National News
Big-name US consulting firm pulls out of Gaza Humanitarian Foundation — for shame?

The Boston Consulting Group, one of the world’s leading management companies, has pulled out of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation as criticism of its operations and controversy around reported IDF shootings of Palestinians arriving to get food have ballooned in the last three days.
The US-based BCG is one of the ‘Big Three’ in the management consultancy world, alongside McKinsey and Co. and Bain and Co. It had reportedly designed and was managing the implementation of operations at the Foundation — which has, in somewhat murky fashion, both US and Israeli (Mossad) backers.
The Foundation has also seen several top officers quit, just in the last week alone, as several media reports have noted — including this one from the Guardian. Leading the exodus, literally, was the Foundation’s former executive director Jake Wood, a former US Marine who resigned because he could not ensure the GHF’s independence from Israeli interests. That was 26 May.
Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) Executive Director Jake Wood announces resignation, effective immediately. pic.twitter.com/2x2elrWpBp
— Joseph Haboush (@jhaboush) May 25, 2025
As for Johnnie Moore, who replaced Wood on 3 June, he is a member of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom — and an adviser to POTUS Donald Trump on ‘inter-faith issues’.
He has been a strident defender of the GHF since well before he took charge, calling out UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres on X with an @, designating him a liar amplifying a Hamas-directed disinformation campaign.
& too many people in the press spread the rumor immediately as truth‼️
It wasn’t even a rumor. It was disinformation!
All of this is exactly why GHF is so important. It’s the only source of aid which cannot be weaponized, manipulated or monetized by the terrorist mafia. https://t.co/pQmn6lYJfK— Rev. Johnnie Moore ن (@JohnnieM) June 1, 2025
The Guardian noted:
‘A biography on the Kairos website calls Moore a “noted evangelical friend of the State of Israel” and says that he has played an important role in US outreach to Middle Eastern governments, including in the conclusion of the Abraham accords to normalise relations between Israel and Arab states.’
What he does not have, the report pointed out, is any experience with humanitarian aid operations.
Meanwhile, the BCG — which was setting prices and supporting and supplying logistical partners for the Foundation’s four distribution hubs has bowed out, leaving the GHF to close down operations Wednesday, 4 June, to allow for clearly unscheduled “update, organization and efficiency improvement work” — just after it announced it was going to try out a women-only lane at the aid centre in Khan Younis, Rafah, for its next distribution day.
Per a Washington Post report citing a spokesperson for the firm, the company has terminated its contract with GHF and placed one of its senior partners, who was leading the project, on leave — pending an internal review.
How non-partisan said review might prove we do not know, but the same report notes an interesting discrepancy of accounts — pun intended. While a BCG spokesperson said its involvement with GHF was pro bono, a source ‘familiar with its operations’ claimed monthly invoices of over $1 million were presented to the Foundation.
Intriguingly, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation’s X handle is @CallElection — a hint perhaps at a not very neutral political agenda?
It has, in a recent post, stated that among its objectives is not just helping all “innocent” people in Gaza but also saving them from “Hamas and UN groups that harm them” (italics ours).
The UN’s harmful act, apparently, is to point out people are dying in the attempt to obtain GHF aid.
Women and girls in #Gaza face an unbearable choice:
Die of starvation or die trying to find food.
For the 3rd consecutive day, over 100 people have been reported killed or injured while seeking life-saving food assistance at Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distribution sites. pic.twitter.com/qCLo6iqFum— UN Women (@UN_Women) June 3, 2025
The GHF, however, yesterday, 3 June, took credit — via Moore — for delivering more than 7 million meals to Gazans in the last week.
These are numbers for which no independent verification is available, in large part because the aid centre in question is closed to international media (and of course Palestinian media are to be seen as inherently biased, maybe even Hamas).
But back to the GHF, which has said it expects to resume operations on Thursday, 5 May.
The UN has said GHF operations are designed to maintain scarcity and herd people to this danger zone in Rafah, in a highly militarised space — which has been designated as a safe zone in the past, only for people to be bombarded once in the refugee camps here like fish in a barrel — where the IDF army acknowledges shooting anyone who strays off the narrow designated path to get out ahead, because that is a threat to Israel’s soldiers.
Inside Israel's Gaza 'Humanitarian' Foundation death camps. A system of engineered scarcity to maintain control over a population through food and using starvation as a weapon.
Source: UN Media Library pic.twitter.com/LiQreoMjyo— Translating Falasteen (Palestine) (@translatingpal) June 1, 2025
Israel has had a little crow about how well things are going too.
