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British aid worker killed in Gaza will be remembered as a hero, say family - BBC News British aid workers killed in Gaza will be remembered as heroes, say families - BBC News
(32 minutes later)
Two charities - Save the Children and Islamic Relief - say they will continue operating in Gaza, after an Israeli air strike killed seven aid workers in the territory. Earlier, we told you about two charities that have pledged to continue their operations in Gaza. Others, however, have decided to pause their work over security concerns.
Save the Children says its staff will "continue working around the clock" despite a "horrendous trend" of attacks on aid workers. Health charity Project Hope says that it will pause its work in Deir al-Balah and Rafah for the next three days "in solidarity with World Central Kitchen" while it reassesses the security situation.
The charity says it "takes all possible measures to keep our staff safe", but "that is getting harder". The humanitarian relief organisation has also called for an "immediate and permanent ceasefire" to allow groups such as themselves to "safely provide lifesaving care".
Meanwhile, Islamic Relief says its staff remain "at constant risk alongside every other civilian in Gaza", with every aid delivery being "difficult and perilous". This arrives just one day after World Central Kitchen and another US charity it works with, American Near East Refugee Aid (ANERA), announced they would be pausing their operations in the Strip.
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