The measures announced on Thursday target Al-Haq group, the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights (PCHR) and Al-Mezan Center for Human Rights, in relation to their support of the work of the International Criminal Court (ICC) on the situation in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, following other sanctions imposed by the US Government in June on renowned Palestinian non-governmental organization (NGO) Addameer.
âFor decades now, these NGOs have been performing vital human rights work, particularly on accountability for human rights violations,â that is âall the more important when international humanitarian and human rights laws are being violated systematically in Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalemâ.
Mr. TĂŒrk urged the US to immediately withdraw its sanctions âas well as the ones imposed earlier on the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967, and on multiple Judges and Prosecutors of the ICC.â
He added that the sanctions will have a âchilling effectâ not only on civil society in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel, but potentially worldwide.
Attacks, famine spread across Gaza
The ongoing Israeli offensive to take full control of Gaza City further intensified on Friday, increasing civilian casualties and attacking facilities on which they depend to survive, the UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said during a press briefing at UN Headquarters.
Earlier on Friday, Israeli forces attacked a high-rise building that they say was used to launch attacks against them, damaging tents sheltering displaced people nearby, according to initial information collected by the UN aid coordination office (OCHA).
âOur humanitarian colleagues tell us that in the north, people are simply exhausted; they canât afford to move south, not only because displacement sites are overcrowded, but also because transport can cost up to $1,000,â Mr. Dujarric said, announcing that nearly 41,000 people have been displaced from Gaza City since 14 August.
âCatastrophe Israel could have preventedâ: WHO chief
Reminding that the offensive is running alongside the spread of famine, World Health Organization (WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said it was âa catastrophe that Israel could have prevented and could stop at any time.â
Starvation âwill not make Israel saferâ
âStarvation of civilians as a method of war is a war crime that can never be tolerated. Doing so in one conflict risks legitimising its use in future conflicts.â
Since the conflict began in October 2023, at least 370 people have died from malnutrition in Gaza, including more than 300 just in the past two months, according to the UN health agency, which said the lack of food and clean water and cramped living conditions are leaving people with weakened immune systems.
Itâs also exposing the population to more disease, with more than 100 cases of Guillain-BarrĂ© Syndrome, including 11 deaths, reported in the last month.
âThe most intolerable part of this man-made disaster is that it could be stopped right now,â he said.
âPeople are starving to death while the food that could save them sits on trucks a short distance away. And for what? The starvation of the people of Gaza will not make Israel safer, nor will it facilitate the release of the hostages.â
While WHO is doing the best it can to alleviate suffering in Gaza, supporting medical evacuations of over 7,640 patients, more than 15,000 others need urgent specialised care, including 3,800 children.
More than 700 people have died while waiting for evacuations, Tedros said, calling for countries to âopen their arms to these critically ill patientsâ and on Israel to allow people to be treated in the nearby West Bank and East Jerusalem.
âAbove all, we call on the Government of Israel to end this inhumane war,â he said. âIf it will not, I call on its allies to use their influence to stop it.â