Curiously, the official government handle repeatedly refers to the GHF as US-led and makes no mention of its own support of the Foundation.
Want to see what real aid looks like, ’ ?
As part of a U.S.-led effort to deliver food directly to the people of Gaza, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation is packing aid boxes and transferring them to trusted… pic.twitter.com/oazjjCvSQF— Israel ישראל (@Israel) June 2, 2025
Amongst the contractors BCG was likely facilitating for GHF are the US private security contractors employed to stave off alleged Hamas militants seizing supplies from aid trucks in Gaza. They are guarding not only the aid convoys but the three (out of four) distribution hubs currently operational in southern Gaza.
These distribution centres have been called a “fig leaf” for Israel — and ally United States — to facilitate the displacement of Palestinians by UN aid chief Tom Fletcher in his briefing to the United Nations Security Council earlier.
The UN has also repeatedly denied any militant activity siphoning off aid supplies at scale, which is the whole raison d’être for GHF’s existence — supposedly.
On the other hand, when it comes to the shootings near the aid hubs, the Associated Press reports that the Israeli military has only said it fired warning shots in several instances — and acknowledged having fired directly at a few ‘suspects’ who ignored warnings and approached its forces. It has denied opening fire on civilians; and, for once, has not claimed Hamas fired in the area of the hubs, though it says it is ‘still investigating’.
What we do know is the crowds desperate for food and other essentials are forced to pass close to the areas where Israeli soldiers are stationed.
And the desperation is a known and understandable factor, juxtaposed against Israel’s 5 a.m. curfew and the narrow corridors ‘allowed’ for movement — with the GHF having started aid distribution on 26 May, following a nearly three-month Israeli blockade that has pushed Gaza’s population of more than 2 million people to the brink of famine.
Add to this that, while there are three distribution hubs — one in central Gaza and two on the outskirts of the now mostly uninhabited city of Rafah — not all of them operate daily.
If people break rank or queue up at 3 a.m., who can blame them?
Apparently, the IDF and Israel’s staunch allies do.
To reach the sites in Rafah, Palestinians must walk for miles along a designated route where the GHF says the Israeli military is in charge of security rather than its own US-based contractor. In statements to the public, the GHF has warned people to stay on the road, since leaving it “represents a great danger”.
That danger, in this case, is surely not Hamas.
Distribution usually starts at 5 a.m. each day. But thousands of Palestinians start walking hours earlier, desperate not to miss out on food. That means large crowds passing by Israeli troops in the dark.
When GHF paused aid distribution on Wednesday, it did say that it was discussing with the IDF measures to improve civilian safety, including changes to traffic management and troop training in this militarised zone (which by definition is barred to media).
Heaviest fire near army base
While shootings have been reported near all three hubs, the heaviest occurred Sunday (1 June) and Tuesday (3 June) at the Flag Roundabout. The traffic circle is located on the designated route about a kilometre northwest of the distribution hub in the Tel al-Sultan district of Rafah — a few hundred metres from an Israeli army base.
Witnesses said that in the early hours Sunday, as crowds made their way down the coastal road toward the hub, Israeli troops fired warning shots and made announcements through drones flying overhead, telling them to turn back and return when the hub opened at 5 a.m.
By 3 a.m., however, thousands were massed at the Flag Roundabout. That was when Israeli troops started firing, with guns, tanks and drones, three Palestinian witnesses said. They said they saw people falling dead or wounded as the crowd scattered for cover.
Mohammed Ahmed, one man in the crowd, said he saw no provocative acts before the shooting. He said troops “may have opened fire because they felt threatened by the thousands of people in the area”.
Witnesses gave similar accounts of Tuesday’s shooting, around 4 a.m., at the same roundabout.
Israel says it only fires warning shots to control crowds
The Israeli military said it fired warning shots on Sunday at “several suspects” approaching them. On Tuesday, it said it “fired to drive away suspects”. In a statement, army spokesman Effie Defrin said “the numbers of casualties published by Hamas were exaggerated” but the incident was being investigated.
He also again accused Hamas of “trying to disrupt the arrival of aid” to Palestinians and pointed to drone footage that the military says shows armed men firing at civilians trying to collect aid in the nearby city of Khan Younis, where there are no GHF sites.
AP reported that it could not independently verify the video, where it was not clear who was being targeted. In its statements, the IDF does not mention any armed Palestinians.
The GHF, meanwhile, claims there has been no violence in or around its distribution centres.
