Around 47 people were injured, largely due to gunshots fired by the Israeli military, during chaotic scenes at a new aid distribution centre in Gaza, a senior UN official said on Wednesday.
Thousands of Palestinians rushed into the centre run by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) on Tuesday, AFP journalists reported, as Israel implemented a new distribution system that bypasses the United Nations.
The incident in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip came days after the partial easing of a total aid blockade on the Palestinian territory that Israel imposed on March 2, leading to severe shortages of food and medicine.
"From the information we have, there are about 47 people who have been injured" in Tuesday's incident, Ajith Sunghay, the head of the UN Human Rights Office in the Palestinian territories, told the UN correspondents' association in Geneva.
He added that "most of those injured are due to gunshots" and based on the information he has, "it was shooting from the IDF" -- the Israel Defence Forces.
Sunghay stressed that his office was still assessing and gathering information on the full picture of events.
"The numbers could go up. We are trying to confirm what has happened to them," in terms of how seriously people were injured, Sunghay added.
Sunghay also expressed concern about the possible medical aid injured people would be able to access.
"Getting medical aid has never been easy in Gaza or in the West Bank because hospitals have been attacked, ambulances have been attacked, health workers have been attacked," he said.
The Israeli military said its troops "fired warning shots in the area outside" the distribution compound on Tuesday, and that it had re-established "control over the situation". A senior military official said the distribution was nonetheless "a success".
Little is known about the GHF, which surfaced in early May.
The foundation has faced accusations of helping Israel fulfil its military objectives while excluding Palestinians, bypassing the UN system, and failing to adhere to humanitarian principles of neutrality, impartiality and independence.
"We have raised numerous concerns with this mechanism," Sunghay said.
He said large parts of the Gazan population would not travel all the way to the far south to collect food -- while the elderly, sick, disabled and those looking after children would not be able to do so in any case.
There were also concerns within the population that they would be detained, or not allowed to return to northern Gaza.
"This has happened in the past when the population has moved from the north to the south: while crossing checkpoints they have been detained by the IDF," Sunghay explained.
"For numerous reasons, this is not the viable solution for what we are facing in Gaza."
Sunghay cited 24 incidents in recent months "where civilians were collecting food and people were shot at".
"What we saw yesterday is a very clear example of the dangers of distributing food under the circumstances which the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation is doing," he said.
"GHF has gone forward; we have seen the consequences."
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by HOOK Desk and is published from a syndicated feed AFP.)
Also read: Yaqeen Hammad, Gaza’s 11-year-old influencer killed in Israeli strikes