UN expert asks states to cut trade ties with Israel over its ‘genocidal campaign’ in Gaza
UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese photographed in February. Photograph: Ida Marie Odgaard/Reuters
A UN expert on Thursday called on states to impose an arms embargo and cut off trade and financial ties with Israel, which she alleged is waging a “genocidal campaign” in Gaza.
In a speech to the UN Human Rights Council, UN Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories Francesca Albanese said: “The situation in the occupied Palestinian territory is apocalyptic.
“Israel is responsible for one of the cruellest genocides in modern history,” she added, in a speech that was met with a burst of applause from the Geneva council, Reuters reports.
Israel’s diplomatic mission in Geneva did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Albanese’s speech.
Israel has rejected accusations of genocide in Gaza, citing its right to self-defence following the 7 October 2023, Hamas attack. Its delegate was not present in the room in line with a new policy to disengage with the council, which Israel says has an antisemitic bias.
Albanese was presenting her latest report, which named over 60 companies she said were involved in supporting Israeli settlements and military actions in Gaza.
“What I expose is not a list, it is a system, and that is to be addressed,” she told the council.
She called for states to impose a full arms embargo, suspend all trade agreements and ensure companies face legal consequences for their involvement in violations of international law.
Israel’s diplomatic mission in Geneva earlier this week said Albanese’s latest report was “legally groundless, defamatory and a flagrant abuse of her office”.
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American contractors guarding aid distribution sites in Gaza are using live ammunition and stun grenades as Palestinians scramble for food, according to accounts and videos obtained by The Associated Press (AP).
Two US contractors, speaking to the AP on condition of anonymity, said they were coming forward because they were disturbed by what they considered dangerous and irresponsible practices. They said the security staff hired were often unqualified, unvetted, heavily armed and seemed to have a licence to do whatever they wished.
They added that their colleagues regularly lobbed stun grenades and pepper spray in the direction of the Palestinians. One contractor said bullets were fired in all directions — in the air, into the ground and at times toward the Palestinians, recalling at least one instance where he thought someone had been hit.
The contractor said:
There are innocent people being hurt. Badly. Needlessly.
Videos provided by one of the contractors and taken at the sites show hundreds of Palestinians crowded between metal gates, jostling for aid amid the sound of bullets, stun grenades and the sting of pepper spray.
Other videos include conversations between English-speaking men discussing how to disperse crowds and encouraging each other after bursts of gunfire. The AP said it cannot independently verify the contractors’ stories.
A spokesperson for Safe Reach Solutions, the logistics company subcontracted by GHF, told the AP that there have been no serious injuries at any of their sites to date.
ShareJulian Borger
The UN special rapporteur on human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories has called for sanctions and an arms embargo on Israel and for global corporations to be held accountable for “profiting from genocide” in Gaza.
A report by Francesca Albanese to the UN Human Rights Council on Thursday points to the deep involvement of companies from around the world in supporting Israel during its 21-month onslaught in Gaza.
“While life in Gaza is being obliterated and the West Bank is under escalating assault, this report shows why Israel’s genocide continues: because it is lucrative for many,” the report says.
Special rapporteurs are independent human rights experts appointed to advise or report on specific situations. Albanese, an Italian legal scholar who has been the special rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories since 2022, first referred to the Israeli offensive in Gaza as a genocide in January 2024.
The international court of justice (ICJ) is weighing the charge of genocide against Israel but Albanese has argued that the evidence of genocide is overwhelming and pointed out that the court issued preliminary measures last year recognising the possibility of genocide in Gaza, triggering universal responsibility to prevent it.
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by Annie Kelly, Hoda Osman, Geneva Abdul
Tributes have been paid to one of Gaza’s most senior doctors who was killed in an Israeli airstrike.
Dr Marwan al-Sultan, a renowned and highly experienced cardiologist and director of the Indonesian hospital in the Gaza Strip, is the 70th healthcare worker to be killed by Israeli attacks in the last 50 days, according to Healthcare Workers Watch (HWW), a Palestinian medical organisation.
“The killing of Dr Marwan al-Sultan by the Israeli military is a catastrophic loss to Gaza and the entire medical community, and will have a devastating impact on Gaza’s healthcare system,” said Muath Alser, director of HWW said on Wednesday.
A number of family members were reported to have been killed alongside him.