On Tuesday, GHF acknowledged that the IDF was investigating — but that the probe was into whether civilians were wounded “after moving beyond the designated safe corridor and into a closed military zone” in an area “well beyond our secure distribution site”.
A spokesperson added that the GHF was “saddened to learn that a number of civilians were injured and killed after moving beyond the designated safe corridor”.
Spate of casualties overwhelm hospitals
Officials at the Red Cross field hospital in Rafah and at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, meanwhile, report being overwhelmed by casualties — including women and children brought in from areas close to the distribution sites. They said most were suffering from gunshot wounds.
An aid worker at one hospital said the morgue was overflowing and that the wounded filled every bed, with more on the floor. Many had gunshot wounds to the buttocks and legs. The worker had spoken to AP on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to talk to the media.
Aid workers in Gaza say there is still a lot of uncertainty about what is happening and why so many people are being shot, injured and killed. The aid workers are unable to operate closer to the sites because they are military zones.
Humanitarian groups, meanwhile, have warned for weeks that having people collect aid in areas with a military presence would expose them to violence.
“This was a ludicrous and ineffective distribution mechanism that was going to end up deadly, which is, tragically, exactly what we are seeing,” said Arwa Damon, founder of the International Network for Aid, Relief and Assistance (INARA) — and a former senior journalist with CNN.
Thank you for having me on @FareedZakaria https://t.co/NAFKUXSzCg
— Arwa Damon (@IamArwaDamon) June 1, 2025
How UN-run humanitarian aid operations differ
The UN-run and allied systems operate differently, in that workers take aid to Palestinians wherever they are, rather than inviting them to cross hostile territory with no shelter nearby.
“It is appalling that the humanitarian sector that knows how to do their job is being prevented from doing it because of the false narrative that Hamas controls the aid,” Damon said.
Deadly encounters around aid distribution aren’t entirely new. In February 2024, Israeli troops guarding an aid convoy heading to northern Gaza opened fire as a crowd of desperate Palestinians stripped supplies off the trucks. More than 100 people were killed, according to Gaza’s health ministry, which is led by medical professionals but reports to the Hamas-run government.
After investigating that incident, Israel said its troops fired on a “number of suspects” who ignored warning shots and advanced toward its forces. It said a stampede around the trucks caused “significant harm to civilians.” EU and UN officials at the time said most of the casualties were from Israeli fire.
A race for food boxes
Palestinians have described a frenzied free-for-all to get food once they reach the GHF’s distribution sites.
Boxes of food are left piled up on pallets in an area surrounded by fences and earth berms. Once the sites’ gates are opened, the crowds rush in with everyone grabbing what they can. Witnesses say some people take multiple boxes, which quickly run out, and many must then leave empty-handed.
The GHF issued a video from the Tel al-Sultan hub showing Palestinians racing pell-mell toward the boxes.
Aid workers say the supplies are far from enough, though the GHF says each box contains enough food for a family of five to eat for 3–4 days. Most boxes contain flour, sugar, cooking oil, pasta and tuna cans, among other items.
“Our team on the ground reports these boxes are woefully insufficient for ensuring children’s well-being,” said Tess Ingram of UNICEF. “It doesn’t have to be this way.”
With AP inputs
National News
U-turn of RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat

The National Swayam Sevak Association (RSS) supremo Mohan Bhagwat has demonstrated that a politician can be seen as a U-turn on the ongoing debate about retirement age, which was triggered by his first comments, firmly denying that he had ever suggested as a benchmark of retirement.
His comment believes that his earlier comments have long been seen as a veil sign for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who turned 75 next month, as Bhagwat himself does.
In particular, the BJP’s own internal policy, as has been implemented by PM Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah, has once turned 75 years old, or she becomes a part of it. Guide circle ,
Speaking in a ‘100 -year journey’ of the incident of Sangh -New Horizon on Thursday, Bhagwat clarified his earlier comments and dismissed all interpretations, stating that he was wrongly based on his words.
Referring to a humorous anecdote by former RSS leader Moropant Pingal, God explained the intention of his previous statements. He said, “I quoted Moropant, which was very funny; he would bounce you on his chair,” he said, remembering the stories from the launch of Pingal’s biography in Nagpur.
One of the anecdotes consisted of a senior RSS leader HV Shashadari, who used to offer pingal with a shawl at the age of 75 – some Bhagwat said it was joking and not as a call for retirement.
