Connect with us

Published

on

There’s a renewed urgency to the delivery of food to Gaza but it’s still struggling to keep pace with the escalating humanitarian catastrophe inside the besieged enclave.

We joined the small kingdom of Jordan’s air force crew coordinating the multi-nation coalition to get aid to the thousands of Gazans cut off in the north of the Strip.

Around ten planes – all variations of C-130s – spent the day delivering several tonnes of food which were dropped from the air at more than a dozen different locations in north Gaza.

The fleet of planes, led by Jordan, included those from Egypt, Belgium and Holland, as well as the USA.

Follow latest: Pictures of aid drop over Gaza show scale of devastation

The aid pallets contained essential food supplies including flour, rice, tins of fish and baby formula, as well as some water supplies. They were mostly in 300kg packages able to feed about a hundred people.

All involved know that’s not nearly enough, but it will provide critical help to families who are in what the UN and US describe as a catastrophic humanitarian situation.

More on Gaza

For the first time though, the Jordanians will be dropping some of the aid using British-provided SC-15 parachutes, which can carry much heavier loads of up to 1,000kg – or one tonne of food.

The whole operation is a feat of co-ordination involving several countries, planes and loads, as well as liaising with Israeli authorities.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Sky News joins Gaza aid airdrop

The C-130 Hercules aircraft are large carriers which have a long military history. According to Lockheed Martin: “Since its first flight in 1954, the Hercules has been everywhere and done just about anything.

“Aircrews have flown it to both poles, landed or airdropped military supplies to hot spots from Vietnam to Afghanistan and performed countless relief operations around the globe.”

Military analysts say they’re very much favoured by military all over the world with more than 70 countries having them in their fleet.

They’re the prime transport for airdropping troops and equipment into hostile areas and have “the longest, continuous military aircraft production run in history and one of the top three longest, continuous aircraft production lines of any type”.

The Sky crew was on one of two planes being operated by the Jordanian air force on today’s operation.

Crates of aid ready to be dropped over the Gaza Strip from a C130 Hercules.

‘Bleak horizon of flattened homes’

One airman told us on condition of anonymity, because he was not authorised to talk to the media, of their pride in his country leading the airdrop effort to help hungry Palestinians.

Jordan is home to the highest number of Palestinians in the world living outside of the territories, and so feels a special bond with what’s going on in Gaza. The Jordanian Queen, Rania, is of Palestinian origin.

The journey from Amman’s King Abdullah airbase to the north of Gaza took about an hour and a half to reach the Gaza coastline.

We saw a blackened landscape from the C-130 portholes. You could pick out a bleak horizon of flattened homes and those still upright appeared roofless.

View of northern Gaza after Israel's bombings from a C130 Hercules.
View of northern Gaza after Israel's bombings from a Jordan air force's C130 Hercules air drops.

‘Within seconds it was all over’

The Hercules circled and turned back on itself to get into position. The air crew hastily checked and rechecked the parachute ties to ensure they were primed and ready for opening.

Each pallet had a parachute strapped to the top and static lines pinned to the aircraft so as soon as the order was given, the pallets would roll towards the plane’s hatch at the rear and the lines would pull open the parachutes as each pallet exited.

We hovered over the north of Gaza briefly, then the thumbs up was given. The eight pallets went out in two batches.

Within seconds, it was all over and the hatch closed.

Jordan air force members watch as crates of aid fall toward Gaza.

Hours of preparations, and multinational co-ordination had preceded the drop. It’s hoped a few hundred people may be able to benefit from our aid delivery.

On the ground, our Sky crew was waiting with thousands of desperate people as the handful of planes began spitting out their cargo at the allocated spots.

Read more:
West has lost patience with Israel over Gaza aid
UK involved in US port plans for Gaza ‘from the start’
Biden: Ceasefire before Ramadan ‘looking tough’

Crates of aid fall over Gaza.
A Jordan air force's C130 Hercules air drops aid in Gaza.

