Palestinians collect aid supplies from the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, June 9, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Hatem Khaled
Several aid workers from the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation were killed Wednesday night when Hamas gunmen attacked a bus transporting local staffers, according to the US- and Israeli-backed organization.
The group, which operates food distribution in Gaza outside of Hamas control, said the vehicle was targeted as it carried more than 20 workers to a distribution site near the city of Khan Younis at approximately 10:00 pm local time.
In a statement Thursday, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) updated its initial casualty toll to five dead, with additional staff injured and concerns that some may have been taken hostage. “We are still gathering facts, but what we know is devastating,” the organization said. A spokesperson added that the investigation was ongoing and provided no further details on the identities of those killed.
The bus attack followed days of threats from Hamas directed at the foundation and its workers.
“This attack did not happen in a vacuum. For days, Hamas has openly threatened our team, our aid workers, and the civilians who receive aid from us. These threats were met with silence,” the GHF said.
Despite the assault, the foundation continued its operations Thursday, opening three distribution centers and delivering more than 45,000 boxes of food aid.
Pro-Israel commentator and influencer Hen Mazzig condemned the lack of response from the international community – including the UN and humanitarian activists – to Wednesday’s attack, highlighting what some have described as a double standard. In recent weeks, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has faced global criticism, including from the UN and human rights groups, after soldiers opened fire near GHF distribution points, killing or wounding Palestinians who approached through unauthorized routes.
“Hamas executed aid workers in Gaza – Palestinians whose only mission was to feed their own people,” Mazzig told The Algemeiner.
“The silence around this from so-called human rights champions is deafening. If you care about Palestinian lives, you need to care when Hamas ends them too,” he said.
BREAKING: After days of threatening GHF workers, Hamas has followed through with violence.
At around 10 pm last night, Hamas attacked a bus carrying over two dozen members of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) — including local Palestinians working alongside U.S. personnel.… pic.twitter.com/8BZqMwo2zr
— Hen Mazzig (@HenMazzig) June 12, 2025
Hamas has not publicly commented on the incident. However, Hamas-linked social media channels claimed responsibility for what they described as an attack against members of the Abu Shabab clan, whom they accused of collaborating with Israel. A Facebook page run by the Abu Shabab family denied the claim, stating its members were not targeted by Hamas.
The GHF was created because Hamas routinely steals humanitarian aid, leaving civilians facing severe shortages. Documents released by the IDF this week showed that Hamas operatives violently took control of approximately 25 percent of incoming aid shipments, which they then resold to civilians at inflated prices.
“Hamas records show their aid hoarding is a plan, not a glitch,” Mazzig said on X. “Their whole business model relies on extortion. Exploiting Gazans during wartime is how they stay afloat. That’s why we need a new aid distribution plan. That’s where the GHF comes in: the only model that’s been able to keep aid out of the hands of Hamas.”
The GHF operates independently from UN-backed mechanisms, which Hamas has sought to reinstate, arguing that these frameworks are more neutral. Israeli and American officials have rejected those calls, saying Hamas previously exploited UN-run systems to siphon aid for its war effort. The UN has denied those allegations while expressing concerns that the GHF’s approach forces civilians to risk their safety by traveling long distances across active conflict zones to reach food distribution points.
Since the GHF launched operations on May 26, there have been reports of Palestinians being shot near distribution sites. The Hamas-run Gaza health ministry and the Red Cross have documented shooting incidents involving civilians attempting to reach food aid, while the IDF has acknowledged targeting what it believed to be armed Hamas operatives using civilians as cover.
On Wednesday, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said it continued to receive reports from Gaza “of people being killed and injured while trying to access food,” without specifying locations. “OCHA reiterates in the strongest terms possible that no one should be forced to risk their lives to receive aid, as people across Gaza are at risk of famine,” the agency said.
John Acree, the GHF’s interim executive director, said the organization weighed shutting down operations after the attack but opted to continue. “We carefully considered closing our sites today given the heightened security risks and safety concerns, but we decided that the best response to Hamas’s cowardly murderers was to keep delivering food for the people of Gaza who are counting on us. We will not be deterred from our mission towards providing food security for the Palestinian people in Gaza.”
The post Gaza Humanitarian Foundation Says Hamas Killed, Abducted Aid Workers first appeared on Algemeiner.com.
Click this link for the original source of this article.
Author: Debbie Weiss
This content is courtesy of, and owned and copyrighted by, https://www.algemeiner.com and its author. This content is made available by use of the public RSS feed offered by the host site and is used for educational purposes only. If you are the author or represent the host site and would like this content removed now and in the future, please contact USSANews.com using the email address in the Contact page found in the website menu.