National News
Bihar sir: More than 1.95 lakhs filed for changes; 25,000 settled

The Election Commission of India (ECI) on Thursday announced that it had received more than 1.95 lakh applications from individuals requesting the inclusion or exclusion of names from Bihar’s draft electoral roles. Of these, around 25,000 have already been addressed, Tiwari said.
Between submissions, 79 was filed by CPI (ML) -Liberation and three were filed by Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD). Both sides are recognized as state-level political institutions in Bihar.
As the process of filing claims and objections enters in its last four days, any such application has been submitted – including any national party – BJP or Congress.
The Commission did not break how many of the total 1,95,802 requests are especially related to the inclusion or exclusion under the ‘claims and objections’ category.
In media reports, an anonymous officer was quoted, saying, “claims and objections are negligible, as compared to more than 60 million names from the draft list for various reasons.”
According to the pole body, till Monday, documentation has been obtained for 99.11 percent of the 7.24 crore voters listed in the draft role.
The draft voter list was released on 1 August as a special intensive amendment (SIR) exercise in Bihar.
In a statement released on Sunday, August 24, the ECI highlighted the claim and objection to the citizens to fix any error in the draft role and to present any of their documents that they may have left while filling their calculations.
Between 24 June and 24 August, the Commission said that 98.2 percent of the voters presented their documents within the 60-day window.
Meanwhile, the Supreme Court has directed the Commission to accept the Aadhaar Card or one of the 11 approved identity documents, demanding to be added to the election register.
In turn, the ECI has appealed to the court to have their trust in the Commission to handle the SIR process in Bihar before the upcoming elections.
National News
Assam’s identity crisis: politics of history, fear and exclusion

Assam is in troubled and upheaval today, one of the most beautiful and bounts states in India. The reason for this is ‘outsiders’, mainly Bengali Muslims-Automatically Bangladeshi is a deep-root concern among Swadeshi Assamia as Bangladeshi. The problem, however, is more complex.
Ahm integrated the Brahmaputra Valley and ruled from 1228–1826. They were migrants of Thai (Tai) origin – from Guijhou in South China, who entered through Thailand and Burma’s glory land. He maintained his ‘foreign’ pride and religion for about three centuries before assimilating into Hinduism.
This question that is a foreigner and who is not, therefore, depends on someone’s approach on a large scale. The irony is that when we celebrate his victory – such as the famous Mughal defeat of Borfukan in 1671 – we ignore the fact that the Mughal general was a Hindu Raja Ram Singh of Ajmer.
There was a turn in 1826 when the British removed the Burmese occupying the ‘Assam’, defeated the remains of Ahmas and enacted people such as new lands and wealth and gentia. Shortly thereafter, the British deliberately put a deliberate policy to settle the land and resources of the region to settle the ‘Mainland’ (Central) Indians.
The magician Bengal Presidency was part of Assam, soon educated Bengali Babus saw teaching and administrative positions, while Bengali farmers expanded farming. In 1874, one of the densely populated Eastern districts of Bengal, Sylhet was merged with Assam to make the province of an integrated Chief Commissioner with Shillong as its capital.
Neither the belly-Bengalis (large-scale Muslims) nor Assamese, mainly Hindus liked it, but both had to swallow it. Obviously, the movement and disposal within this ‘United Provinces’ was completely disqualified and the old settlers of the century get a hyper when the ‘external’ question is raised.
With the flourishing of British tea gardens, oil is being found in Digboi in 1889, and new coal mines and other resources are opened, the British found migrant labor truck loads from Bihar, Central India and Nepal to Assam’s tea gardens and coal mines, which makes serious neglect of local Assamia. A famine in Nagaon noticed that their number fell further. Today’s stress is rooted in these colonial misdeeds.
After independence and subsequent partitions, Sylhet moved to East Bengal (later Bangladesh), but there was no late-up in the flow of refugees in Assam. In 1950, Parliament passed the immigration (removal from Assam) to accept Assamese’s concerns. India’s first NRC (Civil Register of Citizen) was built in Assam based on the 1951 census. But every time riots in East Pakistan, religious oppression extended Hindu Bengalis towards Assam, West Bengal and Tripura, while poverty brought Muslims from East Pakistan to these states.
The problem of many layers of non-disgrace-speakers and their possession of fertile land and paying jobs cannot simply go. Local demonstrations against him became quite common in the 1970s – all Assam Students Union and all the Assam Gana Sangram Parishad with sometimes violence. Their demand: to find and expel illegal migrants – both Hindu and Muslim.