‘Difference between living and dying’

As our crew filmed, there was a sudden surge as the crowd ran towards the parachutes floating down on the horizon. Then more and more from different planes.

By the time the pallets had hit terra firma, the crowds were almost wild with desperation. The constant bombing; the constant fear; the constant hunger has stripped out their basic shared humanity.

Our cameraman picked out at least one man diving headlong into the crowd scrambling to snatch whatever food he could in a sea of hungry people. It could make the difference between living and dying over the next few days.

Palestinians swarm crates of aid air dropped into the Gaza Strip.
A man dives headfirst into a crate of aid in Gaza.

As our aircraft pulled away and swung back towards Amman, the crew on board sat sombrely, reflecting on what they’d just witnessed.

They’d done all that they could, and not a single person heading back felt it was anything near enough.

A member of Jordan's air force looks out at Gaza after dropping aid over the Strip.

Continue Reading

World

Thousands of Ukrainian civilians lost in hellish archipelago of Russian jails

Published

on

By

Thousands of Ukrainian civilians lost in hellish archipelago of Russian jails

In all the horrors of this war, the plight of thousands of civilians abducted by Russia is one of the worst, but is in danger of being overlooked.

Warning: This report contains details of torture and sexual abuse

Their fate is not mentioned for instance in Donald Trump’s peace plan currently being wrestled over, let alone any demands they are released by Russia.

But their plight is truly horrific. Ukraine has identified almost 16,000 names of people lost in a gulag of 180 prisons in Russian-held Ukraine and in Russia itself, as far away as Siberia.

It is a war crime to take civilians hostage during a conflict but that has not deterred Vladimir Putin’s regime.

Worse, there is abundant evidence they are being tortured, sexually abused and killed in custody.

Oleksandra Matviichuk, a Nobel Prize-winning Ukrainian human rights lawyer, said: “I interviewed hundreds of people who survived Russian captivity, men and women, mostly civilians, and they told me how they were beaten, raped, smashed into wooden boxes.

“Their fingers were cut, their nails were torn away, their nails were drilled. There were electrical shocks through their genitalia. One woman told me how her eye was dug out with a spoon.”

Dmytro Khilyuk has been detained by Russia since March 2022
Image:
Dmytro Khilyuk has been detained by Russia since March 2022

When the Russians took territory north of Kyiv at the start of their illegal invasion, they came for the men, among them Dmytro Khilyuk.

Apart from a short letter sent from captivity a few months later, his elderly parents have not seen him since.

Read more from Sky News:
Ukrainian man charged over fires at properties linked to Starmer
Hamas confirms direct peace talks with US – exclusive
Police hunt for teens seen ‘carrying dismembered kittens in bag’

Mr Khilyuk's mother and father, Halyna and Vasyl, show photo of their son
Image:
Mr Khilyuk’s mother and father, Halyna and Vasyl, show photo of their son

‘I just can’t take it anymore’

“We’re old and we’re sick,” his mother Halyna, bedridden after a stroke, told us.

“We’ve been without our only child for four years now, not knowing anything, where he is, how he is.”

She wept as she told us of the agony of living with the uncertainty about their son.

“I just can’t take it anymore. Why is my child suffering like this? It’s been four years. All we get are endless talks, talks, and more talks. And nothing changes. I could die any day… and never see my child again.”

Mr Khilyuk's mother, Halyna
Image:
Mr Khilyuk’s mother, Halyna

Khilyuk has lost half his weight and most of his teeth

A year ago a fellow prisoner who had shared a cell with Mr Khilyuk was released. He said Mr Khilyuk had lost half his weight and most of his teeth.

Fellow journalist and friend of Mr Khilyuk, Stas Kozluk, told us he was worried about his state of mind.

“We just can’t imagine what can happen with the mind of a human being that’s captured and spends three years in that condition. To be honest, I don’t know how to help him. And that’s the most terrifying thing,” he said.

