Wednesday, April 15, 2026

As world focuses on Iran, Israel ‘engineering starvation policy’ in Gaza




As world focuses on Iran, Israel ‘engineering starvation policy’ in Gaza


Israel’s weaponisation of logistics in Gaza has caused severe shortage of fuel, food and medicines, piling misery on Palestinians


Palestinians gather to receive food from a charity kitchen, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, March 24, 2026 [Hasseb Al Wazeer/Reuters]



By Mohammad Mansour
Published On 15 Apr 2026


With the global attention fixated on the diplomatic efforts to end the war on Iran, Israel has systematically escalated its attacks on Gaza and choked off vital aid, plunging the besieged enclave into what economic experts are now calling an “engineered, compounded famine”.

The number of aid trucks entering Gaza has dropped drastically in violation of the October 2025 ceasefire with Hamas. Since then, the Government Media Office in Gaza has recorded 2,400 military violations by Israeli forces, resulting in the killing of more than 700 Palestinians.


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On Tuesday, Israel’s military killed at least 11 Palestinians, including two children, in separate attacks across the war-torn Strip.

The intensity of these attacks spiked during peak regional tensions. Between February 28 and April 8, while Israel and the US were engaged in a bombing campaign against Iran, Israeli forces bombed Gaza on 36 out of those 40 days.

In the last five weeks alone, more than 100 people have been killed, including Al Jazeera journalist Mohammed Wishah. Israel has killed more than 72,336 people since launching the brutal military offensive on October 7, 2023.





The ‘truck deception’

While Israel frequently claims it is allowing hundreds of aid trucks into Gaza, Palestinian officials and economic experts argue these figures are a deliberate mathematical deception.

According to the Government Media Office, only 41,714 aid and commercial trucks have entered Gaza over the past six months. This represents a mere 37 percent of the 110,400 trucks stipulated under the ceasefire agreement. The fuel situation is even more critical, with only 1,366 fuel trucks entering out of a promised 9,200 – an abysmal 14 percent compliance rate.

Recent daily logs highlight the severity of the bottleneck. On April 13, a total of only 102 aid trucks and 7 fuel trucks were allowed into the entire Strip, alongside 216 commercial trucks – a fraction of the more than 600 total trucks required daily under the “ceasefire” deal. By April 14, the numbers remained critically low with 122 aid trucks and 12 fuel trucks entering.

Crucially, Israeli authorities entirely shut down additional entry points like the Zikim and Kissufim crossings, which had processed dozens of commercial and aid trucks just a day prior, bottlenecking all limited traffic exclusively through Karem Abu Salem.

Mohammed Abu Jayyab, a Palestinian economic expert based in Gaza, told Al Jazeera that Israel utilises a “technical and commercial deception” to inflate these numbers.

“An Israeli truck carries up to 32 or 34 pallets… which are then unloaded into two or three smaller, dilapidated Palestinian trucks on the Gaza side,” Abu Jayyab explained. “Consequently, the UN and Israel count double or triple the actual number of Israeli trucks entering.” One pallet holds roughly 1 tonne of goods or food items.

Furthermore, Israel recently banned mixed-load shipments. If a merchant brings in 20 pallets of sugar, the remaining 12 pallet spaces on the truck must remain empty, yet it is still registered as a full commercial truck.

“The political agreement stipulated a ‘truck’ but did not specify quantities, weights, or the number of pallets,” Abu Jayyab noted, allowing Israel to weaponise logistics to restrict aid while appearing compliant.
Engineering starvation

This logistical strangulation is part of a broader strategy. Hassan Abu Riyala, undersecretary of the Ministry of National Economy in Gaza, stated in a meeting published on the ministry’s official Telegram channel that Israel is “engineering a policy of starvation”.

To ensure chaos in the local markets and sky-high prices, Israel has deliberately dismantled civil regulatory bodies. “The occupation targeted the majority of the crews that monitored prices, and assassinated the [former] undersecretary of the Ministry of Economy and five directors general during the war,” Abu Riyala said.

The results have been devastating, basic commodities have become scarce, and bread production has plummeted to 200 tonnes daily, far below the 450 tonnes required to feed the population.

“We manage this structural deficit under exceptional and coercive conditions,” Ismail Al-Thawabteh, director general of the Government Media Office, told Al Jazeera.

He described the ongoing reduction of supplies despite the truce as a “systematic restriction of basic supplies” that pushes the population towards dangerous levels of food insecurity. Fresh produce has skyrocketed, with 1kg (2.2lb) of tomatoes jumping from $1.50 to nearly $4 in a matter of weeks.

