Children killed collecting water in Gaza, medical officials say, as ceasefire talks hit sticking points

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  • Children killed collecting water in Gaza, medical officials say, as ceasefire talks hit sticking points</p>

<p>Tim Lister, Oren Liebermann, Eugenia Yosef, Ibrahim Dahman and Eyad Kourdi, CNNJuly 13, 2025 at 10:00 PM</p>

<p>A young boy inspects the site of an Israeli strike that killed Palestinians gathered at a water distribution point, according to medics, in central Gaza on July 13. - Stringer/Reuters</p>

<p>Several children were killed in an Israeli airstrike at a water distribution point in central Gaza Sunday, health officials said, one of several deadly incidents in the territory that come as ceasefire talks in Doha falter.</p>

<p>Hopes had been high for the latest negotiations but after days of negotiations the two sides accused each other of blocking an agreement while on the ground there has been no let-up in Israel's military campaign, which resumed when the last ceasefire collapsed in March.</p>

<p>The Palestinian health ministry reported Sunday that 139 bodies had been brought to Gaza hospitals in the past 24 hours, with a number of victims still under the rubble. The number is the highest reported since July 2 and brings the total number of people killed since October 7, 2023 to 58,026, according to the ministry.</p>

<p>That was before the Israeli airstrike Sunday killed six children and four others at a water distribution point in central Gaza, according to Al-Awda Hospital. Video from the chaotic scene showed multiple casualties including children amid buckets and water carriers.</p>

<p>The Israeli military acknowledged that an airstrike targeting an "Islamic Jihad terrorist" had gone wrong and the "munition fell dozens of meters from the target," saying the incident was under review.</p>

<p>Also in central Gaza on Sunday, at least 12 people were killed and more than 40 injured when an Israeli airstrike targeted a crowded junction, according to Dr. Mohammed Abu Salmiya, Director of Al-Shifa Medical Complex central Gaza City. The dead included a prominent doctor, Ahmad Qandeel, described by the health ministry as "one of Gaza's most respected medical professionals."</p>

<p>A boy leans over the body of his cousin after he was killed in an Israeli strike that hit Nuseirat in central Gaza on July 13. - Eyad Baba/AFP/Getty Images</p>

<p>Sunday's heavy toll followed several deadly incidents Saturday. The ministry said 27 were killed and many more injured when Israeli troops opened fire on people trying to obtain aid from a distribution site near southern Rafah run by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).</p>

<p>GHF denied the claim, saying "there were no incidents at or in the immediate vicinity of our sites" on Saturday.</p>

<p>The Israeli military also denied that anyone was injured by gunfire from its troops in the vicinity of the site but said it continued to review the reports. It told CNN Sunday it had no further comment.</p>

<p>However, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said its field hospital near the site had received 132 patients suffering from weapon-related injuries. Twenty-five were declared dead on arrival and six more died after being admitted – the largest number of fatalities since the hospital began operations in May 2024, according to the ICRC.</p>

<p>"This situation is unacceptable. The alarming frequency and scale of these mass casualty incidents underscore the horrific conditions civilians in Gaza are enduring," the ICRC added.</p>

<p>Nearly 800 Palestinians were killed while trying to access aid in Gaza between late May and July 7, according to the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), when the GHF began operating.</p>

<p>Elsewhere in Gaza, 13 people were killed Saturday in airstrikes in Al-Shati refugee camp near Gaza City, in the north of the territory, according to Mohammed Abu Salmiya, director of Al-Shifa Hospital. Salmiya told CNN that 40 injured people had been admitted. Geolocated video showed at least one child among the victims.</p>

<p>The Israel Defense Forces said Sunday it had destroyed weapons and tunnels used by Hamas in northern Gaza and the air force had carried out attacks on more than 150 targets across the Gaza Strip, including "booby-trapped buildings, weapons depots, anti-tank missile and sniper positions."</p>

<p>Talks 'stall,' Hamas says</p>

<p>The spike in casualties in Gaza comes as talks on agreeing a new ceasefire deal and hostage continue in Doha, with optimism having faded that an agreement can be quickly reached.</p>

<p>US President Donald Trump's envoy Steve Witkoff said Tuesday he was hopeful of a deal by the end of the week.</p>

