Israeli Forces Kill Two More Journalists Spiking Total to 168


Israeli forces killed two Palestinian journalists in Gaza, topping the number of media workers who were killed by Israel to 168.

The first was Palestinian TV journalist Tamim Ma’mmar. He was killed after Israeli forces bombarded his house in Khan Yunis, Friday, killing him and his family instantly.

Their killings are trending on the social media with images.



In a separate air strike Israeli forces targeted the home of Al-Aqsa TV journalist Abdullah Al-Sousi, massacring him and his family.

The Israeli army carried out airstrikes on Khan Yunis, killing Tamim Muammar along with his wife Islam Fayez and two children Mais and Salam. The Israeli strikes also killed Abdullah Sousi along with two of his nephews according to the Quds News Network.

Last week, the government media office announced the death of Al Jazeera correspondent Ismail Al-Ghoul and its cameraman Rami Al-Rifi in an Israeli airstrike that targeted their car in Gaza City.

Despite repeated warnings from Palestinian and international organizations, Israel has continued targeting press teams in Gaza, even those clearly identified with press vests and helmets. This defiance of international warnings has drawn widespread condemnation.


These attacks underscore Israel’s deliberate targeting of Palestinian journalists in Gaza. The number of journalists killed in Gaza is much more than the number those killed during the whole of World War II between 1939 and 1945.

Continue reading
US ‘Appalled’ by Smotrich’s Starvation of Gaza Remarks

The US administration is “appalled” by remarks made by the Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich Monday of starving the entire population of Gaza as “justified and moral” to release the Israeli prisoners.

“We are appalled by these comments and reiterate that this rhetoric is harmful and disturbing,” a State Department spokesperson said in a statement to The Times of Israel according to the Quds News Network.

The statement added that US President Joe Biden and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken have repeatedly stressed “the need to end the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, remove any obstacles to the flow of aid and restore basic services for those in need”.

Meanwhile British Foreign Secretary David Lammy called on the Israeli occupation government to retract and slam Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich’s remarks on starving the entire population of Gaza.

He said in a post on X, “There can be no justification” for the statements. “International law could not be more clear – the deliberate starvation of civilians is a war crime,” Lammy added.

Speaking at a conference hosted by the Israel Hayom outlet on Monday, Smotrich expressed support for blocking aid to the Gaza Strip but said Israel lacked international legitimacy to do so.


“We are bringing in aid because there is no choice,” the far-right minister said.

“We can’t, in the current global reality, manage a war. Nobody will let us cause two million civilians to die of hunger even though it might be justified and moral until our hostages are returned,” he added.


He said that Israel needed “international legitimacy for this war”.

For about 10 months, the Israeli occupation has imposed a tight siege on the Gaza Strip, extremely limiting the flow of life-saving essential food and medical items.

In June, independent UN investigators said Israel was using starvation on the Palestinian population as a weapon of war. The hunger crisis has led to the death of dozens of people due to malnutrition, mostly children according to the Quds News Network.

Continue reading
Tech Firms in Cahoots With Israel Army in Gaza

Recent reports reveal that the Israeli army has been leveraging cloud services and AI tools from Amazon, Google, and Microsoft to enhance its military operations in Gaza.

Col. Racheli Dembinsky, commander of the Israeli army’s Center of Computing and Information Systems, confirmed the use of these technologies in a July 10 presentation according to the Quds News Network.

 The army’s use of Amazon Web Services (AWS) for “endless storage” of intelligence data on nearly everyone in Gaza underscores the scale of surveillance and data collection.

As the genocide continues, the role of these companies in military activities shines a light on the intersection of technology and warfare, challenging us to reflect on the responsibilities of global techfirms in such contexts



While these cloud services boost operational efficiency, they also raise serious ethical concerns. The partnership, part of a $1.2 billion deal known as Project Nimbus, has sparked protests among employees of these tech giants, some of whom were dismissed after speaking out.

Continue reading
Israeli Soldiers Wake up to Rats on Their Faces

Rats and dogs are attacking Israeli soldiers at the Netzarim crossing that divides Gaza according to the Israeli Walla website.

The situation has become so bad the Israeli soldiers are complaining more and more to their superior officers about the lack of hygiene in their headquarters.

