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Rescue mission turns into carnage in southern Gaza
A massive crowd gathered on Monday, March 31, in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, to pay their final respects to fifteen humanitarian workers who lost their lives in a tragic and controversial incident. The victims included eight workers from the Palestinian Red Crescent, six members of Gaza's civil defense emergency unit, and one employee from the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA). They were killed by Israeli forces while carrying out a rescue mission in Rafah, located in the southern part of the Palestinian territory.
Their bodies were discovered on Sunday, buried in an improvised mass grave, allegedly plowed over by Israeli bulldozers. The humanitarian workers had been missing and presumed dead since Sunday, March 23. The Palestinian Red Crescent asserts that the victims and their vehicles were clearly marked as medical and humanitarian personnel, accusing Israeli troops of executing them "in cold blood."
Israeli military officials, however, claim that their soldiers fired upon vehicles that were "suspiciously approaching" without identifying themselves. The International Committee of the Red Cross has described this as the deadliest attack on its personnel in the past eight years globally.
This incident adds to the mounting concerns over the safety of humanitarian workers in conflict zones. The Israeli government has imposed severe restrictions on foreign press, limiting independent verification of the events. Humanitarian organizations and international bodies have called for an independent investigation into the killings, urging accountability and the protection of medical personnel under international law.
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