NRC: ‘Gaza Ceasefire in Name Only’

Statement by Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), on six months of ceasefire in Gaza

“Six months into the ceasefire, civilians in Gaza remain trapped amid attacks on civilians, restricted aid, and an uncertain political process that is now shaping whether recovery will begin or collapse. While the ceasefire has formally held, Israeli strikes have continued to kill and injure civilians, destroy homes, and erode any sense of safety.

“Humanitarian access remains severely constrained. Aid deliveries continue to fall far below agreed levels, with far too few trucks entering to meet basic needs. At the same time, the entry of goods and the restoration of infrastructure are not treated as operational questions, but increasingly tied to political negotiations over Gaza’s future.

“Ongoing talks led by the Board of Peace have introduced new conditions that link reconstruction, the lifting of restrictions, and the withdrawal of Israeli forces to the disarmament of Hamas. Failure of these negotiations could trigger renewed large-scale hostilities. Civilians are already paying the price of this uncertainty.

“Our teams continue to operate under extreme conditions, reaching close to one million people with shelter, legal assistance, water, and other essential services. Yet the situation on the ground is deteriorating. Families remain in makeshift shelters, exposed to hazards, with limited access to basic goods and rising prices driven by restricted supply.

“A ceasefire must be more than a reduction in violence. It must ensure sustained humanitarian access, enable immediate reconstruction, and protect humanitarian actors from administrative or legal barriers that undermine our work. Civilian recovery cannot remain conditional on political or military outcomes.

“The people of Gaza and Israel need more than a fragile pause. They need a credible path to safety, dignity, and recovery.”

Notes

  • Photos from Gaza can be downloaded for free use here.
  • Despite the ceasefire, which went into effect on 10 October 2025, Israeli strikes have continued in Gaza, with 713 people reported killed and 1,940 injured (OCHA).
  • Israeli forces have continued to raze areas inside the so-called yellow line, while attacks have also occurred in areas from which forces had withdrawn (OHCHR).
  • Over the past six months, the Norwegian Refugee Council has supported 920,276 people in Gaza through water and sanitation, shelter, legal, protection, education, food and cash services.

Norweigan Refugee Council

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Israel’s Mass Lebanese Massacre Must be Investigated – Euro NGO

Editor’s Note: The final death toll of the mass Israeli massacre stands at 303 people killed and 1,150 injured as per the Lebanese Health Ministry, Thursday

The large-scale Israeli attack on Lebanon, which caused heavy civilian casualties and extensive damage to civilian objects, warrants investigation for war crimes and crimes against humanity, given their apparently indiscriminate or disproportionate nature and indications of a systematic attack on the civilian population.

Preliminary field data on Israel’s intensive airstrikes on Beirut and other areas on Wednesday, 8 April, indicate that more than 1,300 people were killed or injured, with dozens still trapped or missing under the rubble. The attacks reflect a pattern of using highly destructive, indiscriminate force in densely populated civilian areas, in violation of international humanitarian law.

Israeli airstrikes hit densely populated residential areas in Beirut and its southern suburbs, as well as parts of the Beqaa Valley and southern Lebanon, killing and injuring civilians in their homes and other civilian settings. The attacks caused widespread destruction of residential buildings and civilian infrastructure. Civilian gatherings and social events were also struck, indicating indiscriminate and excessive use of force in violation of the principles of distinction, proportionality, and precaution.

This escalation came shortly after the announcement of a ceasefire agreement between the United States and Iran, suggesting a pre-emptive attempt to derail meaningful de-escalation and impose facts on the ground through force. It also undermines political and diplomatic efforts and increases the risk of wider escalation and violence in the region.

The Israeli attacks may give rise to criminal responsibility for war crimes, given the strikes on densely populated residential areas and civilian gatherings, the high number of civilian casualties, and the extensive damage to civilian objects and infrastructure.