“For someone like this to be lost with his entire family is so tragic that it’s beyond description,” said Mohammad, an NHS consultant who grew up in Jabalia, northern Gaza and went to primary and secondary school with al-Sultan.
Killed: Dr Marwan al-Sultan, head of the Indonesian hospital in Gaza. Photograph: X Photograph: X
“Obviously, he was targeted in his flat with his kids, five children, and it’s part of targeting doctors,” said Mohammad who has worked in the UK for 20 years. “His targeting is part of the systematic form of genocide to make sure that society doesn’t have professionals that can help and survive.”
Though Mohammad hadn’t spoken to al-Sultan since before the March ceasefire, in January, al-Sultan had visited Mohammad’s family sheltering in Jabalia, northern Gaza, to assist his diabetic mother.
“It’s just telling about what an amazing person he is,” said Mohammad. “He became a director of a hospital in wartime where that in itself makes him a target and he knew that.”
He added: “For him and his family to just go in a flash is just tragic and he’s not the only one, so many like him just gone. It’s a societal loss, it’s a human loss.”
You can read more on this here:
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Hamas could respond to ceasefire proposal ‘by Friday’ – Reuters
Hamas is seeking guarantees that a new US ceasefire proposal for Gaza would lead to the war’s end and could respond by Friday, sources said on Thursday, Reuters reports.
Israeli officials said prospects for reaching a ceasefire deal and hostage deal appeared high.
A separate source familiar with the matter said that Israel was expecting Hamas’ response by Friday and that if it was positive, an Israeli delegation would join indirect talks to cement the deal.
It was unclear whether those would be held in Egypt or Qatar, the two countries that have been mediating talks.
Hamas is seeking clear guarantees that the ceasefire will eventually lead to the war’s end, the source close to the group said. Two Israeli officials said that those details were still being worked out.
Ending the war has been the main sticking point in repeated rounds of failed negotiations.
The proposal includes the staggered release of 10 living Israeli hostages and the return of the bodies of 18 more in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails, sources say. Of the 50 remaining hostages in Gaza, 20 are believed to still be alive.
A senior Israeli official close to prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said preparations were in place to approve a ceasefire deal even as the premier heads to Washington to meet Trump on Monday.
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Danish police said on Thursday they were present at the Israeli embassy, just north of Copenhagen, and were investigating a shipment received by the embassy.
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Here are some images coming to us over the wires:
People attend funeral ceremonies as dozens of Palestinians lost their lives in attacks carried out by the Israeli army on the Gaza Strip in Khan Younis, Gaza. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty ImagesA view of damage at Mustafa Hafez School following the Israeli attacks in Gaza City. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty ImagesA view of damage at Mustafa Hafez School. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty ImagesA Palestinian man, displaced by the Israeli offensive, bathes his son inside their shelter amid summer heat, in Gaza City. Photograph: Dawoud Abu Alkas/ReutersA Palestinian woman carries a water container as she walks past the rubble of a destroyed building in Gaza City. Photograph: Dawoud Abu Alkas/ReutersShare
We have more on France’s stance on Iran sanctions.
AFP reports that France said it would decide whether to reimpose sanctions against Iran depending on whether Tehran released two French detainees charged with spying for Israel.
Foreign minister Jean-Noël Barrot said:
Freeing Cecile Kohler and Jacques Paris is an absolute priority for us. We have always told our interlocutors from the Iranian regime that any decisions on sanctions will be conditional on resolving this issue.
France’s foreign minister Jean-Noël Barrot photographed on 23 June 2025. Photograph: Olivier Hoslet/EPAShare
France says a decision on Iran sanctions will depend on the release of French detainees, AFP reports.
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Airstrikes and shootings in Gaza kill 94 Palestinians, including 45 waiting for aid, authorities say
In an update, the Associated Press reports that airstrikes and shootings have killed 94 Palestinians in Gaza overnight, including 45 who were attempting to get humanitarian aid, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry on Thursday.
Among the dead, 45 were attempting to get humanitarian aid.
Israel’s military did not immediately comment on the strikes.
As reported earlier, dozens of people were killed in airstrikes that pounded tents and a school sheltering displaced people in the Strip Wednesday night and Thursday morning.
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UN expert asks states to cut trade ties with Israel over its ‘genocidal campaign’ in Gaza
UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese photographed in February. Photograph: Ida Marie Odgaard/Reuters
A UN expert on Thursday called on states to impose an arms embargo and cut off trade and financial ties with Israel, which she alleged is waging a “genocidal campaign” in Gaza.