<p>"We had four issues, and now we're down to one after two days of proximity talks," Witkoff said.</p>

<p>The same day Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu discussed Gaza at length at the White House.</p>

<p>"We got to get that solved," Trump said.</p>

<p>But despite days of proximity talks in Doha between Israel and Hamas, significant gaps remain between the warring parties.</p>

<p>An Israeli source familiar with the matter said last week that the outstanding issue was where the Israeli military would redeploy in Gaza once the ceasefire takes effect. The latest proposal called for the military to withdraw from parts of northern Gaza on the first day of a ceasefire and from parts of southern Gaza on the seventh day.</p>

<p>The detailed maps were left to negotiations between Israel and Hamas, and that appears to be the main sticking point.</p>

<p>Smoke rises into the sky following an Israeli attack in northern Gaza, as seen from southern Israel, on July 10. - Leo Correa/AP</p>

<p>The talks had "stalled," a senior Hamas official told CNN on Saturday, claiming Israel had added new conditions, "the latest being new deployment maps for the Israeli army's presence in the Gaza Strip."</p>

<p>But an Israeli political source told CNN Saturday that "Israel has shown willingness to be flexible in the negotiations" and that "Hamas remains obstinate, sticking to positions that prevent the mediators from advancing an agreement."</p>

<p>Netanyahu is set to meet Sunday with his national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, to discuss the negotiations, according to a source familiar with the matter.</p>

<p>Ben Gvir and finance minister Bezalel Smotrich – the far-right members of Netanyahu's government – have both been vocal critics of any deal with Hamas, instead calling for Israel to cut off aid to Gaza and escalate its war until the militant group is destroyed.</p>

<p>Recent opinion surveys in Israel suggest overwhelming approval for a deal that would end the war and return all the hostages, living and dead. A poll for Israel's Channel 12 Friday said that 74% of the public believes that Israel should end the war in Gaza in exchange for the return of all the abductees in one step, with only 8% supporting the phased deal that the government is trying to promote.</p>

<p>Netanyahu has insisted that Israel has the right to return to combat at the end of the 60-day ceasefire now on the table. Hamas is demanding a pathway to an indefinite cessation of hostilities, with the complete withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.</p>

<p>For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at CNN.com</p>

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Children killed collecting water in Gaza, medical officials say, as ceasefire talks hit sticking points

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Before Butler, Secret Service denied requests to bolster Trump's security, report says

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<p>Faris TanyosJuly 13, 2025 at 10:04 PM</p>

<p>Getty Images</p>

<p>Sen. Rand Paul, the author of the Senate report, will join "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" at 10:30 a.m. ET to discuss the findings.</p>

<p>Ahead of the assassination attempt one year ago on President Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, the U.S. Secret Service denied multiple requests from Mr. Trump's Secret Service detail to bolster his security apparatus during his 2024 presidential campaign, according to a Senate report released Sunday.</p>

<p>The report from the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs found that the Secret Service "denied or left unfulfilled at least 10 requests" from Mr. Trump's detail for "additional resources," including an enhanced counter drone system, counter assault team personnel and counter snipers.</p>

<p>On July 13, 2024, a 20-year-old gunman opened fire on Mr. Trump from the rooftop of a nearby building during a campaign rally in Butler. The president was grazed in the ear by one of the bullets, while one rallygoer was killed and two others were critically wounded in the shooting. The gunman, Thomas Crooks, was shot and killed by a Secret Service sniper. The incident prompted several investigations into the Secret Service's practices and protocols.</p>

<p>"This report reveals a disturbing pattern of communication failures and negligence that culminated in a preventable tragedy," wrote Sen. Rand Paul, Republican of Kentucky and the chairman of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, in the report. "What happened was inexcusable and the consequences imposed for the failures so far do not reflect the severity of the situation."</p>

<p>The report accuses then-Secret Service director Kimberly Cheatle of "falsely" testifying to Congress that "no USSS asset requests were denied for the Butler rally." Cheatle resigned nearly a year ago after testifying before Congress.</p>

<p>Richard Giuditta Jr., chief counsel to the Secret Service, told the committee that there was no evidence that "political animus" was behind the denials, the report reads.</p>