According to the website, soldiers are complaining that a large number of mice and rats in the area looking for food and intruding into the outposts where the troops are staying. Soldiers are also fearful from the increase in diseases because of the lack of sanitation.

Walla stated that one of the soldiers said a pack of dogs attacked him. “There were also cases when we woke up to a rat running on our faces, soldiers who turned an entire area into a huge mess,” he said.

Also other soldiers claim there is a phenomenon of dog packs or stray dogs, probably not vaccinated, and some of them tried to attack soldiers who had to use live fire to defend themselves. In one case, soldiers saw a dog carrying a human skull.

Reserve soldiers said that in many places in the “corridor” there are no toilets, so the soldiers in the large outposts defecate in bags or bottles.

Continue reading
Horrific: Israeli Bombs 17 UNRWA Schools in July

The UN Human Rights Office is horrified by the unfolding pattern of the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) strikes on schools in Gaza killing internally displaced Palestinians seeking shelter there. Strikes on at least 17 schools just in the last month reportedly killed at least 163 Palestinians, including children and women – suggesting a failure to comply with the principles of distinction, proportionality, and precautions in carrying out these attacks.

Such attacks are escalating. In the span of the last eight days, at least seven schools were targeted. On 27 July, Khadija School and the adjacent Ahmad Al Kurd School in Deir al Balah were struck, killing at least 30 Palestinians, reportedly including 15 children and 8 women. On 1 August, Dalal Moghrabi public school in Ash Shujaiyeh neighborhood in eastern Gaza City was struck killing 15 Palestinians, including children, followed on 3 August, by an attack on Hamama School and the adjacent Huda School in Shake Radwan in Gaza City, with initial reports indicating at least 16 Palestinians were killed, including children and women.

On 4 August, Hassan Salame and Nasser Schools in An Nassr area in western Gaza City were attacked almost simultaneously, with initial reports suggesting at least 25 Palestinians, including children and women, were killed.

All seven schools were reportedly serving as shelters for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) while Khadija school was also serving as a field hospital. The Israeli military claims that Khadjia, Dalal Moghrabi, Hamama, Hassan Salame and Nasser schools were being used by “Hamas operatives”. Meanwhile, in the last four weeks, the UN Human Rights Office has recorded another 10 strikes on schools across Gaza.

While the collocation by armed groups of military objectives with civilians or the use of the presence of civilians with the objective of shielding a military objective from attack constitute violations of International Humanitarian Law (IHL) it does not negate Israel’s obligation to comply strictly with International Humanitarian Law, including the principles of proportionality, distinction and precaution when carrying out military operations. Israel, as the occupying power, is also obliged to provide the evacuated populations with basic humanitarian needs, including safe shelter.

The UN Human Rights Office calls once more for an immediate cease-fire.

The Office is also extremely concerned by Israeli security forces’ (ISF) use of lethal force in the West Bank as it reportedly killed nine Palestinians on 3 August, five of which appeared to have been planned extra-judicial executions. According to information gathered by the UN Human Rights Office, including statements by Israeli authorities, ISF raided western areas of Tulkarem in the early morning of 3 August 2024, withdrawing after about two hours.

At around 06:20 am, ISF targeted a Palestinian vehicle on a road in Tulkarem with two consecutive airstrikes and killed five Palestinian men inside the vehicle, claiming that they were on the way to carry out a “terrorist attack”. At around 12:30 pm, after a raid by the ISF in south-western Tulkarem, ISF and four Palestinian armed men on a side road in Tulkarem engaged in an exchange of fire. The ISF then launched an airstrike against the four men, killed them.

The planned killing of individuals who do not represent an imminent threat to life as well as the regular recourse to military tactics and weapons of war in law enforcement operations in the occupied West Bank raises concerns of unnecessary or disproportionate, and unlawful, use of force.

On 4 August, in another disturbing incident, a Palestinian man from Salfit, occupied West Bank, reportedly stabbed and killed two Israelis and injured two others in Holon, Tel Aviv, after irregularly crossing into Israel. ISF reportedly shot and killed the assailant on the spot.

For more information and media requests, please contact:
UN Human Rights office at [email protected]

Tag and share
Twitter @OHCHR_Palestine
Facebook UN Human Rights Palestine

Reliefweb

Continue reading