Moreover, the use of highly destructive weapons in densely populated civilian areas, combined with the apparent failure to distinguish effectively between military targets and civilians, the inability to limit the attacks’ effects as required by international humanitarian law, and civilian harm that appears excessive in relation to any anticipated direct military advantage, provides serious grounds to conclude that direct attacks on civilians or indiscriminate or disproportionate attacks may have occurred. It also suggests a failure to take required precautions in attacks. These acts may constitute grave breaches of international humanitarian law and war crimes, warranting investigation and accountability.

The recent Israeli attacks must be viewed in their broader context as part of an ongoing pattern of strikes on civilian areas that have caused death, injury, destruction, and forced displacement, placing Lebanon’s civilian population under coercive conditions that threaten their lives, safety, and stability.

The scale and repetition of these attacks across a wide geographic area, including strikes on infrastructure and hospitals, the killing of journalists and medical personnel, and the use of white phosphorus, indicate that these are not isolated incidents but may form part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against civilians. Accordingly, these practices, including killing, forced displacement, and other inhumane acts, warrant investigation as crimes against humanity.

The continued commission of such attacks without accountability entrenches a long-standing pattern in the international response to Israeli violations, marked by the absence of effective deterrence despite the gravity and scale of harm to civilians. This fuels impunity and encourages further violations by keeping political and legal costs low. It also weakens international protection frameworks, threatens world peace and security, and underscores the need for urgent, decisive action to halt the attacks, ensure effective civilian protection, and hold those responsible accountable.

The international community must act immediately and effectively to stop Israeli military attacks that target civilians or expose them to grave danger, and adopt concrete, practical measures to protect civilians and civilian objects, rather than limiting its response to political condemnations or calls for de-escalation.

Independent, impartial, and effective international investigations are needed into all alleged Israeli violations, including attacks on residential areas, civilian gatherings, and civilian infrastructure, to establish individual responsibility and ensure accountability for anyone who ordered, carried out, facilitated, or concealed these crimes, and to prevent impunity.

It is essential to adopt tangible punitive measures against Israeli officials implicated in serious violations, including targeted diplomatic and economic sanctions, asset freezes, and travel bans, and to halt any cooperation or support that could directly or indirectly enable these violations or provide political or practical cover for them.

Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor calls for an immediate halt to the export and transfer of weapons, ammunition, and military equipment to Israel, where there is a clear indication they may be used to commit serious violations of international humanitarian law or other international crimes against civilians. Continuing to supply such materiel, or to engage militarily, despite a documented record of violations, increases the legal exposure of the states concerned and risks making them complicit in facilitating or sustaining these crimes.

Additionally, Euro-Med Monitor stresses the need to activate all available international and national accountability mechanisms, including supporting domestic jurisdiction over international crimes and backing investigations and prosecutions before relevant courts and mechanisms, to ensure accountability for all those responsible for these violations.

Unimpeded access must be ensured for rescue teams and humanitarian and medical aid to affected areas, along with the protection of health and humanitarian workers. Necessary measures should also be taken to evacuate the wounded and recover those trapped or missing under the rubble. Euro-Med Monitor urges the establishment of international mechanisms to monitor violations, document them, and preserve evidence in line with international standards, thereby safeguarding victims’ rights and supporting future justice processes.

Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor

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Gaza’s Death Toll Spirals to Over 72,000

Gaza’s Ministry of Health announced on Tuesday that 10 Palestinians were killed in the past 24 hours, raising the death toll from the Israeli war the Strip since October 2023 to 72,312.

Hospitals in the Gaza Strip received “10 new martyrs and 44 wounded” in the past 24 hours, the ministry explained whilst refraining from specifying the circumstances of the new casualties. However the Israeli army daily violates the ceasefire agreement in effect since October 10, 2025, through shelling and gunfire, resulting in deaths and injuries.

On Monday, medical sources told Anadolu Agency that 10 Palestinians were killed and others wounded in shelling and gunfire from Israeli drones targeting a gathering of civilians east of the Maghazi refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip.

In this context, the ministry stated that the death toll from Israeli violations of the agreement has risen since October 11 to “733 martyrs and 2,034 wounded.”

The Turkish news agency noted that the cumulative death toll from the Israeli offensive since October 2023 has thus risen to 72,312 martyrs and 172,134 wounded.

