The Geneva-based Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor said more than 90,000 Palestinians, which is about 4 percent of the population in Gaza, have been killed, injured or missing in violent Israeli attacks on the war-torn enclave since October 7. The rights group also accused the Israeli authorities of using food as a weapon and forcefully displacing people from their residences…
No fewer than 90,000 people, representing about 4% of the population in Gaza, are dead, wounded or missing, according to a human rights monitor report.
The Geneva-based Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor in its assessment of the raging violent conflict in Gaza explained that Israel’s continuous air, land and sea attacks have destroyed about 70% of the Gaza Strip’s civilian infrastructure since October 7 when the fighting broke out.
In a statement, the group accused Israel of pushing out hundreds of thousands of civilians towards mass forced displacement.
The group stressed that hundreds of bodies that cannot be recovered remain on roads, especially in places where the Israeli army has conducted ground invasions.
The statement added that Israel’s attacks are an “apparent attempt” to expand its territory to include the entire Gaza Strip, uprooting the vast majority of the population in violation of international law, which, it added, “likely amounts to war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide.”
Since a cross-border strike by the Palestinian resistance group Hamas on Oct. 7, Israel has launched a barrage of air and military attacks on the Gaza Strip.
Nearly 2 million residents have displaced amid acute shortages of food, clean water and medicine.
According to Gaza’s health authorities, at least 22,600 Palestinians have been killed and 57,910 have been injured since then. The Israeli death toll stood at 1,200.
more recommended stories
-
Navigating Through Turbulence: The Role of Somalia’s Foreign Ministry in Shaping Future Relations with Somaliland.
By: Abdi Jama In the nuanced.
-
A Vision for Change: Dr. Abdirahman Irro’s Blueprint for Somaliland’s Future
Dr. Abdirahman Mohamed Abdillahi Irro, a.
-
Past, Present, and Future of Somaliland: A Nation at the Crossroads
The story of Somaliland is marked.
-
The High Cost of Non-Visionary Leadership: Analyzing Somaliland under President Colonel Muse Bihi
By: Abdi Jama In the intricate.