Moreover, the humanitarian catastrophe is being accelerated by the withdrawal of major aid groups. Al-Thawabteh noted that the scaling back or suspension of operations by key international institutions, most notably the World Food Programme (WFP), due to Israeli restrictions, represents a “highly dangerous development” that threatens the complete collapse of Gaza’s relief system.

“We issue an urgent appeal to the international community and the guarantors of the agreement to immediately pressure Israel to open the crossings… before reaching a point of no return and an imminent human explosion,” he said.


A ‘compounded famine’

The crisis has evolved beyond a simple lack of food; it is now a complete collapse of the Palestinian economy.

Abu Jayyab described the current situation as a “compounded famine”. With unemployment soaring to 80 percent and the destruction of more than 160,000 jobs across industrial, agricultural, and commercial sectors, the population has entirely lost its purchasing power.

“It has become illogical to link the entry of food supplies from the crossings to their availability to Palestinian citizens,” Abu Jayyab told Al Jazeera. Even when goods reach the market, between 70 to 80 percent of families simply cannot afford to buy them due to the total absence of income.

This extreme deprivation is forcing civilians into life-threatening alternatives. “The return of long queues for bakeries, and citizens resorting to burning plastic and waste in the absence of cooking gas, are dangerous field indicators of an unprecedented deterioration,” Al-Thawabteh warned, noting that government health facilities are currently struggling to treat respiratory and skin diseases resulting from this toxic pollution.


The medical blockade

Meanwhile, the stranglehold extends to Gaza’s most vulnerable patients. While the ceasefire agreement mandated the opening of the Rafah crossing for medical evacuations, Israel has kept the borders tightly restricted.

Over the past six months, only 2,703 people have been allowed to cross through Rafah out of an expected 36,800 – a compliance rate of just 7 percent. Consequently, only 8 percent of the severely wounded and chronically ill patients slated for urgent medical evacuation have been permitted to leave. According to the World Health Organization, roughly 18,000 people are still trapped in Gaza waiting for life-saving treatment abroad.



(Al Jazeera)


***


One nuke into Tel Aviv and the World will solve 98% of its conflict problems.


Death toll from India's power plant boiler blast rises to 17





Wednesday, 15 Apr 2026 | 9:11 PM MYT


NEW DELHI: (Bernama-Xinhua) The death toll in a boiler blast at a power plant in the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh has risen to 17, police said on Wednesday (April 15), reported Xinhua.

The blast took place on Tuesday at the Vedanta power plant in Singhitarai village of Sakti district, about 228 kilometres northeast of Raipur, the capital city of Chhattisgarh.

"Still, 19 people are undergoing treatment at different hospitals," said Prafull Thakur, a senior police official in Sakti.

According to Thakur, the power plant's safety team is carrying out searches in the area, and police have sought help from the State Disaster Response Force.

Police believe a tube in the boiler in Unit 1 exploded, spewing "superheated steam" on the workers present there and triggering a massive fire in the power plant.

The local government has ordered a magisterial inquiry into the deadly blast.

Vedanta Limited Chhattisgarh Thermal Power Plant has also initiated a separate inquiry to ascertain the causes of the explosion. - Bernama-Xinhua

Diesel down 75 sen, unsubsidised petrol drops 25 sen










Diesel down 75 sen, unsubsidised petrol drops 25 sen



Published: Apr 15, 2026 8:32 PM
Updated: 10:32 PM



The government has announced cuts across all retail fuel prices, with diesel in Peninsular Malaysia falling by 75 sen per litre - three times the reduction applied to unsubsidised petrol grades in the same weekly adjustment.

From April 16 to April 22, diesel in Peninsular Malaysia will be priced at RM5.97 per litre, down from RM6.72.

Non-subsidised petrol prices have also been revised downward. RON95 will fall 25 sen to RM4.02 per litre, whilst RON97 drops by the same margin to RM5.10 per litre.


READ MORE: Petrol dealers group cites cashflow pressure, in talks with govt amid fuel volatility


In a statement today, the Finance Ministry said that the reductions follow declining international market prices and apply according to the government’s automatic pricing mechanism.




Separately, the ministry also unveiled an increase to the Budi Diesel cash assistance, raising the monthly payment to RM400 for approximately 350,000 recipients under the Budi Individu and Budi Agri-Komoditi programmes, which adds RM35 million to the monthly outlay.


READ MORE: Fuel crisis: Some stations running out of petrol but disruptions intermittent


This is the second such increase, following a rise from RM200 to RM300 in March 2026.

Under the targeted subsidy framework, RON95 petrol under the Budi95 programme remains priced at RM1.99 per litre, while diesel in Sabah, Sarawak, and Labuan remains at RM2.15 per litre.




