This week's airstrike against a food convoy adds to Gaza's already high death toll for aid workers - Action News
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This week's airstrike against a food convoy adds to Gaza's already high death toll for aid workers

An Israeli attack that killed a team of mostly international aid workers this week in Gaza has ignited global outrage. But their deaths follow months of attacks that have claimed the lives of hundreds of Palestinians doing similar work in the war-torn territory.

UN says some 200 aid workers killed since start of Israel-Hamas war

A person holds a document of an aid worker named Saifeddin Issam Ayad Abutaha. A British passport is also visible.
A person holds an identification document of Palestinian aid worker Saifeddin Issam Ayad Abutaha, who was killed along with six other aid workers by an Israeli strike in Gaza on Monday. His death adds to an already high number of aid and medical workers killed since the start of Israel's war against Hamas. (Mohammed Salem/Reuters)

An Israeli attack that killed a team of mostly international aid workers this week in Gaza has ignited global outrage. But their deaths follow months of attacks that have claimed the lives of hundreds of Palestiniansdoing similar work in the war-torn territory.

Israel has said the strike against the World Central Kitchen (WCK) convoy was an accident a claim supported by the U.S. but refuted by others including WCK founderJos Andrswho alleges the vehicles were "systematically" targeted.

Andrs said the seven deaths addto an already staggering number of Palestinian humanitarianworkers killed since Israel declared war against Hamas, in retaliation for the Oct. 7 attacks.

One of the slain WCK workers was a Palestinian.Saifeddin Issam Ayad Abutaha, who was from Rafah in southern Gaza, had only been working as a driver and translator for the group for a few months, according to his family.

According to the United Nations,he was one of thesome200 humanitarian aid workers killed in Gaza since the war began.

WATCH | Aid groups in Gaza fear for safety:

More aid groups halt work in Gaza after foreign workers killed

6 months ago
Duration 2:32
After Israeli missile strikes killed seven aid workers with World Central Kitchen, some aid groups working in Gaza are halting deliveries because they're afraid their staff could be next.

Most of them, 173, worked for the UN Relief Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), the principal aid agency in Gaza.

UNRWA had approximately 13,000 staffers in Gaza before the outset of the war, providing humanitarian assistance, health care, education, social services and emergency relief.

LISTEN | 'Nowhere is safe,'UNICEF worker says:

Israel has accused UNRWA staff of being involved in the Oct. 7 attacks, which led to several nations, including Canada, to temporarily suspend their funding to the agency. Israel has also prevented UNRWA from distributing food and humanitarian aid in the besieged northern part of the territory.

Other groups that have suffered losses include the PalestineRed Crescent Society which, in a recent online post, said 26 of its people have died in the conflict, 15 of which it alleged, without providing more detail, were "targeted" by Israel.

Doctors Without Borders says five of its Palestinian staff and volunteershave been killed so far including two who died in an attackon the al-Awda Hospital in northern Gaza.

"Nowhere in Gaza is safe. Israeli forces have repeatedly attacked health workers and medical facilities, making it nearly impossible for us to continue to provide lifesaving humanitarian assistance," Doctors Without Borders said on its website last month.

Further to that, Israeli military strikes and assaults on medical facilities and ambulances in Gaza which Israel claims have been used by militant groups have resulted in some 350 Palestinian medical workers being killed, according to Gaza's HealthMinistry.

WATCH |Gazans who rely on WCK have few options now:

Palestinians dependent on food aid 'will suffer a lot' after strike kills workers

6 months ago
Duration 0:59
After World Central Kitchen said it would pause operations in the region after an Israeli airstrike killed seven international aid workers, Palestinians who relied on the charity for food lamented the impact it will have on people in Gaza.

WCK, in co-operation with the United Arab Emirates and the Spanish non-government organization OpenArms, recently led its second aid flotilla through a new maritime humanitarian corridor between Cyprus and Gaza.

Its convoy had just been loaded withfood from a nearby warehouse, near the city of Deir al-Balah, when the Israeli strikes hit.

Their vehicles, two of which were armoured, were clearly identified with WCK's logo and the team's movements were known to the Israeli military,says Andrs.

Those are steps humanitarian workers use to try to ensure their safety in the dangerous region, says Chris Skopec, executive vice president of global health at Project HOPE, which operates health clinics in Gaza.

He says the strike against the WCK convoyhas increased apprehension among aid workers in the region.

WCK has paused operations in Gaza and the flotilla has returned to Cyprus, at a time when UN agencies have warned parts of the territory are facing the imminent risk of famine.

Seven people are pictured in a collage.
The aid group World Central Kitchen has identified the seven workers who were killed in the strike. Clockwise from top left: Damian Sobl, Jacob Flickinger, Lalzawmi (Zomi) Frankcom, James Kirby, James (Jim) Henderson, John Chapman and Saifeddin Issam Ayad Abutaha. (Instagram/World Central Kitchen, Facebook/Free Place Foundation)

Other humanitarian groups are making similar decisions.

Anera, a partner of WCK that provides humanitarian aid in the Middle East, said Tuesday it would take the "unprecedented step" of pausing its humanitarian operations in Gaza.

"The blatant nature of the attack on WCK's convoy has proven that aid workers are currently under attack," said Aneraspokesperson Steve Fake. "Our decision to resume aid relies on the safety of our staff."

The International Medical Corps, which has one of the largest field hospitals in Rafah with 140 beds, said it is "rethinking" its process, including its plans to set up another field hospital in Deir al-Balah.

"It puts us [in] a very uncertain position in terms of our co-ordination with the different actors for security," said Dr. Zawar Ali, who runs the organization's Rafah hospital.

WATCH | Grieving fatherbelievesteam was targeted by Israel:

Father of Canadian aid worker killed in Gaza says IDF strike was 'deliberate'

6 months ago
Duration 1:42
Jacob Flickinger, a former member of the Canadian Armed Forces who grew up in Quebec, was one of seven World Central Kitchen workers killed in a strike Israel has called unintentional. 'Their convoy was marked, clearly marked, and they are on a well-used humanitarian route. So in my opinion, it was a targeted kill,' his father, John Flickinger, told CBC News.

The killing of humanitarian and medical workers has raised questions about Israel is violating international law which, under a number of conventions and treaties, says intentionally attacking personnel and material involved in humanitarian assistance is a war crime as long as those providing the aid are civilians.

Lt. Gen.Herzi Halevi, the chief of general staff for the Israel Defence Force, said the strikes were "a mistake that followed a misidentification at night during a war in very complex conditions."

Andrs rejects that claim.

"Even if we were not in co-ordination with the [Israel Defence Forces], no democratic country and no military can be targeting civilians and humanitarians," he said.

WATCH |Doctor mourns aid workers killed in airstrikes:

'Hurts to say goodbye' to aid workers killed in IDF strike, doctor says

6 months ago
Duration 0:46
Dr. Marwan Al-Hams, director of Abu Youssef Al-Najjar Hospital in Rafah, decried the recent killing of aid workers who died in a strike the Israel Defence Forces has called unintentional adding that Israel's weapons 'don't differentiate' between Palestinians and foreigners.

With files from Reuters and The Associated Press