The agreement was reached two years after a genocidal war launched by Israel on October 8, 2023, with US support, which left behind massive destruction affecting 90 percent of civilian infrastructure, with the UN estimating reconstruction costs at approximately $70 billion. Anadolu

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Face of Israeli Genocide!

Horrifying images published by Dr. Mohamed Tawfik of Al-Firdous Eye Center in Egypt, showing a wounded Palestinian man who had fled the genocidal war waged by Israel in the Gaza Strip. He wrote:

This is not just a patient. This is the face of genocide. A man who just arrived from Gaza with severe facial damage and both eye injuries. It permanently altered his life. What we are seeing is not an illness but it is a direct result of the systematic destruction of healthcare, the delays in accessing it, and the ongoing violence.

He pointed out: As ophthalmologists, we deal with trauma. But this… this is man-made destruction. In Gaza, blindness is not just a complication. It is manufactured. Medicine alone is not enough here. This is a humanitarian catastrophe.

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Iran Fires 6,169 Missiles, Drones on Gulf States, Jordan Since 28 Feb

Iran targeted seven Arab countries, mostly Gulf states, with at least 6,169 missiles and drones, in addition to an attack by two fighter jets, in the first 38 days of the US-Israeli war on Iran.

These figures are based on Anadolu Agency’s monitoring and count, using official data and statistics from the UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Oman, as of 9:15 PM GMT on Monday.

The attacks launched by Iran since 28 February, 2026 are part of what it describes as a response to the ongoing US-Israeli aggression against it since the end of that month.

Tehran specifically maintains that it is not directly targeting those countries, but rather its missiles and drones are aimed at US military bases and other interests. However, some of these attacks resulted in deaths and injuries of civilians, and damaged different infrastructure, including airports, ports, energy facilities, and other buildings.

The UAE has been the most targeted, followed by Kuwait, then Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, and Jordan, while Oman has been the least targeted, according to Anadolu Agency’s monitoring and count of the combined number of missiles and drones.

Secretary-General of the Gulf Cooperation Council Jassem Al-Budaiwi stated on television on 26 March that the toll of “Iranian aggression” against the Gulf states exceeded 5,000 missiles and drones. These represent 85 percent of the total missiles launched by Iran during this war.

This means only 15 percent of the Iranian attacks were directed at Israel.

UAE: 519 Missiles and 2,210 Drones

The UAE Ministry of Defense announced in a statement on Monday that “since the beginning of the blatant Iranian attacks, 519 ballistic missiles, 26 cruise missiles, and 2,210 drones have been intercepted.”

Kuwait: 365 Missiles and 786 Drones

The Kuwaiti army stated in a statement on Monday that “since the start of the Iranian aggression on 28 February, 2026, the total number of hostile aerial threats detected reached 350 ballistic missiles, 15 cruise missiles, and 786 drones.”

Saudi Arabia: 88 Missiles and 885 Drones

Saudi Arabia had not announced an updated tally of the Tehran attacks as of Monday evening, but according to Anadolu Agency’s monitoring of data from the Ministry of Defense and a daily count by the official Al-Ekhbariya channel, at least 88 missiles and 885 drones were intercepted.

Bahrain: 188 Missiles and 468 Drones

The Bahrain Defense Force (BDF) announced in a statement on Monday that it had intercepted and destroyed 188 missiles and 468 drones since the start of the Iranian attacks.

Qatar: 218 Missiles, 108 Drones, and 2 Fighter Jets

Qatar had not released an updated tally of the Iranian attacks as of Monday evening. However, according to Anadolu Agency’s monitoring and counting of data from the Ministry of Defense, at least 218 missiles, 108 drones, and 2 fighter jets were intercepted.

Jordan: 289 Missiles and Drones

According to Anadolu Agency’s monitoring and counting as of Monday evening, the Jordanian army reported that 289 Iranian missiles and drones had targeted the Kingdom’s territory since the start of the Iran-Iraq War.

Oman: 19 Drones

Muscat had not released an overall tally of the attacks as of Monday evening. However, data published by the Oman News Agency indicated that the Sultanate had been directly targeted by at least 19 drones.

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