<p>Specifically concerning the Butler rally, the committee did not find that there was an "explicit denial" for enhanced counter drone systems. However, in a transcribed interview to the committee, a Secret Service counter-unmanned aircraft systems agent alleged that such a request was denied via phone by a Secret Service technical security division advance agent, the report states.</p>

<p>That denial was corroborated by Secret Service documents, the report found.</p>

<p>This would appear to contradict previous testimony from then-Secret Service Acting Director Ronald Rowe, who had replaced Cheatle in the post. During a contentious July 30, 2024, hearing before the Senate Homeland Security and Judiciary committees, Rowe testified that "all assets requested were approved" for the Butler rally.</p>

<p>Rowe, however, also testified regarding requests for assets other than Butler: "There are times when assets were unavailable and not able to be filled, and those gaps were staffed with state and local law enforcement tactical assets."</p>

<p>Furthermore, the new report found that, prior to the Butler shooting, the Secret Service had no formal process for submitting resource requests, and "therefore there was no standard response concerning approvals or denials of such requests from USSS Headquarters."</p>

<p>Documents obtained by the committee "revealed a pattern of certain categories of requests being either blatantly denied, unfulfilled, or required to be supplemented by local law enforcement or other federal agencies," the report said.</p>

<p>In a statement, Secret Service director Sean Curran said the agency "took a serious look at our operations and implemented substantive reforms to address the failures that occurred that day."</p>

<p>A "lack of structured communication was likely the greatest contributor to the failures" of the Secret Service at Butler, the report stated, echoing a previous 180-page House report released last December on the assassination attempt which found that there was "fragmented communications" at Butler because local law enforcement and the Secret Service had separate command posts.</p>

<p>According to the Senate committee's findings, the Secret Service agent tasked with leading communications at Butler — a role known as the "security room agent" — was the special agent in charge of the Secret Service's Buffalo, New York, field office, and was assigned the Butler role on July 11, 2024, only two days before the rally.</p>

<p>That agent "only discovered the existence of the second command post" after he overheard conversations between a Pennsylvania State Police officer who was stationed in the Secret Service's command post, and other law enforcement.</p>

<p>"By his own admission, he never had direct contact with local law enforcement throughout the day, and that his only method of communication with them was through the PSP officer in the USSS Security Room," the report said of the security room agent.</p>

<p>The report also addressed the announcement this week that six Secret Service personnel were suspended following an internal investigation into the Butler shooting response. The six personnel were issued suspensions without pay or benefits ranging from 10 to 42 days.</p>

<p>However, the Senate committee's investigation found that the security room agent at Butler was not among those disciplined, even though, the report writes, "according to testimony and documents received by the committee," he "failed to relay critical information he obtained from" the Pennsylvania State Police officer stationed in the Secret Service's command post "regarding a suspicious individual with a range finder" to the Secret Service agents "who could have removed or prevented President Trump from taking the stage."</p>

<p>In a statement provided to CBS News, U.S. Secret Service Director Sean Curran said that his agency had received the report "and will continue to work cooperatively with the committee as we move forward in our mission."</p>

<p>"Following the events of July 13, the Secret Service took a serious look at our operations and implemented substantive reforms to address the failures that occurred that day," Curran said. "The Secret Service appreciates the continued support of President Trump, Congress, and our federal and local partners who have been instrumental in providing crucial resources needed to support the agency's efforts."</p>

<p>Earlier this week, meanwhile, CBS News was taken inside the Secret Service's James J. Rowley Training Center in Laurel, Maryland, to see the agency's security improvements in response to Butler, which include a fleet of military-grade drones and a system of mobile command posts.</p>

<p>How a father's persistence unlocked his son's brilliance</p>

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<p>Takeaways from Trump's tour of Texas flooding damage</p>

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Before Butler, Secret Service denied requests to bolster Trump's security, report says

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Trump to meet NATO secretary general as plan takes shape for Ukraine weapons sales

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<p>AAMER MADHANI July 13, 2025 at 10:04 PM</p>

<p>NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte attends a news conference with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz during a meeting at the chancellery in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday, July 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)</p>