In a speech to the UN Human Rights Council, UN Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories Francesca Albanese said: “The situation in the occupied Palestinian territory is apocalyptic.
“Israel is responsible for one of the cruellest genocides in modern history,” she added, in a speech that was met with a burst of applause from the Geneva council, Reuters reports.
Israel’s diplomatic mission in Geneva did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Albanese’s speech.
Israel has rejected accusations of genocide in Gaza, citing its right to self-defence following the 7 October 2023, Hamas attack. Its delegate was not present in the room in line with a new policy to disengage with the council, which Israel says has an antisemitic bias.
Albanese was presenting her latest report, which named over 60 companies she said were involved in supporting Israeli settlements and military actions in Gaza.
“What I expose is not a list, it is a system, and that is to be addressed,” she told the council.
She called for states to impose a full arms embargo, suspend all trade agreements and ensure companies face legal consequences for their involvement in violations of international law.
Israel’s diplomatic mission in Geneva earlier this week said Albanese’s latest report was “legally groundless, defamatory and a flagrant abuse of her office”.
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The Associated Press is reporting on how the summer heat in Gaza has set off a “domino effect”, intensifying hardship for its two million inhabitants.
Aid groups have long warned that reduced water availability, crippled sanitation networks, and shrinking living spaces threaten to cause illnesses. This scorching summer coincides with a lack of clean water for the majority of Gaza’s population, most of whom are displaced in tented communities.
Many Palestinians in the besieged territory must walk long distances to fetch water, and ration each drop, limiting their ability to wash and keep cool. Fuel is needed to pump water from wells and operate desalination plants, but Israel has stopped it from getting into the territory.
The only way Rida Abu Hadayed can offer her children relief is by fanning them with a tray or bits of paper – whatever she can find. If she has water, she pours it over them, but that is an increasingly scarce resource.
“There is no electricity. There is nothing,” she said. “They cannot sleep. They keep crying all day until the sun sets.”
Rida Abu Hadayed, 32, cools off her two-year-old daughter Azhar with water in their tent at a camp for displaced people in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip. Photograph: Abdel Kareem Hana/AP
“We are only at the beginning of summer,” Hadayed’s husband, Yousef, said. “And our situation is dire.”
“Our lives in the tent are miserable,” he added. “We spend our days pouring water over their heads and their skin. Water itself is scarce. It is very difficult to get that water.”
Mohammed al-Awini said: “We are awake all night, dying from mosquito bites. We are the most tired people in the world.”
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Opening Summary
Israeli airstrikes and shootings have killed 82 Palestinians in Gaza overnight, including 38 while attempting to get humanitarian aid, hospitals and the Health Ministry said on Thursday.
Israel’s military did not have an immediate comment on the strikes, AP reports.
Five people were killed while outside sites associated with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the controversial US- and Israeli-backed aid organisation, while 33 others were killed waiting for aid trucks in other locations across the Gaza Strip.
Dozens of people were killed in airstrikes on Wednesday night and Thursday morning, including 15 people killed in strikes that hit tents in the sprawling Muwasi zone, where many displaced Palestinians are sheltering, and a strike on a school in Gaza City sheltering displaced people.
Agence France-Presse, citing Gaza’s civil defence agency, reported that the Israeli strike on Thursday hit a school sheltering displaced Palestinians in the Al-Rimal neighbourhood in western Gaza City, killing at least 12, mostly women and children. The Israeli military told AFP it “will try to look into” the report.
Gaza’s Health Ministry said the number of Palestinians killed in Gaza has passed 57,000, including 223 missing people who have been declared dead. The ministry doesn’t differentiate between civilians and combatants in its death count but says that more than half of the dead are women and children.
The Israeli military blames Hamas for the civilian casualties because it operates from populated areas. The military said it targeted Hamas militants and rocket launchers in northern Gaza that launched rockets towards Israel on Wednesday.
The deaths come as Israel and Hamas inch closer to a possible ceasefire that would end the 21-month war.
Trump said on Tuesday that Israel had agreed on terms for a 60-day ceasefire in Gaza and urged Hamas to accept the deal before conditions worsen.
Hamas said on Wednesday that it was studying what Trump called a “final” ceasefire proposal for Gaza, but that Israel must pull out of the territory.
Meanwhile, Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday “there will be no Hamas” in postwar Gaza.
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