Russia releases no information

Ukrainian authorities can only piece together information about the abducted civilians. Mr Kozluk told us those who’ve been detained learn the phone numbers and names of relatives of others they are held with.

Those who are released pass on what information they can.

Russia releases no information about those civilians it is holding illegally, against the rules of war.

Follow The World
Follow The World

Listen to The World with Richard Engel and Yalda Hakim every Wednesday

Tap to follow

‘The world doesn’t understand’

Thousands of innocent civilians are lost in a hellish archipelago of Russian jails notorious for their evil regime of abuse.

And the world, says Oleksandra Matviichuk, is in danger of forgetting about them.

“I think the world doesn’t understand, first, the cruelty and unhuman conditions in which Ukrainians are held in Russian captivity,” she says.

“Second, they don’t understand that Russia detained not just military, but civilians. And according to the Geneva Convention, they have to be released immediately without any exchanges, without any conditions.”

Diplomatic efforts to end this war grind on fitfully. But there has been very little pressure on Russia to end its illegal abduction of thousands of innocents.

Continue Reading

World

US ‘doesn’t have high expectations’ for Ukraine-Russia negotiations, Marco Rubio admits

Published

on

By

US 'doesn't have high expectations' for Ukraine-Russia negotiations, Marco Rubio admits

The United States “doesn’t have high expectations” for negotiations in Turkey between Russia and Ukraine to end the war, America’s top diplomat has admitted.

US secretary of state Marco Rubio said he did not think there would be a “breakthrough” in discussions until Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin meet to discuss it directly.

Russia and Ukraine are preparing to hold their first direct peace talks in three years, but the negotiations will take place in the aftermath of Mr Putin declining Volodymyr Zelenskyy‘s offer of an in-person meeting.

It came after Mr Putin proposed direct negotiations with Ukraine over the war “without any preconditions” after the “coalition of the willing” countries threatened Russia with fresh sanctions if it failed to take part in a 30-day ceasefire beginning on Monday. In response Mr Zelenskyy had called on Mr Putin to meet him in Istanbul.

Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting with senior officials. PIc: Reuters
Image:
Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting with senior officials. PIc: Reuters

Ukraine war latest: Trump teases ‘destination unknown’

The Ukrainian president said he was sending a team headed by his defence minister, from the Turkish capital Ankara to Istanbul, to meet the Ukrainian delegation, though he said Moscow’s team did not include “anyone who actually makes decisions”.

Mr Zelenskyy accused Moscow of not taking efforts to end the conflict seriously by sending a low-level negotiating team he described as “a theatre prop”.

Russian presidential aide Vladimir Medinsky, who is heading Moscow’s delegation, said: “The task of these direct negotiations with Ukraine is to establish long-term peace sooner or later by eliminating the root causes of this conflict.”

He later said he expected Ukraine’s representatives to turn up for the beginning of discussions on Friday morning.

Marco Rubio. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Marco Rubio. Pic: Reuters

Mr Rubio said he will meet Ukraine’s delegation on Friday, adding: “It’s my assessment that I don’t think we’re going to have a breakthrough here until the president [Mr Trump] and President Putin interact directly on this topic.”

The team sent by Russia “does not indicate a breakthrough”, he said, before going on to say: “I hope tomorrow the news says they’ve agreed a ceasefire. But it’s not my assessment.”

He was echoing remarks made by Mr Trump earlier in the day, when he said: “Nothing’s going to happen until Putin and I get together.”

Asked if any plans were under way for a meeting between the US and Russian leaders, Mr Rubio said Mr Trump was going to make a decision once his trip to the Middle East finishes.

Follow The World
Follow The World

Listen to The World with Richard Engel and Yalda Hakim every Wednesday

Tap to follow

Read more from Sky News:
It’s the Trump era and Putin knows how to exploit it
What happened last time Putin and Zelenskyy met face to face?

