Gaza ceasefire violations January 2026: Bombings persist as 37 aid groups face bans
Reports of Gaza ceasefire violations January 2026 emerge as Israeli strikes hit tent camps in Khan Younis. Meanwhile, Israel has banned 37 major aid groups including MSF.
The ink on the ceasefire paper hasn't dried, but the blood on the ground is already fresh. Despite a U.S.-brokered agreement reached on October 10, military operations in Gaza have not ceased. On January 8, 2026, an Israeli strike on a family tent in the al-Mawasi area of Khan Younis killed at least three people, marking another tragic chapter in the region's history.
Gaza ceasefire violations January 2026 and rising civilian toll
According to the Palestinian Health Ministry, at least 425 Palestinians have been killed and 1,206 wounded since October 11, just one day after the ceasefire took effect. In Jabalia, an 11-year-old girl was reportedly killed by gunfire. These deaths occur amidst a brutal winter, where heavy rains have flooded makeshift camps, leaving hundreds of thousands of families without adequate shelter or warmth.
Israel revokes licenses for major humanitarian organizations
The humanitarian crisis is entering a darker phase as Israel revoked the operating licenses of 37 aid organizations, including Doctors Without Borders (MSF) and the Norwegian Refugee Council. Authorities cited a failure to comply with new, stringent reporting regulations. MSF and other groups reported that their international staff were refused entry this week, a move experts say contravenes basic humanitarian principles and puts countless Palestinian lives at risk.
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