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Tragedy in Khan Younis: Aid Chaos Turns Deadly for Starving Gazans

At least 20 Palestinians were killed in a tragic crowd crush at a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) aid distribution site in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, on Wednesday.
According to GHF, a U.S. and Israeli–backed group, 19 people were trampled to death and one stabbed.
This happened amid “a chaotic and dangerous surge, driven by agitators in the crowd” at the southern Gaza facility
GHF issued a statement accusing armed Hamas-linked individuals of deliberately instigating the rush.
For the first time since its operations began in May, the group reported that firearms were spotted among the crowd
GHF’s director noted that false information circulated on Telegram and elsewhere – claiming aid would be disbursed at closed locations – led to crowds converging on inoperative sites, triggering confusion and unrest
Hamas and Palestinian health officials, meanwhile, disputed GHF’s claims, stating that at least 20 Palestinians suffocated in the crush
One medic described the scene as a small, overcrowded area where people were trapped and crushed
Local eyewitnesses said GHF guards used pepper spray to control the crowd just before the gates were locked, which sparked panic in a tightly confined space
The tragedy exemplifies what UN officials have labeled a broader crisis: the UN rights office in Geneva reports 875 deaths near aid sites and food convoys, most around GHF centers
Gaza’s confinement under blockade since March has produced widespread hunger.
Gaza’s health ministry adds that more than 800 Palestinians have been killed near or at GHF facilities since the foundation began operations
GHF operates outside the UN-led system, deploying private U.S. security contractors to deliver food, an arrangement Israel supports to avoid aid being diverted by Hamas.
Critics, including the UN, argue this model is unsafe and politically compromised
Local organizations and observers have accused GHF of disorganization, mismanagement, and crowd control failures leading to needless deaths
Politician Ahmad Tibi, an Arab-Israeli member of Israel’s Knesset, claimed the deaths occurred in a “death trap set up by Israel using American mercenaries,” alleging firearms were used against the desperate crowd
Tibi shared a tense video of people packed into a closed-in area, decrying the scene as a “moral crime”
The deadly crush came amid a major Israeli military push in southern Gaza.
On Wednesday, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) unveiled a new 15‑kilometer-long security corridor.
It was dubbed “Magen Oz,” through Khan Younis, linking to the earlier Morag Corridor, designed to split Hamas’s strongholds and encircle the city
The IDF said its 36th Division, comprising the 188th Armored and Golani Infantry brigades, had completed the route.
It stated that it would ease pressure on Hamas and lead to more decisive operations against the Khan Younis brigade
Overnight, the Israeli Air Force struck more than 120 targets across Gaza, including weapons caches, tunnels, terror operatives, and other infrastructural assets
Media outlets reported dozens of casualties among Palestinians, not yet tallied by Gaza’s health ministry.
In northern Gaza, the IDF’s 401st Armored Brigade reportedly came under RPG fire near Jabalia; the military responded with a drone strike that killed the threat without casualties to Israeli forces.
In Beit Hanoun, the 646th Reserve Paratroopers Brigade dismantled a rocket-launching site and killed militants planting bombs targeting southern Israel.
A London-based report suggests Israel has accelerated targeted killings of Hamas and allied Palestinian Islamic Jihad leaders.
These include four senior Hamas military commanders and a former Hamas minister, Mohammed Faraj al-Ghoul.
These operations are part of what Israel calls “Operation Gideon’s Chariots,” aiming to dismantle Hamas infrastructure, seize territory, and pressure the group amid ongoing hostage negotiations
This aid‑site tragedy in Khan Younis has amplified existing concerns about the safety and impartiality of humanitarian delivery models in Gaza.
It exposed the deadly risks of overcrowded distribution points and contested narratives.
As the IDF presses deeper with new corridors and strikes, civilian suffering continues to mount, underscoring the fragile, volatile conditions under which aid is delivered.
It also highlights the sharp geopolitical pressures surrounding each operation.
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