Tens of thousands of soldiers have been killed on both sides in the war since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, along with more than 12,000 Ukrainian civilians, according to the UN.

Russian forces are preparing for a fresh military offensive, Ukrainian government and Western military analysts have warned.

👉 Listen to Sky News Daily on your podcast app 👈

Sir Keir Starmer accused Mr Putin of “standing in the way of peace”, with the prime minister saying: “There was only one country that started this conflict – that was Russia. That was Putin. There’s only one country now standing in the way of peace – that is Russia, that is Putin.”

Continue Reading

World

Iran ‘ready to make nuclear concessions’ – as Trump asks for Qatar’s help getting a deal

Published

on

By

Iran 'ready to make nuclear concessions' - as Trump asks for Qatar's help getting a deal

A top Iranian official has said the country is prepared to make a number of concessions related to its nuclear programme, in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions.

It comes as Donald Trump, during his tour of the Middle East, urged Qatar to wield its influence over Iran to persuade it to give up its nuclear programme.

Ali Shamkhani, a top political, military and nuclear adviser to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, spoke to Sky News’ US partner NBC News.

Ali Shamkhani pictured in 2023.
Pic: Reuters
Image:
Ali Shamkhani pictured in 2023.
Pic: Reuters

He said Tehran was willing to commit to never making nuclear weapons again, getting rid of its stockpiles of highly enriched uranium, which can be weaponised, agree to only enrich uranium to the lower levels needed for civilian use and allow international inspectors to supervise the process.

This was in exchange for the prospect of the immediate lifting of all economic sanctions on the country.

Asked if Iran would sign an agreement today if those conditions were met, Mr Shamkhani told NBC: “Yes.”

His comments are the clearest public indication of what Iran hopes to get out of a deal and their willingness to do one.

More on Donald Trump

“It’s still possible. If the Americans act as they say, for sure we can have better relations,” Mr Shamkhani added.

However, he expressed frustration at continued threats from the US president, describing them as “all barbed wire” and no olive branch.

Similarly, he warned that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu might try to derail the deal.

Trump goes to the Middle East

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Trump’s second day in the Middle East

Elsewhere, on the second of three stops on his tour of the Middle East, Mr Trump appealed to Qatar for help in the process.

He urged the country to use its influence over Iran to persuade its leadership to reach a deal with the US and dial back its rapidly advancing nuclear programme.

Mr Trump made the comments during a state dinner.

He said: “I hope you can help me with the Iran situation.

“It’s a perilous situation, and we want to do the right thing.”

Donald Trump listens as Qatar's Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani (not pictured) speaks at a state dinner.
Pic: Reuters
Image:
Donald Trump listens as Qatar’s Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani (not pictured) speaks at a state dinner.
Pic: Reuters

Over the years, Qatar has played the role of intermediary between the US and Iran and its proxies – including talks with Hamas as its 19-month war with Israel grinds on.

This comes after Mr Trump told a Gulf Cooperation Council meeting in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, this week that he wants “to make a deal”.

However, he said that as part of any agreement, Iran must end its support of proxy groups throughout the Middle East.

A nuclear Iran

Mr Trump has always said Iran could not be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon.

While Iran has always denied doing so, the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, has warned that Tehran has enough enriched uranium close to weapons-grade quality for nearly six bombs.

Read more:
King ‘piggy in the middle’ in Canada-US stand-off
Trump: ‘It would be stupid not to accept Qatari plane’

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Trump 100 breaks down the president and Iran

The US and Iran reached a nuclear deal in 2015, under Barack Obama, in which Iran agreed to drastically reduce its stockpile of uranium and limit enriching up to 3.67%.

But Mr Trump scrapped that deal in his first term.

Today, Iran enriches up to 60%, a short, technical step from weapons-grade levels.

Washington and Tehran have engaged in four rounds of talks since early April.

Continue Reading

Trending