<p>BRIDGEWATER, NJ (AP) — NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte is set to meet President Donald Trump this week on the heels of the U.S. leader announcing plans to sell NATO allies weaponry that it can then pass on to Ukraine.</p>

<p>NATO in a statement said Rutte will be in Washington on Monday and Tuesday and would meet with Donald Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth as well as Congress. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the visit.</p>

<p>The visit comes as Trump last week teased that he would make a "major statement" on Russia on Monday and as Ukraine struggles to repel massive and complex air assaults launched by Russian forces.</p>

<p>Rubio said Friday that some of the U.S.-made weapons that Ukraine is seeking are deployed with NATO allies in Europe. Those weapons could be transferred to Ukraine, with European countries buying replacements from the U.S., he said.</p>

<p>"It's a lot faster to move something, for example, from Germany to Ukraine than it is to order it from a (U.S.) factory and get it there," Rubio told reporters last week during visit to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.</p>

<p>French Defense Minister Sebastien Lecornu in an interview published Sunday in La Tribune Dimanche said that European officials have been making the case to the Trump administration to bolster air defense capabilities with any coming packages.</p>

<p>He added that France is in a "capacity hole" and will have to wait until next year before being able to provide Ukraine new ground-air missiles.</p>

<p>Trump is also facing calls from Republicans and Democrats as well as European allies to support legislation in the Senate that aims to cripple Russia's oil industry and hit Moscow with U.S. sanctions for its ongoing invasion of Ukraine.</p>

<p>The legislation, in part, calls for a 500% tariff on goods imported from countries that continue to buy Russian oil, gas, uranium and other exports. It would have an enormous impact on economic behemoths China and India, which account for roughly 70% of Russia's energy trade.</p>

<p>That revenue is critical in helping keep the Russian war machine humming as the U.S. and Europe have imposed significant import and export bans on a wide range of goods to and from Russia, affecting sectors like finance, energy, transport, technology, and defense.</p>

<p>Trump for months had threatened, but held off on, imposing new sanctions against Russia's oil industry.</p>

<p>But the Republican leader has become increasingly exasperated with Putin in recent days and has laid into the Russian leader for prolonging the war.</p>

<p>"We get a lot of bull---- thrown at us by Putin, if you want to know the truth," Trump said last week in an exchange with reporters. "He's very nice all the time, but it turns out to be meaningless."</p>

<p>Congress has been prepared to act on the legislation, sponsored by Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Democrat Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, for some time.</p>

<p>The bill has overwhelming support in the Senate, but Republican leadership has been waiting for Trump to give the green light before moving ahead with it.</p>

<p>The White House had expressed some reservations about the legislation. Trump made clear he wants full authority over the waiver process to lift the sanctions, tariffs or other penalties, without having to cede control to Congress.</p>

<p>Under the initial bill, the president "may terminate" the penalties under certain circumstances, but immediately reimpose them if the violations resume. Graham has said the president would be allowed to waive the sanctions, for 180 days, and could also renew a waiver.</p>

<p>______</p>

<p>writer Angela Charlton in Paris contributed reporting.</p>

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Emergency crews suspend search for flooding victims in central Texas amid new flood warnings.

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<p>GABRIELA AOUN July 13, 2025 at 10:27 PM</p>

<p>1 / 2Texas Floods Extreme WeatherSearch and rescue teams comb the banks of the Guadalupe River after a flash flood swept through the area, Saturday, July 12, 2025, in Kerrville, Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)</p>

<p>KERRVILLE, Texas (AP) — Emergency crews suspended their search for victims of catastrophic flooding in central Texas on Sunday morning amid new warnings that additional rain would again cause waterways to surge.</p>

<p>It was the first time a new round of severe weather has paused the search since the flooding earlier this month.</p>

<p>Ingram Fire Department officials ordered search crews to immediately evacuate the Guadalupe River corridor in Kerr County until further notice, warning the potential for a flash flood is high.</p>

<p>Search-and-rescue teams have been searching for missing victims of the July 4 weekend flooding that killed at least 129 people and left more than 170 missing.</p>

<p>As heavy rain fell Sunday, National Weather Service forecasters warned that the Guadalupe River could rise to nearly 15 feet (4.6 meters) by Sunday afternoon, about five feet above flood stage and enough to put the Highway 39 bridge near Hunt under water.</p>

<p>"Numerous secondary roads and bridges are flooded and very dangerous," a weather service warning said.</p>

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Emergency crews suspend search for flooding victims in central Texas amid new flood warnings.

