Israeli soldiers accused of widespread use of human shields in Gaza – Middle East crisis live

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Israeli soldiers and former detainees tell AP Israel's use of human shields in Gaza is widespread

Several Palestinians and Israeli soldiers have told the Associated Press (AP) that troops are systematically forcing Palestinians to act as human shields in Gaza, sending them into buildings and tunnels to check for bombs and gunmen. They told the AP that the practice has become ubiquitous over 19 months of war.

The AP spoke with seven Palestinians who described being used as shields in Gaza and the occupied West Bank and with two members of Israel’s military who said they engaged in the practice, which is prohibited by international law.

In response to these allegations, Israel’s military says it strictly prohibits using civilians as shields – a practice it has long accused Hamas of using in Gaza. Israeli officials blame the militants for the civilian death toll in its offensive that has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians.

In a statement to the AP, the military said it also bans otherwise coercing civilians to participate in operations, and “all such orders are routinely emphasised to the forces.”

The military said it is investigating several cases alleging that Palestinians were involved in missions, but would not provide the AP with details. The news agency said that the Israeli military did not answer questions about the reach of the practice or any orders from commanding officers.

Rights groups say Israel has used Palestinians as shields in Gaza and the West Bank for decades. The supreme court outlawed the practice in 2005, but the groups continued to document violations, reports the AP.

Experts say this war is the first time in decades the practice – and the debate around it – has been so widespread.

More on this story in a moment, but first, here are some other key updates:

  • The Israeli army reported that 83 trucks carrying humanitarian aid entered Gaza via the Kerem Shalom Crossing on Friday, after security inspections. The aid included food, medical equipment and medicines.

  • The UN has called for more aid in Gaza to meet the territory’s “massive needs”. In its latest humanitarian update, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (Ocha) said it “stressed once again that the small amounts of supplies being allowed into the Gaza Strip are nowhere near enough to roll back the extreme deprivation that Gaza’s population is facing”.

  • UN secretary general António Guterres said on Friday that Palestinians were enduring “the cruellest phase” of the war in Gaza, where more than a dozen food trucks were looted after the partial easing of a lengthy Israeli blockade.

  • Gaza’s civil defence agency said Israeli strikes killed at least six people on Saturday across the Palestinian territory, where Israel has ramped up its military offensive in recent days. “Our teams have recovered at least six dead,” civil defence agency spokesperson Mahmud Bassal told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

  • More than 40 leading Jewish organisations issued a joint set of urgent requests from the US government after Wednesday’s deadly shooting outside Washington’s Capital Jewish Museum, Haaertz reported.

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Here are some of the latest images coming in via the newswires:

Tents are set up for displaced Palestinians along the beach near the port in Gaza City.
Tents are set up for displaced Palestinians along the beach near the port in Gaza City. Photograph: Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto/Shutterstock
Bodies of Palestinians, who lost their lives in Israeli attacks, are received by their relatives at the Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, on Friday.
Bodies of Palestinians, who lost their lives in Israeli attacks, are received by their relatives at the Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, on Friday. Photograph: APAImages/Shutterstock
Israelis protest near the border with Gaza, calling for an immediate ceasefire, on Friday.
Israelis protest near the border with Gaza, calling for an immediate ceasefire, on Friday. Photograph: Saeed Qaq/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock
A graduate holds a Palestine flag as he joins students, graduates, faculty, and others protesting against the City University of New York and Barclay’s involvement with Israel, outside the Barclays Centre during the Brooklyn College commencement ceremony in New York, on Friday.
A graduate holds a Palestine flag as he joins students, graduates, faculty, and others protesting against the City University of New York and Barclay’s involvement with Israel, outside the Barclays Centre during the Brooklyn College commencement ceremony in New York, on Friday. Photograph: Sarah Yenesel/EPA
Visitors view work by artist Hava Gal-On, depicting Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack on Israel, at the Fresh Paint art fair in Tel Aviv, on Friday.
Visitors view work by artist Hava Gal-On, depicting Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack on Israel, at the Fresh Paint art fair in Tel Aviv, on Friday. Photograph: Oded Balilty/AP

Syria on Saturday hailed the Trump administration’s lifting of US sanctions, as Washington hopes to open a new chapter in its relations with Damascus, reports Agence France-Presse (AFP).

US president Donald Trump surprised many with his announcement of the new policy on a Gulf tour earlier this month, during which he shook hands with Syria’s interim president Ahmed al-Sharaa.

Trump said he wanted to give the war-torn country’s new rulers “a chance at greatness” after their overthrow of longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad in December.

“The Syrian Arab Republic welcomes the decision from the American government to lift the sanctions imposed on Syria and its people for long years,” a foreign ministry statement said, according to AFP.

It described the move as “a positive step in the right direction to reduce humanitarian and economic struggles in the country”.

Israeli armed forces carried out an airstrike on the town of Toul in southern Lebanon, killing one person and injuring another.

The strikes began on Thursday afternoon and the Israeli military issued an evacuation warning for residents of Toul, just outside the city of Nabatieh, before carrying out an airstrike there.

Footage captures moment of Israeli airstrike on Lebanon – video

Aletha Adu

Aletha Adu

UK ministers are under pressure from inside and outside Labour to recognise Palestinian statehood at a UN conference next month, with party grandees arguing it would bolster prospects for peace and demonstrate moral leadership amid escalating tensions.

Alf Dubs, the veteran Labour peer and Holocaust survivor, said the symbolic recognition of a Palestinian state would offer Palestinians “the self-respect they’d have if they had a proper state,” and provide them a stronger footing in any future peace negotiations.