In 1979, a terrorist offshoot – the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) – emerged for “India to Asambha Assam”. Violence was at its peak in February 1983, with the infamous Nelli massacre in which some 2,000 people, mainly Bengali Muslims, were killed in one of the worst pogroms in independent India.
The popularity of the Assam movement led by AASU and Aagsp continued until Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi broke the Assam Agreement in August 1985. Aasu and AagSP leaders will soon form governments and take official steps to weed ‘foreigners’. However, ULFA was curved and violent, and operated on foreign soil.
Even in 1991, when I was posted in Barpeta and Nalbari as the supervisor of the Election Commission, ULFA slogans were raised – screaming ‘Indians go out’ and using other derogatory conditions. So there was heavy security, that a step could not be taken without ringing by a gun-totting guard. Over the years, batches of armed ULFA cadres began to surrender, recently led a major faction led by Arbinda Rajkhova.
The ULFA army led by more aggressive Paresh Barua still operates from China, with the only purpose to cut Assam away from India.
,
Despite the movements, the central fear persisted: Assamese could become a minority in its state. We have not even touched the issue of Bodos and many tribal groups, which are demanding our own ‘land’ free from Assamese or within or within Assam. Assamese were rapidly disappointed at the slow progress of identifying ‘foreigners’ and sometimes boiling outbreaks -sometimes boiling.
In 2013, the Supreme Court stepped into and ordered an immediate update to NRC of Assam and strictly monitored by Justice Ranjan Gogoi (an Assamia) and Justice Rohinton Fali Nariman.
The BJP, with an aggressive Hindu agenda, came to power at the Center in 2014 and accused the Congress governments on the issue of Mulayam-Peding foreigners. BJP’s state unit in Assam rode behind this combative and in 2016 seized Shakti.
Entire NRC process Grained for six yearsUnder intensive investigation and amid allegations of prejudice and massive confusion. The final update NRC for Assam was published on 31 August 2019, but no one was satisfied. It certified some 3.1 million people as real citizens in the population of 3.3 crore. It was surprising for many people that out of 19 lakh suspected foreigners, there were more Bengali Hindus than Muslims. Most Assamese did not accept this list compiled after a long drawn process costing Rs 1,603 crore by March 2022.
The governments of India and Assam were released from conclusions. Soon, soft-spoken Sarbanand Sonowal was replaced by radical Himant Biswa Sarma in 2021-a former Congress stallwart replaced the Hindutva Champion. It is during his tenure that high-granality is the rule where ‘Mass’ (Bengali Muslims) are particularly targeted.
Since 2021, he launched an aggressive campaign for the ‘encroachment’ ‘free’ government or forest land, and the record would prove that almost all such ruthless expulsions have been against Bengali speaking Muslims. He claims that he has freed 1.5 lakh bighas and is ramping on a scale ahead of next year’s assembly elections. There is no doubt that he wants to play communal cards, and there is any violence, destruction or death, but is a collateral damage.
But there is another aspect of Sarma’s plan – his alleged collusion in ‘handing over the government’ to the government and even constitutionally favorable industrialists protected tribal land. During a recent hearing, Gauhati High Court Expressed shock and disappointment Sarma’s 3,000 bigha allocation (about 4 sq km) Tribal land for a private company in Dima Hasao district.
A group of tribals in the region met the People’s Tribunal Team (Harsh Mandar, Prashant Bhushan, Vajahat Habibullah, Syeda Hamid, themselves and others) during their recent visit – to explain how illegal this action was.
Some of us visited the village of Burduar in Kamup district, where Raba Tribals talked about eviction to make us a way for some ‘Township’ project. In Golpara, the government made a prohibitory orders under Section 144 of (Old) CRPC to block our journey, but Mandar and Habibullah defined the order and visited the affected villages like Rakhishini, Hasila Beel and Asshudubi and told the authorities about bulldozers and muscles.
On 27 August, CM issued a shoot-on-vision order to the police in Dhubri district-to intimidate the minority community with population and protect “Sanatan Dharma which is in danger”.
This is the Assam of Himanta Biswa Sarma, who arrests Pawan Khera in Will and where the police issues the police until the Supreme Court is interfered against journalists Siddharth Vidarajan and Karan Thapar. It is a suspicious honor that Sarma took time out to brand our journey as “Jamaat-inspired” and allegedly stacked the Chosest interactive on us to try to disrupt Assam.
Welcome to India of Narendra Modi, Amit Shah, Yogi Adityanath and his very competent contestants, Himant Biswa Sarma.
Jawahar Sarkar A retired IAS officer and former Rajya Sabha MP
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