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Beautiful or fatal? Picturesque dams hide a deadly legacy

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  • Beautiful or fatal? Picturesque dams hide a deadly legacy</p>

<p>Michele Haddon and JD Mullane, USA TODAY NETWORKJuly 13, 2025 at 8:01 PM</p>

<p>It was the day after the anniversary of his son's death when Jim Gentile heard a park ranger had gone missing near a low-head dam in Tyler State Park in Pennsylvania over Memorial Day Weekend.</p>

<p>Two days later, when the body of Alec Campbell had been recovered — his death a result of his kayak capsizing in fast moving water near by the Weir Dam on the Neshaminy Creek in Bucks County — Jim couldn't help but relive his own family's tragic loss.</p>

<p>His son Jonathan, who had been in town visiting from the Pittsburgh suburb of Mount Lebanon, drowned in the unforgiving currents of the nearby New Hope wing dam in 2022.</p>

<p>Jim Gentile looks out onto the New Hope wing dam on Monday, June 23, 2025 recalling the moments leading up to his 38-year-old son's death three years ago when his kayak capsized, leaving him trapped under the hydraulic currents created by the dam.</p>

<p>There were too many parallels to ignore.</p>

<p>The two men were both 38 years old when they died. Each one, a husband and a father.</p>

<p>Alec and Jonathan were both known for their involvement in their communities — Alec as a passionate educator who enjoyed connecting with visitors and students throughout his time as a park ranger, and Jonathan as a vibrant teacher, mentor and coach.</p>

<p>Both deaths, Jim said, were preventable.</p>

<p>"My son died, somebody else's son has died. In three years, nothing has been done," said Jim, a nurse who has since devoted much of his time advocating for the remediation and removal of low-head dams.</p>

<p>Jonathan Gentile, a Bucks County native, was 38 years old when he died after his kayak capsized at the New Hope Dam in 2022, leaving behind his wife, Kathy Rose, and son, Giancarlo.The dangers of New Hope Dam</p>

<p>Looking downstream toward the New Hope Dam on a recent Monday afternoon, the Delaware River gave off an air of tranquility, its glassy surface reflecting the tree-lined hills and clear blue sky above before cascading off the V-shaped stone structure below.</p>

<p>The conditions weren't much different the day Jim and Jonathan set out on their kayaks three years earlier.</p>

<p>"When approaching it, it looked just like the edge of an infinity pool. The water flowing over it looked so peaceful and calm," Jim recalled.</p>

<p>Water on the Delaware River flows downstream towards the New Hope wing dam, Monday, June 23, 2025.</p>

<p>The scene gave little indication of the dangers that waited for them on the other side.</p>

<p>Trailing a few yards behind, Jim watched Jonathan confidently paddle over the edge of the dam before falling just out of his line of sight for what should've just been a moment until he could catch up with his son.</p>

<p>But by the time he guided his boat over the same drop off, a mere 30 seconds later, Jonathan had completely vanished.</p>

<p>"I swam under the waterfalls, I saw his kayak lodged up under there, and all I kept thinking is, 'He's under the water,'" Jim said.</p>

<p>Jonathan Gentile, who died after drowning at the New Hope Dam in 2022, is pictured here in his kayak in 2020.</p>

<p>He desperately screamed his son's name over and over as he searched the river, knowing any chance of survival dwindled with each passing second. He spotted a lifejacket breaking the surface of the water several minutes later, and quickly made his way over and to find his unconscious son floating in it.</p>

<p>In the moments that followed, Jim did all he could in an attempt to save Jonathan's life, fighting against a strong current that threatened to rip his son away as he attempted to rescue him out of the water and onto the precarious rocky shore.</p>

<p>"I pulled him up and held him tight with his back on my chest," Jim said. "He started to turn purple. And I tried to blow air into his lungs, but I can't because there's too much water, and I tried to do CPR and couldn't because we were stuck on the rocks."</p>

