The ministry said that the death toll from Israeli violations of the agreement, since it came into effect on October 11, 2025, has risen to 420 martyrs and 1,184 wounded.
In the latest developments on the ground, the Israeli occupation army killed three Palestinians, including a boy, and wounded others in various areas of the Gaza Strip on Sunday. A medical source reported that 15-year-old Alaa al-Din Muhammad Zuhair Asraf was killed by Israeli fire in the Jorat al-Lut area south of Khan Younis, one of the areas from which the army withdrew according to the ceasefire agreement.
Palestinian Fadi Najib Imad Salah was killed by Israeli drone fire northwest of Rafah, and fisherman Abdul Rahman Abdul Hadi al-Qan (32 years old) was killed after being shot in the head off the coast of the Gaza Strip. Other Palestinians were wounded, one critically, by Israeli naval gunfire in areas supposedly included in the withdrawal agreement.
In parallel, Israeli aircraft launched raids on areas in the northern Gaza Strip, west of Rafah and east of Gaza City, and carried out demolition operations on residential buildings east of Khan Younis, in addition to artillery shelling and heavy gunfire from military vehicles.
Cancellation of licenses of international humanitarian organizations
In a related context, the Hebrew Broadcasting Authority announced that Israel has begun canceling the operating licenses of 37 international organizations that bring humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip, on the grounds that they have not complied with a new security registration mechanism and submitted lists of their employees’ names.
She explained that the decision includes major organizations, including "Doctors Without Borders," and that licenses will be revoked as of January 1, with a grace period to end activities until March 1.
humanitarian aid throughout the war, and that the scope of aid will not be affected by this decision," according to the agency.
She added: "This step (revoking licenses) is being led by a joint team from several ministries, headed by the Ministry of Diaspora Affairs and Combating Anti-Semitism, and includes sending official letters to more than ten international organizations, including Doctors Without Borders."
The head of Doctors Without Borders, Isabelle Dufourny, warned that the Israeli decision could force the organization to halt its operations in Gaza by next March, describing the ban as a "flagrant overreach" that threatens humanitarian work in the sector.
The broadcasting authority claimed that "security investigations revealed the involvement of Doctors Without Borders employees in terrorist activities, and in two key cases, the organization withheld full information about the employees' identities and roles."
But according to the Hebrew newspaper Haaretz, last November, Israel’s decision to withdraw the licenses of international aid organizations was due to purely political reasons.
She explained that the Ministry of Diaspora Affairs now has broad authority to reject applications from organizations to operate or to revoke their licenses, for reasons including if it turns out that the organization "denies the existence of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state," or "works to delegitimize Israel," as well as if the organization supports "the trial of Israelis in a foreign country or before an international court" on the grounds of genocide crimes in Gaza, according to Haaretz.
These steps coincide with Palestinian and international warnings of a worsening humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza, where some 1.5 million displaced people are living in dire shortages of food, medicine and relief supplies, while Palestinian authorities assert that Israel is not complying with the ceasefire agreement to allow aid in, leaving the sector on the brink of famine.