“In addition, the Fertiliser Incentive Rate for Farmers for the 2026 planting season has been raised from RM160 to RM300 per hectare, involving an additional allocation of approximately RM40 million and benefitting nearly 200,000 paddy farmers to help the agro-food sector manage rising input costs.


READ MORE: Study on Budi95-like mechanism for diesel subsidy to be tabled next week


“Overall, the government is estimated to bear approximately RM7 billion per month based on current prices.

“The RON95 subsidy has increased from approximately RM300 million per month before the conflict to approximately RM4 billion per month, whilst the diesel subsidy has surged from approximately RM400 million to approximately RM3 billion per month,” the ministry said.


4 dead after Turkey’s second school shooting in 2 days


FMT:

4 dead after Turkey’s second school shooting in 2 days


The shooter was in the eighth-grade and concealed their father's guns in a backpack to carry out the attack


First aid officers carry a body bag outside a school in Kahramanmaras, southern Turkey. (DHA/AFP pic)


ANKARA: A student shot at least four people dead including fellow pupils and wounded at least 20 others at a middle school in southeastern Turkey on Wednesday, the local governor said, marking the country’s second school attack in two days.

Three students and one teacher were left dead in the incident in the province of Kahramanmaras, governor Mukerrem Unluer told reporters.

The shooter died in the attack.


The student was in the eighth-grade at the school and concealed their father’s guns in a backpack to carry out the attack, the governor added.

School shootings are very rare in Turkey.

Television footage from the scene on Wednesday showed ambulances arriving at the school where police and crowds had gathered by the gate. Justice minister Akin Gurlek said on X that an investigation was launched into the attack.

On Tuesday, a former student opened fire at a school in the southeastern province of Sanliurfa, wounding at least 16 people, including students and teachers.


Two Malaysian vessels en route from Strait of Hormuz, five still remain in area, says communications minister






Two Malaysian vessels en route from Strait of Hormuz, five still remain in area, says communications minister



A ship is seen post-transiting the Strait of Hormuz, which is now a point of contention between the US and Iran. — Reuters pic

Wednesday, 15 Apr 2026 6:43 PM MYT


PUTRAJAYA, April 15 — Communications minister Datuk Fahmi Fadzil said two Malaysian vessels are currently on their way back to the country, while five others remain in the Strait of Hormuz.

He said one of the vessels is expected to arrive on April 17 and another anticipated to reach its destination the following week.

“At present, two vessels are reported to be en route. One is expected to arrive on April 17, while the other is likely to arrive the following week.

“Five vessels remain in the Strait of Hormuz,” he said during the ministry’s weekly press conference here today.


He also said the government will continue to closely monitor the movement of the vessels and ensure that all aspects of crew safety and cargo security are prioritised.


Last Friday, Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim said that one of the seven vessels previously stranded in the Strait of Hormuz had safely passed through the waters and is now heading towards Malaysia.

Anwar also said that the remaining six vessels have received approval and are awaiting their turn to pass through the key trade route.

Iranian commander threatens shipping in Gulf and Red Sea if US naval blockade continues

 


Iranian commander threatens shipping in Gulf and Red Sea if US naval blockade continues


Summary



  1. Iran threatens shipping in Gulf, Red Sea, and Gulf of Oman if US naval blockade continuespublished at 20:56
    Breaking

    Ghoncheh Habibiazad
    Senior reporter, BBC Persian

    Ali Abdollahi - the commander for Iran’s Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, the country’s highest operational command co-ordinating the armed forces - says that if the US continues its blockade and creates "insecurity for Iran’s commercial vessels and oil tankers", it will "constitute a prelude to a violation of the ceasefire".

    Abdollahi adds that Iran’s armed forces would consequently not allow "any exports or imports to continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman, and the Red Sea".

    He did not specify which countries' exports and imports could be affected, although the bodies of water he mentions cover a vast area.

    The US blockade of Iranian ports began on Monday. On Wednesday, the US military said "no ships made it past the blockade" in the first 24 hours, with six merchant vessels forced to turn around in the Gulf of Oman.

    The US-Iran ceasefire, referenced by Abdollahiwas announced on 8 April after nearly six weeks of conflict between Iran and the US and Israel.

    The first round of negotiations between Iran and the US failed - although Donald Trump says US-Iran talks could restart in the next two days. Iran is yet to confirm.