“Even if it doesn’t lead to anything immediately, it would still give Palestinians a better standing,” Lord Dubs said. “Symbols matter.”

The former cabinet minister Peter Hain echoed the call, warning that “delaying recognition until negotiations are concluded simply allows Israel’s illegal occupation to become permanent”. Lord Hain argued that formal recognition should be “a catalyst, not a consequence” of peace talks.

At the first preparatory meeting in New York before a UN conference on a two state solution due to be held between 17 and 20 June, Saudi Arabia urged countries to recognise Palestine as a state, saying that “recognition should be seen as a precondition for peace, and not its product”.

The conference is seen as a potential moment when states such as France and the UK that have yet to recognise Palestine take what would be a momentous diplomatic step.

Here is more on the report by the Associated Press (AP) of Israeli soldiers being accused of the widespread use of human shields in Gaza:

The two Israeli soldiers who spoke to the AP – and a third who provided testimony to Israeli non-governmental organisation Breaking the Silence – said commanders were aware of the use of human shields and tolerated it, with some giving orders to do so. Some said it was referred to as the “mosquito protocol” and that Palestinians were also referred to as “wasps” and other dehumanising terms.

The soldiers said they first became aware human shields were being used shortly after 7 October 2023, when Hamas attacked Israel, and that it became widespread by the middle of 2024. Orders to “bring a mosquito” often came via radio, they said – shorthand everyone understood. Soldiers acted on commanding officers’ orders, according to the officer who spoke to the AP.

He said that by the end of his nine months in Gaza, every infantry unit used a Palestinian to clear houses before entering. “Once this idea was initiated, it caught on like fire in a field,” the 26-year-old said. “People saw how effective and easy it was.”

He described a 2024 planning meeting where a brigade commander presented to the division commander a slide reading “get a mosquito” and a suggestion they might “just catch one off the streets”.

The officer wrote two incident reports to the brigade commander detailing the use of human shields, reports that would have been escalated to the division chief, he said. The Israeli military said it had no comment when asked whether it received them.

One report documented the accidental killing of a Palestinian, he said – troops did not realize another unit was using him as a shield and shot him as he ran into a house. The officer recommended the Palestinians be dressed in army clothes to avoid misidentification.

He said he knew of at least one other Palestinian who died while used as a shield – he passed out in a tunnel.

In a statement to the AP, the military said it also bans otherwise coercing civilians to participate in operations, and “all such orders are routinely emphasised to the forces.” The military said it is investigating several cases alleging that Palestinians were involved in missions, but would not provide details.

Gaza civil defence says six killed in Israeli strikes

Gaza’s civil defence agency said Israeli strikes killed at least six people on Saturday across the Palestinian territory, where Israel has ramped up its military offensive in recent days.

“Our teams have recovered at least six dead,” civil defence agency spokesperson Mahmud Bassal told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

He said a couple were killed with their two young children in a pre-dawn strike on a house in the Amal quarter of the southern city of Khan Younis. Another two people were killed in a strike on the Nuseirat refugee camp in the centre of the territory, he said.

The Israeli military said it was unable to comment on individual strikes without their “precise geographical coordinates”.

Israeli soldiers and former detainees tell AP Israel's use of human shields in Gaza is widespread

Several Palestinians and Israeli soldiers have told the Associated Press (AP) that troops are systematically forcing Palestinians to act as human shields in Gaza, sending them into buildings and tunnels to check for bombs and gunmen. They told the AP that the practice has become ubiquitous over 19 months of war.

The AP spoke with seven Palestinians who described being used as shields in Gaza and the occupied West Bank and with two members of Israel’s military who said they engaged in the practice, which is prohibited by international law.

In response to these allegations, Israel’s military says it strictly prohibits using civilians as shields – a practice it has long accused Hamas of using in Gaza. Israeli officials blame the militants for the civilian death toll in its offensive that has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians.

In a statement to the AP, the military said it also bans otherwise coercing civilians to participate in operations, and “all such orders are routinely emphasised to the forces.”

The military said it is investigating several cases alleging that Palestinians were involved in missions, but would not provide the AP with details. The news agency said that the Israeli military did not answer questions about the reach of the practice or any orders from commanding officers.

Rights groups say Israel has used Palestinians as shields in Gaza and the West Bank for decades. The supreme court outlawed the practice in 2005, but the groups continued to document violations, reports the AP.

Experts say this war is the first time in decades the practice – and the debate around it – has been so widespread.

More on this story in a moment, but first, here are some other key updates:

  • The Israeli army reported that 83 trucks carrying humanitarian aid entered Gaza via the Kerem Shalom Crossing on Friday, after security inspections. The aid included food, medical equipment and medicines.

  • The UN has called for more aid in Gaza to meet the territory’s “massive needs”. In its latest humanitarian update, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (Ocha) said it “stressed once again that the small amounts of supplies being allowed into the Gaza Strip are nowhere near enough to roll back the extreme deprivation that Gaza’s population is facing”.

  • UN secretary general António Guterres said on Friday that Palestinians were enduring “the cruellest phase” of the war in Gaza, where more than a dozen food trucks were looted after the partial easing of a lengthy Israeli blockade.

  • Gaza’s civil defence agency said Israeli strikes killed at least six people on Saturday across the Palestinian territory, where Israel has ramped up its military offensive in recent days. “Our teams have recovered at least six dead,” civil defence agency spokesperson Mahmud Bassal told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

  • More than 40 leading Jewish organisations issued a joint set of urgent requests from the US government after Wednesday’s deadly shooting outside Washington’s Capital Jewish Museum, Haaertz reported.

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