Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site as officials say 33
aid-seekers killed in Gaza
[August 04, 2025]
By WAFAA SHURAFA, SAM METZ and SAMY MAGDY
DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — A far-right Israeli minister visited
and prayed at Jerusalem’s most sensitive holy site on Sunday, triggering
regional condemnation and fears that the provocative move could further
escalate tensions. The visit came as hospitals in Gaza said 33 more
Palestinians seeking food aid were killed by Israeli fire.
With Israel facing global criticism over famine-like conditions in the
besieged strip, Itamar Ben-Gvir 's visit to the hillside compound
threatened to further set back efforts by international mediators to
halt Israel’s nearly two-year military offensive in Gaza.
The area, which Jews call the Temple Mount, is the holiest site in
Judaism and was home to the ancient biblical temples. Muslims call the
site the Noble Sanctuary. Today it is home to the Al-Aqsa Mosque, the
third-holiest site in Islam.
Visits to the site by Israeli officials are considered a provocation
across the Muslim world and openly praying violates a longstanding
status quo. Jews have been allowed to tour it but are barred from
praying, with Israeli police and troops providing security. Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said after Ben-Gvir's visit
that Israel would not change the norms governing the site.
Ben-Gvir visited following Hamas’ release of videos showing two
emaciated Israeli hostages. The videos caused an uproar in Israel and
raised pressure on the government to reach a deal to bring home the
remaining 50 hostages who were captured on Oct. 7, 2023, in the
Hamas-led attack that triggered the war.
Ben-Gvir called for Israel to annex the Gaza Strip and encourage
Palestinians to leave, reviving rhetoric that has complicated
negotiations to end the war. He raged against a video that Hamas
released Saturday of 24-year-old hostage Evyatar David showing him
emaciated in a dimly lit Gaza tunnel, and called it an attempt to
pressure Israel.

Ben-Gvir's previous visits to the site have prompted threats from
Palestinian militant groups. Clashes between Israeli security forces and
Palestinian demonstrators in and around the site fueled an 11-day war
with Hamas in 2021.
Sunday's visit was swiftly condemned as an incitement by Palestinian
leaders as well as Jordan, the Al-Aqsa Mosque's custodian, Saudi Arabia
and Turkey. Houthi rebels in Yemen said they fired three drones at
Israel; Israel's military said a “suspicious aerial target launched from
Yemen” was intercepted.
Videos of hungry and suffering Israeli hostages
The videos — released by Hamas and Islamic Jihad, the second-largest
militant group in Gaza — triggered outrage across the Israeli political
spectrum after the hostages, speaking under duress, described grim
conditions and an urgent lack of food. Tens of thousands rallied in Tel
Aviv on Saturday, calling on Israel and the United States to urgently
pursue the hostages' release after suspending ceasefire talks.
Israel’s mission to the U.N. said it requested an emergency meeting of
the U.N. Security Council on the hostages, which will take place
Tuesday.
“They do not want a deal,” Netanyahu said of Hamas. “They want to break
us using these videos of horror.”
His office said it spoke with the Red Cross to seek help in providing
the hostages with food and medical care. The International Committee of
the Red Cross said it was “appalled by the harrowing videos” and called
for access to the hostages.
Hamas' military wing said it was ready to respond positively to Red
Cross requests to deliver food to hostages, if humanitarian corridors
are opened in a “regular and permanent manner” in Gaza.
Right-wing politicians who oppose deals with Hamas said the videos
reinforced their conviction that Hamas must be obliterated.

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Thousands of protesters walk across the Sydney Harbour Bridge during
the Palestine Action Group's March for Humanity in Sydney, Sunday,
August 3, 2025. (Dean Lewins/AAP Image via AP)

Deadly chaos around food distribution points
The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said a staff member was killed
when Israeli forces shelled its office. Israel’s military said it
was reviewing the claim. The Red Cross called it an “outrage” that
so many first responders have been killed in the war.
Hospital officials said Israeli forces killed at least 33
Palestinians seeking food Sunday, and witnesses described facing
gunfire as hungry crowds surged toward aid sites.
Desperation has gripped the Palestinian territory of more than 2
million, which experts warn faces “a worst-case scenario of famine ″
because of Israel’s blockade. No aid entered Gaza between March 2
and May 19, and aid has been limited since then.
Witness Yousef Abed described coming under indiscriminate fire and
seeing at least three people bleeding on the ground.
“I couldn’t stop and help them because of the bullets,” he said.
Two hospitals in southern and central Gaza reported receiving bodies
from routes leading to the Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian
Foundation aid sites, including 11 killed in the Teina area while
trying to reach a distribution point in Khan Younis.
Three Palestinian eyewitnesses, including one traveling through
Teina, told The Associated Press they saw soldiers open fire on the
routes, which are in military zones. Israel's military said it was
not aware of casualties as a result of its gunfire near aid sites.
GHF’s media office said there was no gunfire “near or at our sites.”
The United Nations says 859 people were killed near GHF sites from
May 27 to July 31 and hundreds of others have been killed along the
routes of U.N.-led food convoys.
GHF says its armed contractors have only used pepper spray or fired
warning shots to prevent deadly crowding. Israel’s military has said
it only fires warning shots. Both claim the death tolls have been
exaggerated.

More deaths from hunger
Gaza's Health Ministry said six Palestinian adults died of
malnutrition-related causes over the past 24 hours, bringing the
death toll among adults to 82 over the five weeks that such deaths
have been counted. Ninety-three children have died of
malnutrition-related causes since the war began, the ministry said.
Malnutrition-related deaths are not included in the ministry’s war
casualty count.
Israel has taken steps in the past week to increase the flow of food
into Gaza, saying 1,200 aid trucks have entered while hundreds of
pallets have been airdropped, but U.N. and relief groups say
conditions have not improved. The U.N. has said 500 to 600 trucks a
day are needed.
About 1,200 people were killed in the 2023 attack that sparked the
war and another 251 were abducted. Israel’s retaliatory military
offensive has killed more than 60,800 Palestinians, according to
Gaza’s Health Ministry.
The ministry, which doesn’t distinguish between civilians and
combatants in its count, is staffed by medical professionals. The
U.N. and other independent experts view its figures as the most
reliable casualty count. Israel has disputed the figures but hasn’t
provided its own.
___
Metz reported from Jerusalem and Magdy from Cairo. Melanie Lidman in
Tel Aviv, Israel; Sally Abou AlJoud in Beirut and Edith M. Lederer
at the United Nations contributed.
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