<p>"I couldn't save him."</p>

<p>Thanks to a 911 call from one of the bystanders watching from a nearby condominium balcony, members of a marine rescue crew eventually made their way to the two men. They brought Jonathan to a flatter surface further down shore, where they could properly administer CPR and employ the use of an AED and other emergency medical interventions to get his heart beating again.</p>

<p>Jonathan survived two days in the hospital, hooked up to a ventilator, giving his family a chance to donate his organs and say their final goodbyes.</p>

<p>Low-head dams have killed more than 600 people</p>

<p>In the years that followed, Jim has turned his grief into action. He's advocated for adequate signage explicitly warning people of the dangers, and ultimately, the complete elimination of the more than 13,000 low-head dams that remain in the U.S.</p>

<p>Currently, the one in New Hope is considered a wing dam, but he believes the structure should be reclassified as a low-head dam, given its size and shape that creates the dangerous underwater hydraulic effect that his son had fallen victim to.</p>

<p>Jonathan Gentile died in 2022 after his kayak capsized in the Delaware River, trapping him underwater at the base of the New Hope wing dam for several minutes.</p>

<p>Low-head dams typically span the entire width of the waterway, according to the American Society of Civil Engineers. They're usually between 1- to 15-feet in height, allowing water to flow over their tops, resulting in a powerful "washing machine effect" that essentially traps people under water with little chance of escaping.</p>

<p>"The hydraulics of these things are generally not known by the public," Mike Parker, spokesman for the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission, told the Bucks County Courier Times, part of the USA TODAY Network. "There's a low-head dam in the Susquehanna (River) in Harrisburg that's killed around 30 people over the last few decades."</p>

<p>In Pennsylvania alone, more than 100 deaths have occurred at three dozen dams across the commonwealth, according to a study conducted by a team of researchers at Brigham Young University.</p>

<p>According to the report, the database that was compiled as a part of the project continues to be . While based on an extensive search of public records, it's not all-inclusive.</p>

<p>"As long as dangerous low-head dams exist, there will be more tragic cases and the database is destined to grow," the report concluded, asking lawmakers and engineers to use the information to determine remediation measures to improve public safety.</p>

<p>There are more than 600 names listed in the database. Alec and Jonathan are among them.</p>

<p>As difficult as it is to relive the events of that day, Jim is determined to keep telling his son's story. He carries the hope that something will change on the local, state and federal levels to prevent low-head dams from claiming more lives.</p>

<p>"It's hard coming here," he said, standing just yards away the dam that took his firstborn.</p>

<p>"But if it saves someone's son, someone's father, someone's husband, then I don't care how hard it is. ... These are preventable deaths, and they are turning a blind eye to public safety. It's irresponsible, and it's reckless. But nothing is being done."</p>

<p>Michele Haddon can be reached at [email protected]. JD Mullane can be reached at [email protected].</p>

<p>This article originally appeared on Bucks County Courier Times: Low-head dams have killed 600 across US. One dad wants change</p>

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At least 30 are killed in Israeli strikes in Gaza as war deaths top 58,000, officials say

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<p>WAFAA SHURAFA and IMAD ISSEID July 13, 2025 at 7:04 PM</p>

<p>Relatives carry the body of 13-year-old Seraje Ebrahim, killed in an Israeli strike on a drinking water distribution point, for burial outside Al-Awda Hospital in Nuseirat, central Gaza Strip, Sunday, July 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)</p>

<p>DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israeli strikes in the Gaza Strip killed at least 30 people on Sunday, including six children at a water collection point, local health officials said, despite attempts by mediators to bring about a ceasefire.</p>

<p>Israel and Hamas appeared no closer to a breakthrough in talks meant to pause the 21-month war and free some Israeli hostages. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was in Washington last week to discuss the deal with the Trump administration, but a new sticking point has emerged over the deployment of Israeli troops during the truce, raising questions over the feasibility of a new deal.</p>

<p>Israel says it will only end the war once Hamas surrenders, disarms and goes into exile, something it refuses to do. Hamas says it is willing to free all the remaining 50 hostages, less than half said to be alive, in exchange for an end to the war and the full withdrawal of Israeli forces.</p>

