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Israeli attacks 16 in Gaza, while the auxiliary kitchens are closed after the supplies have ended | Israel-Palestine conflict news

Israeli air strikes killed at least 12 Palestinians over the Gaza Strip after, according to medical officials, more than 100 people have lost their lives.

New strikes on Thursday killed at least three people in separate attacks in Deir El-Balah and in the Nuseeia refugee camp in the center of Gaza, reported Al Jazera Arabic and cited medical sources. In Shujaya, east of the city of Gaza, another person killed another person and wounded several others.

Further north, Israeli fighter planes aimed at home in Beit Lahiya and killed five, reported the Palestinian news agency Wafa. The rescuers were still looking for a woman who was assumed that she was caught under the rubble.

The place of attack in Beit Lahiya was “full of displaced persons,” said Hani Mahmoud from Al Jazeera from the city of Gaza.

“The owner of this house and the people he organized as displaced people were killed in this dormitory. Many others were reported with serious injuries and burns to the Indonesian hospital that has already been overwhelmed.

“A single family has just lost nine family members, including women and children, and more people are missing and caught under the ruins,” added Mahmoud.

A girl was killed in Khan Younis and four more wounded after Israeli artillery protected tents into the western part of the city.

The continued attack on Gaza is in the middle of the growing alarm that the total blockade of Israel presses the enclave into famine.

A Palestinian man hugs the body of his five-year-old son, who was killed in the Central Gaza Strip on Wednesday, May 7, 2025, in the Central Gaza Strip [Abdel Kareem Hana/AP]

“We don't have any more food”

The blockade of Israel on the Gaza Strip – tightened on March 2 – brought the population deeper into the crisis, cut off help and crippled humanitarian relief. On Wednesday, World Central Kitchen (WCK), one of the most important food providers in Gaza, announced that he had stopped all cooking processes.

“We no longer have to prepare foods,” said the auxiliary group, after we needed flour and other basic deliveries to guide your soup kitchens and mobile bakeries. WCK offered at least 130,000 meals and 80,000 bread bread every day.

“The trucks are ready in Egypt, Jordan and Israel,” said WCK founder Jose Andres. “But you cannot move without permission. Humanitarian aid must be allowed to flow.”

The World Food Program previously warned that its food stocks in Gaza had driven dry and ended an important lifeline for hundreds of thousands of Palestinians. The continued blockade, say aid organizations, accelerated the start of famine. Power nutrition is now widespread. Humanitarian workers warn that they can no longer treat or prevent hunger -related diseases.

Law groups have condemned the blockade as “hunger tactics” and argue that they could represent a war crime.

Sean Carroll, President of American near East Refugee Aid, told Al Jazeera that the humanitarian crisis from Gaza had reached a critical point, with the aids in influence. “We delivered almost a million meals a week and have only delivered a few thousand in the last 66 days,” he said, noticing that shares are exhausted.

“I think the governments have to use every diplomatic lever, every political lever, every economy lever to convince all parties that there is an appearance to return to humanitarian aid. We lose our humanity here,” added Carroll.

Scenes on the few remaining open auxiliary centers are becoming increasingly chaotic. Children, women and men are crumbled by rations when food distribution systems collapse. Bakeries have closed and fuel shortages have paralyzed water distribution networks.

Israel threatens Iran

Elsewhere, the tensions beyond Gaza are faded out, with the Israeli Minister of Defense Israel Katz warned Iran that it could be exposed to the same fate as Hamas and the Hezbollah. His comments followed a Houthi drone attack near Ben Gurion Airport in Israel.

“You are directly responsible,” said Katz on Thursday. “What we have done to the Hisbollah in Beirut, which Hamas did in Gaza in Gaza, we will also do you in Tehran.”

The Houthi rebels of the Jemens started a ballistic rocket that entered Ben Gurion in Tel Aviv on Sunday near Ben Gurion's international airport, and said the attack was supported by the Palestinian in Gaza.

The strike disturbed the flights and prompted Israel to start air raids to the international airport and power plants of Sanaa in the areas controlled by Houthi, kill at least one and to violate dozens.

Iran denied to support Houthi's attack. Despite a ceasefire from the United States conveyed by Oman on Tuesday and ensuring the “freedom of navigation” in the Red Sea, Houthi spokesman Yahya Saree said: “We will carry out more military operations against the Israeli enemy”, which aimed at Israel and his ships.

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