An online security platform called "The Guardian" which is affiliated with Hamas claims that aid distribution points in Gaza are being used as intelligence traps. According to the statement, Israeli special forces have infiltrated these centers, monitors civilians, and targets https://t.co/5mT2RsgYOX
BREAKING: Hamas gangs release footage of them stealing over 320 aid trucks. Will the New York Times report this? https://t.co/b8nbYy1fbY
Hamas and a partner tribe in Gaza released a video bragging about how they steal humanitarian aid. When will the media report this? https://t.co/qW8lTqNyhe
Multiple online videos circulated by Hamas-affiliated groups over the past two days purport to show militants and allied tribal fighters commandeering between 210 and more than 320 trucks carrying food and medical supplies destined for civilians in the Gaza Strip. The footage depicts armed men removing consignments from convoys run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, according to the clips’ narrators. Separately, the Israel Defense Forces released an audio recording in which a Gaza resident tells an Israeli officer that Hamas gunmen opened fire on civilians at an aid distribution point, allegedly to disrupt relief efforts. The speaker says the group "doesn’t want the people to receive aid." Bloomberg could not independently verify the recording or the authenticity of the videos. An online security platform calling itself "The Guardian," which claims affiliation with Hamas, asserted that some aid depots are being used as Israeli intelligence traps and that Israeli special-forces operatives have infiltrated the facilities. No evidence was provided to support the allegation. In another clip from an aid site, a Palestinian teenager thanks former U.S. president Donald Trump for helping to secure humanitarian deliveries. The competing claims underscore the growing information war around Gaza’s relief corridors as international agencies struggle to maintain secure distribution amid the enclave’s continuing conflict.