    A regional map highlighting Iran in white with its name in red. Surrounding countries are labeled in grey, neighbouring Iraq to the west and other Middle Eastern countries including Syria, Jordan, Israel, Gaza and Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, and Oman. Bodies of water such as the Red Sea and the Gulf of Oman are marked in blue.
  2. Gas prices will go down 'tremendously' once war is settled, says Trumppublished at 20:33

    US President Donald Trump speaks to members of the media outside the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, USA, 13 April 2026Image source,EPA/Shutterstock

    We can now bring you some more lines from US President Donald Trump's interview with Maria Bartiromo on Fox Business Network, after a snippet was released earlier.

    In the full interview, Trump says that if you give Iran a nuclear weapon, "the world will be blown up".

    He adds that once the war with Iran has been settled, gas prices will go down "tremendously", adding that electricity prices will decrease too.

    Trump describes the Iran nuclear deal, signed in 2015, as the "worst deal ever made" - and says it gave the country a "short term path" to a nuclear weapon.

    He adds that if the US did not bomb Iran's nuclear facilities last year, the country would have used a nuclear weapon on Israel and its Middle East neighbours, as well as the US.

    Iran has always said that its nuclear programme is entirely peaceful and that it has never sought to develop a nuclear weapon.

    Trump says that after he heard reports that China was giving weapons to Iran, he wrote a letter to President Xi asking him not to.

    Xi wrote Trump a letter back, "essentially" saying China isn't doing that, Trump adds.

  3. Customers will pay for rising air freight costs, trade body sayspublished at 20:01

    Jemma Crew
    Business reporter

    Emirates planeImage source,EPA

    Brandon Fried, executive director of the Airforwarders Association - the trade body that represents hundreds of US freight forwarding companies – says disruption to cargo is "broad and on a wide scale".

    Middle East carriers such as Emirates, Etihad and Qatar normally carry up to a fifth of the world’s cargo but are operating under capacity, causing congestion and delays, he tells BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme.

    This is "starting to have a worldwide effect", he says, adding the rising cost of jet fuel, rerouting cargo, risk insurance and extra security measures are all significantly adding to the issue.

    He says it varies but some air freight rates have risen by 20-30% in recent weeks.

    "As an industry we can only absorb this for so long, sooner or later the actual customer pays for it."

  4. Tehran's neighbourhoods unrecognisable, charity worker tells BBCpublished at 19:32

    People view debris from a damaged residential building that, according to Iranian authorities, was hit by a strike onImage source,Getty Images
    Image caption,

    People view the aftermath of a strike on a building that, according to Iranian authorities, was hit on 4 March

    Martje van Raamsdonk has been on the ground in Iran for the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) - an international aid agency - since November.

    The NRC is one of very few international humanitarian organisations inside Iran and Martje told the BBC's Newsday programme this morning about the extent of the damage she has witnessed in the country's capital Tehran.

    "They bombed almost daily in densely populated areas so here in Tehran, which is a huge city of over ten million people, many buildings have been destroyed and neighbourhoods are unrecognisable with buildings gone," Martje says.

    "My colleagues also are sharing very horrific stories. They live across Tehran and also in cities like Isfahan they have been very close to attacks, to missiles falling. Hearing those sounds having their roofs and windows shaken and a huge impact with only a few blocks away."

    A woman stands next to debris lying in front of a residential building damaged by a strikeImage source,Reuters
    Image caption,

    A woman stands next to debris in front of a residential building damaged by a strike in Tehran on 4 March, image taken on 14 April

  5. Israeli military says it is operating with 'significant force' in part of southern Lebanonpublished at 19:15

    Smoke rises behind buildings following an Israeli strike in Lebanon.Image source,Reuters
    Image caption,

    Smoke rises behind buildings following an Israeli strike in Lebanon, near the border with Israel

    The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have issued a fresh evacuation order for parts of southern Lebanon where it says "air strikes are ongoing".

    The IDF says they are operating with "significant force" in the area south of the Zahrani River, and people should evacuate immediately and head north.

    "Anyone present near Hezbollah elements, their facilities, or their combat vehicles endangers their life," the statement adds.

  6. Any attempts to force Iran to surrender are destined to fail, president sayspublished at 19:00

    Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian delivers remarks during the 'Council for the Development of Quranic Culture' in Tehran, Iran, on February 24, 2026.Image source,Iranian Presidency handout via Getty Images

    Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian says any attempts by the US or Israel to force Iran to "surrender" are "destined to fail and the Iranian nation will never accept such an approach".

    Speaking at a meeting with Tehran's emergency service officials on Wednesday, Pezeshkian says Tehran is not looking for war or instability.

    Instead, the president says "[Iran] has always stressed the need for constructive talks and interactions with various countries".

    His remarks, reported by Iranian media, come after Trump said US-Iran talks could restart in Pakistan "in the next two days", but Tehran is yet to comment.