<p>Gaza's Health Ministry said Sunday that more than 58,000 people have been killed in the war. The ministry doesn't differentiate between civilians and combatants in its count but says more than half of the dead are women and children. In the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that sparked the war, Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people and abducted 251 in a raid on northern Israel.</p>

<p>Throughout the war in Gaza, violence has also surged in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where funerals were held Sunday for two Palestinians, including Palestinian-American Sayfollah Musallet, 20, who was killed in an attack by Israeli settlers, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry.</p>

<p>Children killed at a water collection point</p>

<p>In central Gaza, officials at Al-Awda Hospital said it received 10 bodies after an Israeli strike on a water collection point in nearby Nuseirat. Among the dead were six children, the hospital said.</p>

<p>Ramadan Nassar, a witness who lives in the area, told The that around 20 children and 14 adults were lined up Sunday morning to fill up water. When the strike occurred, everyone ran and some, including those who were severely injured, fell to the ground, he said.</p>

<p>He said Palestinians walk some 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) to fetch water from the area.</p>

<p>The Israeli military said it was targeting a militant but that a technical error made its munition fall "dozens of meters from the target." It said the incident was being examined.</p>

<p>Additionally, health officials said an Israeli strike hit a group of citizens walking in the street on Sunday afternoon, killing 11 people and injuring around 30 others in central Gaza City.</p>

<p>Dr. Ahmed Qandil, who specializes in general surgery and laparoscopic, was among those killed, the Gaza Health Ministry said in a statement. One of the ministry's spokespeople, Zaher al-Wahidi, told the AP that Qandil was on his way to Al-Ahli Arab Baptist Hospital when the strike happened. All bodies and those wounded were taken to Al-Ahli hospital, according to al-Wahidi.</p>

<p>In the central town of Zawaida, an Israeli strike on a home killed nine, including two women and three children, officials at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital said.</p>

<p>The military said it was unaware of a strike on the home, but has struck over 150 targets over the past 24 hours, including what it said are weapons storage facilities, missile launchers and sniping posts. Israel blames Hamas for civilian casualties because the militant group operates out of populated areas.</p>

<p>Funeral held for Palestinian-American killed in the West Bank</p>

<p>In the West Bank, where violence between Israeli troops and Palestinians has been compounded by attacks on Palestinians by Israeli settlers, funerals were held for a Palestinian-American and a Palestinian friend of his.</p>

<p>The Palestinian Health Ministry said Musallet, a Florida native, was killed after being beaten by Israeli settlers. Diana Halum, a cousin, said the attack occurred on his family's land. The Health Ministry initially identified him as Seifeddine Musalat, 23.</p>

<p>Musallet's friend, Mohammed al-Shalabi, was shot in the chest, according to the ministry.</p>

<p>On Sunday, their bodies were carried through the streets of Al-Mazraa a-Sharqiya, a town south of where they were killed. Mourners, waving Palestinian flags, chanted "God is great."</p>

<p>In a statement Saturday, Musallet's family said he was "a kind, hard-working, and deeply-respected young man, working to build his dreams." It said he built a business in Tampa, Florida, and that he was deeply connected to his Palestinians heritage.</p>

<p>Musallet's family said it wants the U.S. State Department to investigate his death and hold the settlers accountable. The State Department said it was aware of the reports of his death but had no comment out of respect for the family.</p>

<p>Israel's military has said Palestinians hurled rocks at Israelis in the area on Friday, lightly wounding two people and setting off a larger confrontation.</p>

<p>Palestinians and rights groups have long accused the military of ignoring settler violence.</p>

<p>___</p>

<p>Isseid reported from Al-Mazraa a-Sharqiya, West Bank. writers Fatma Khaled in Cairo and Melanie Lidman in Tel Aviv, Israel, contributed to this report.</p>

<p>___</p>

<p>Follow AP's war coverage at https://ift.tt/5JwErCL>

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At least 30 are killed in Israeli strikes in Gaza as war deaths top 58,000, officials say

<p>- At least 30 are killed in Israeli strikes in Gaza as war deaths top 58,000, officials say</p> <p...

 

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