[Video transcript]
Palestinians deliver bodies of their loved ones to the morgue at Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis.
Health officials and witnesses say Israeli forces opened fire on crowds outside an aid site run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation near Rafah. The Israeli- and US-backed foundation denied there were any incidents, accusing Hamas of fabricating rumors. The Israeli military said it was reviewing the matter, but was unaware of injuries caused by IDF fire.
Arafat Essiam: "Why do they tell them to go to the aid point — why? And then they go there and get killed. What they're doing to us is wrong, they're lying to us. My younger brother was killed — he went to get aid for his children, and he was killed. Why? They say this is aid for the people and a humanitarian case. Why are they doing this?"
Gazans have been forced to scramble for limited resources in chaos.
Woman: "Shame on them, we have never reached this point before. Why is this happening? My son has not had bread in 4 days."
The United Nations has warned the new system of aid delivery puts Gazans at risk.
Jonathan Whittall, OPT Head of office, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA): "This newly developed distribution scheme, for lack of a better phrase, is more than just the control of aid. It's essentially engineered scarcity."
This comes as Hamas and Israel exchanged blame over failing to secure a ceasefire.
On Saturday, Hamas sought amendments to a US-backed proposal for a temporary ceasefire with Israel in Gaza.
President Donald Trump's envoy rejected the group's response as "totally unacceptable."
Without a deal, Gazans are left to fend for themselves, as the promise of a ceasefire remains out of their grasp.