News | International
28 Jul 2025 20:25
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > International

    Donald Trump says Gaza is a 'mess' as Israel denies starvation crisis

    US President Donald Trump says Israel needs to "make a decision" about its next steps in Gaza, as more than 100 humanitarian agencies warn of mass starvation.


    US President Donald Trump has labelled Gaza "a mess" and says Israel will have to "make a decision" about its next steps in the strip, hours after aid restrictions were eased.

    Speaking at his golf course in Scotland, the president suggested Hamas had changed its stance on negotiations to release the 50 Israeli hostages the group still held captive, in exchange for a ceasefire in the war-ravaged strip.

    "They had a routine discussion the other day and all of a sudden [Hamas] hardened up," he said.

    "They don't want to give them back, and so Israel's going to have to make a decision."

    Mr Trump said the situation in Gaza had deteriorated dramatically.

    More than 100 humanitarian agencies had warned the strip was facing mass starvation, as Israeli restrictions on aid fuelled shortages of food and other supplies.

    Israel denied its actions had caused a starvation crisis, instead blaming Hamas for creating the situation.

    Palestinian health authorities said 133 people had died from starvation in the last week, with 87 of them children.

    "You know, when I see the children and when I see, especially over the last couple of weeks, and people are stealing the food, they're stealing the money, they're stealing the money for the food, they're stealing weapons, they're stealing everything," Mr Trump said.

    "It's a mess. That whole place is a mess."

    He suggested it was a mistake by then Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon to withdraw from Gaza, although he could not name which Israeli leader had been responsible for the move.

    "The Gaza Strip, you know, was given many years ago so that they could have peace — that didn't work out too well," he said.

    "When Israel gave that up, whoever was the prime minister at the time, who I know who it was — but it was not exactly a very clever thing to do, because that was given so that they finally have peace.

    "And it's actually made the situation worse."

    Ceasefire and hostage negotiations between Israel and Hamas have collapsed, with the White House's special envoy for the Middle East Steve Witkoff saying the militant group displayed a "lack of desire to reach" a deal.

    "There is no point in continuing negotiations under blockade, extermination and starvation of our children, women and people in the Gaza Strip," Hamas chief Khalil al-Hayya said on Sunday night.

    "The immediate and dignified entry of food and medications to our people is the real and serious expression of the viability of continuing negotiations."

    'They are all hungry'

    Despite the stalemate, Israel has bowed to international pressure over the humanitarian crisis which has developed in Gaza.

    The Netanyahu Government ordered a partial easing of the aid restrictions in the strip, with the changes coming into force on Sunday local time.

    Pallets of aid were dropped across Gaza by the Israeli, Jordanian and United Arab Emirates air forces, while the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it had established "secure corridors" for the United Nations and other agencies to distribute aid.

    There are reports that as many as 11 Palestinians were injured as the pallets fell on their tents.

    Even with more supplies entering Gaza, it remains a dangerous situation for Palestinians trying to secure supplies.

    The ABC found Alaa Abu Muteer, 47, lying on a thin mattress in the Al-Shifa hospital in a corridor full of injured Palestinians.

    "Currently, I am unemployed. I went to bring food for my children. I reached the location, and saw there Israeli tanks that began opening fire on the people, and I was shot in my back," he said.

    "I have [10] children. They are all hungry, and I am also hungry. 

    "I am looking for a mouthful of bread. I now need treatment for the wounds that I have."

    The IDF told the ABC it was not aware of any shootings in the area.

    Marwari Al-Barari, 39, said she feared the aid situation in Gaza had fuelled a dangerous culture.

    "This has taught our children to use knives, things like that," she said.

    "I saw a 10-year-old boy carrying a knife. Where is he going to? He said he is going to the aid distribution."

    She said the airdrops were the wrong approach.

    "I fully reject it, because I was in the south and it happened in front of my eyes. The people were living next to me, and the parachutes came down," she said.

    "There was a boy, 12 years old, that was killed on the spot from a parachute.

    "Also, these parachutes cause the barbarism and killing and bullying and stabbing and so forth. I reject it in full."

    Israeli PM denies starvation crisis again

    Israel has accused humanitarian organisations of refusing to pick up supplies which have been dropped on the Gaza side of the border fence.

    In response, Israel has been accused of making it too difficult and too dangerous to collect the supplies.

    "We have hundreds of trucks that are waiting on the Gazan side of the Kerem Shalom crossing," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.

    "We've just announced that formally — here are safe corridors.

    "And the UN has no excuses left. No excuses left, stop lying. Stop finding excuses, do what you have to do, and stop accusing Israel deliberately of this egregious falsehood."

    The prime minister again denied there was a starvation crisis in Gaza, despite changing his government's policy in the strip and the international consensus on the situation.

    "Israel is presented as though we are applying a campaign of starvation in Gaza — what a bold-faced lie," Mr Netanyahu said.

    "There is no policy of starvation in Gaza, and there is no starvation in Gaza.

    "Hamas rob, steals this humanitarian aid and then accuses Israel of not supplying it."

    Aid agencies have repeatedly denied that there is any evidence of Hamas stealing food and other items.

    The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk, urged the international community to continue pressuring Israel to allow more aid in.

    "When we think it can't get worse, it gets worse," he said.

    "Children are starving and dying in front of our eyes.

    "Gaza is a dystopian landscape of deadly attacks and total destruction."


    ABC




    © 2025 ABC Australian Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved

     Other International News
     28 Jul: India bats out fourth Test draw against England, Cook and Vaughan lament pitch
     28 Jul: Surrey takes Women's T20 Blast as Grace Harris's 63 helps win title over Bears and sister Laura
     28 Jul: Shaolin Temple head under investigation in China on suspicion of embezzlement
     28 Jul: What influencers and content creators can claim as tax deductions
     28 Jul: Destiny's Child reunites for Beyoncé's final Cowboy Carter show
     28 Jul: English golfer Lottie Woad wins Women's Scottish Open after turning pro at 21
     27 Jul: Taiwan opposition parliamentarians survive major recall election
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    Tyrel Lomax will miss at least the first two games of the All Blacks' Rugby Championship campaign with a broken hand More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    The Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister's confident an in-store ban on payment card surcharges won't hugely affect retail prices More...



     Today's News

    Entertainment:
    Logan Lerman found the Only Murders in the Building set to be "oddly fun" 20:19

    Entertainment:
    Jamie Lee Curtis believes the "filter face is what people want" 19:49

    International:
    India bats out fourth Test draw against England, Cook and Vaughan lament pitch 19:37

    Entertainment:
    Steve Aoki has become a dad 19:19

    Rugby:
    Tyrel Lomax will miss at least the first two games of the All Blacks' Rugby Championship campaign with a broken hand 18:57

    Entertainment:
    Taylor Swift plans to "take the high road" after being slammed by ex-boyfriend Matt Healy's mother Denise Welch 18:49

    Business:
    The Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister's confident an in-store ban on payment card surcharges won't hugely affect retail prices 18:37

    Entertainment:
    Mama June Shannon was admitted to hospital, just hours after a psychic warned her about health issues 18:19

    National:
    Showing happiness brings social rewards, but the opposite can happen if people feel pressured to appear happy 18:17

    Law and Order:
    The National Organised Crime Group's made New Zealand's biggest LSD seizure ever in Auckland - more than 40-thousand tabs 18:07


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd