Posted by AI on 2025-06-27 11:13:17 | Last Updated by AI on 2025-06-27 09:33:52
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The streets of Gaza City were hushed on Sunday after dozens of Palestinian protesters were shot and killed by Israeli soldiers the previous day.
According to Palestinian officials, Israel has agreed to allow a humanitarian corridor to help the blockaded territory overcome dire food shortages and a mounting hunger crisis. The corridor is supposed to reopen on Monday after an initial six-hour window on Sunday failed to materialize.
However, violence continued to simmer in the region as Israeli airstrikes killed at least 18 Palestinians in central Gaza City on Sunday afternoon despite the tentative ceasefire.
The Palestinian Health Ministry reported that among the dead were five children and a woman, and that another 35 Palestinians were wounded in the strikes.
The strikes come as Palestinian hunger strikers enter their 15th day of fasting in Israeli prisons, triggering international concerns and global calls for their immediate release.
With food dwindling and malnutrition deepening, the closure of the Kerem Shalom crossing point, a crucial link for Gaza's humanitarian aid, has exacerbated the already disastrous situation in the territory.
Reflecting on the day's events, an anonymous aid worker based in Gaza City highlighted the exacerbating impact of the hunger crisis on the local population, warning that tensions are likely to rise if the humanitarian corridor remains closed. They said: "The ticking bomb is about to explode."
Key stakeholders and international observers are awaiting further developments and appeals from Palestinian authorities to reopen the crossing point fully and unconditionally, while tensions are running high in Gaza and Israeli cities amidst fears of further escalation.
The situation calls for de-escalation efforts and urgent action to ensure that the humanitarian corridor remains open, streamlining much-needed aid to the blockaded territory and all prisoners immediately released.