Tel Aviv/New York, Oct. 9, 2023
Relatives in Israel are still desperately searching for the missing after Saturday’s bloodbath caused by the Hamas militants at a music festival in the Israeli Negev desert.
Middle East crisis: UN chief condemns attacks, engages parties
This is as the United Nations (UN) Secretary General, Antonio Guterres, on Monday condemned the attacks by Hamas and others against Israeli towns and villages in the Gaza periphery, which left over 800 Israelis dead and more than 2,500 injured.
Guterres, according to Cecilia Ologunagba, told newsmen in New York that he just concluded an extraordinary meeting of senior UN leaders to discuss the unprecedented developments in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory.
The UN chief said the number of deaths and those injured was expected to rise as the attacks were ongoing and many remained unaccounted for.
“In addition, over 100, possibly more, Israelis – civilians and military – have been reported captured by armed groups, including women, children and the elderly.
“Some are being held hostage inside Israel and many others have been taken inside the Gaza Strip,” he said.
Meanwhile, Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad have launched thousands of indiscriminate rockets that have reached central Israel, including Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.
Guterres, who recognised the legitimate grievances of the Palestinian people, however, said nothing could justify these acts of terror and the killing, maiming and abduction of civilians.
“I reiterate my call to immediately cease these attacks and release all hostages.
“In the face of these unprecedented attacks, Israeli airstrikes have pounded Gaza.
“I am deeply alarmed by reports of over 500 Palestinians – including women and children – killed in Gaza and over 3,000 injured.
“Unfortunately, these numbers are rising by the minute as Israeli operations continue,” he said.
The UN chief said while he recognised Israel’s legitimate security concerns, he also reminded Israel that military operations must be conducted in strict accordance with international humanitarian law.
“Civilians must be respected and protected at all times. Civilian infrastructure must never be a target.
“We already have reports of Israeli missiles striking health facilities inside Gaza as well as multi-storied residential towers and a mosque,” said Guterres.
According to him, two UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) schools sheltering displaced families in Gaza were also hit.
The UN chief said some 137,000 people were currently sheltering in UNRWA facilities – with the number increasing as heavy shelling and airstrikes continue.
“I am deeply distressed by today’s announcement that Israel will initiate a complete siege of the Gaza Strip, nothing allowed in – no electricity, food, or fuel.
“The humanitarian situation in Gaza was extremely dire before these hostilities; now it will only deteriorate exponentially.
“Medical equipment, food, fuel and other humanitarian supplies are desperately needed, along with access for humanitarian personnel.
“Relief and entry of essential supplies into Gaza must be facilitated – and the UN will continue efforts to provide aid to respond to these needs,” said Guterres.
He urged all sides and the relevant parties to allow United Nations access to deliver urgent humanitarian assistance to Palestinian civilians trapped and helpless in the Gaza Strip.
He also appealed to the international community to mobilise immediate humanitarian support for this effort.
“The UN Special Coordinator and I are engaging with leaders in the region to express our concern, our outrage, and to advance efforts to avoid any spillover to the wider Middle East.
“Even in these worst of times – and perhaps especially in the most trying moments – it is vital to look to the long-term horizon and avoid irreversible action that would embolden extremists and doom any prospects for lasting peace.
“This most recent violence does not come in a vacuum. The reality is that it grows out of a long-standing conflict, with a 56-year long occupation and no political end in sight.
“It’s time to end this vicious circle of bloodshed, hatred and polarisation.
Israel must see its legitimate needs for security materialised – and Palestinians must see a clear perspective for the establishment of their own state realized,” he said.
According to him, only a negotiated peace that fulfills the legitimate national aspirations of Palestinians and Israelis, together with their security alike can bring long-term stability to the people of this land and the wider Middle East region.
According to other NAN reports, he attack on the festival near the border with the Gaza Strip formed part of a wider assault by Palestinian fighters who poured over the border.
Rocket attacks into southern Israel also made Saturday’s massacre the biggest individual loss of civilian lives in Israel’s history, with over 700 dead.
Israel has hit back, killing over 500 in airstrikes on Gaza.
According to the ZAKA rescue service, 260 people were killed on the Israeli festival grounds alone.
More than 100 have been taken as hostages into the Gaza Strip, many expected to be from the Supernova electronic music festival.
“I don’t know if my daughter is lying somewhere bleeding, I don’t know if they took her to Gaza, I don’t know if she is suffering,” Ahuwa Maizel said on Monday.
The last time she spoke to her daughter Adi was on Saturday morning.
Adi called and said, “There is a massacre here, they are causing a massacre, hundreds of terrorists are shooting.’’
Then, Maizel said, the connection was cut off.
If someone is holding her captive, please, please, stay human.
“We all have the same DNA, we are all just human,” Maizel said through tears.
The uncertainty, she said, is unbearable.
She believes innocent people must not be misused for political purposes.
“Let this not become another Holocaust.”
On social media, survivors shared how they experienced the Hamas raid on the festival.
Arik Nani described how she spent hours trying to get to safety.
“We ran to the fields and heard constant gunfire behind us, we saw people running and falling.
“We hid in the bushes while bullets flew over our heads,” said Nani, who will turn 26 this week.
She will celebrate her birthday in sadness but with gratitude.
“I did not think I would make it,” she said.
Nani said she ran for six hours, dehydrated and with an injury to her hand, until she managed to get to shelter.
Other witnesses have told of how they tried to escape in cars and came under fire.
Pictures after the attack showed dozens of burnt-out cars near the festival site.
Others hid in bushes and trees.
“They went from tree to tree shooting. I saw that people were dying everywhere.
“I was very quiet. I didn’t cry, I didn’t do anything,” one survivor told the BBC.
Footage from cameras on parked cars also showed the last living moments of injured festival-goers being shot by members of Hamas, classified as a terrorist organisation by the EU, the U.S., and Israel.
According to Israeli media, numerous women were reportedly raped before being killed or abducted.