one man’s descent collided with young Israeli Embassy staffers.
The U.N. children’s agency says more than 9,000 children have been treated for malnutrition in Gaza this year, and food security experts say tens of thousands of cases are expected in the coming year.
The aid trucks that Israel has allowed into the Gaza Strip this week are "too little, too late," a spokesperson for the German government said on Friday.
The Israeli PM says if there is an opportunity for a temporary ceasefire and a hostage release deal, Israel will be open to this.
Microsoft has seen a growing number of protests at recent events over the Israeli military's use of the company's AI products.
An Israeli center-left opposition party leader and former general sparked an outcry this week when he made rare criticism of the toll of the war on Palestinian civilians in Gaza.
Per Israeli officials, 93 aid trucks entered the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, but experts say that is not nearly enough.
Renewed deliveries of food and supplies are beginning in Gaza. Western help hasn’t yet resulted in enough practical support on the ground, aid groups say.