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Israel asked to explain deadly strike on Gaza residential block

Israel asked to explain deadly strike on Gaza residential block

Video footage showed several bodies wrapped in blankets on the ground outside a bombed four-storey building.

More bodies and survivors were being retrieved from under the wreckage as neighbours rushed to help with the rescue.

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“There are tens of martyrs (dead) – tens of displaced people were living in this house. The house was bombed without prior warning. As you can see, martyrs are here and there, with body parts hanging on the walls,” Ismail Ouaida, a witness who was helping to recover bodies, said in the video.

Later, Palestinian health officials said, several people were killed and wounded in an Israeli airstrike that hit three houses in Beit Lahiya.

Trapped

The Palestinian Civil Emergency Service said around 100,000 people were trapped in Jabalia, Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun without medical or food supplies. Reuters could not verify the number independently.

The health ministry said those wounded in the Beit Lahiya strike could not receive care as doctors had been forced to evacuate the nearby Kamal Adwan Hospital.

“Critical cases without intervention will succumb to their destiny and die,” the ministry said.

Gaza’s emergency service said its operations had come to a halt because of the three-week Israeli assault into northern Gaza. Israel says its campaign is to destroy the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas, whose fighters had regrouped in the area in the year-long war.

Hamas’ October 7, 2023 attack on Israel killed 1200 people and more than 250 hostages were captured and taken into Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.

The death toll from Israel’s retaliatory air and ground onslaught in Gaza has exceeded 43,000, the Gaza health ministry said.

Gaza’s war has kindled wider conflict in the Middle East, with Israel bombing Lebanon and sending forces into its south to disable Iran-backed Hezbollah, a Hamas ally.

Hezbollah’s new leader has vowed to keep fighting Israel

In a statement, Hezbollah named Naim Qassem as its new leader. Israel said his tenure would be “temporary”, an apparent threat after it killed his predecessor Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut last month.

Naim Qassem speaks during an interview in the southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon in 2009. Credit: AP

“Temporary appointment. Not for long,” Israel’s Defence Minister Yoav Gallant posted on X with a photo of Qassem.

Qassem was appointed as Hezbollah’s deputy chief in 1991 by the armed group’s then-secretary general Abbas al-Musawi, who was killed by an Israeli helicopter attack the following year.

Qassem remained in his role when Nasrallah became leader, and has long been one of Hezbollah’s leading spokesmen, conducting interviews with foreign media.

Nasrallah was killed on September 27 in an Israeli air attack on Beirut’s southern suburbs and senior Hezbollah figure Hashem Safieddine – considered the most likely successor – was killed in Israeli strikes a week later.

Israeli banning aid group dubbed ‘collective punishment’

The latest strike on Gaza came a day after Israel’s parliament passed a law to ban the UN relief agency UNRWA from operating inside the country, alarming some of Israel’s Western allies who fear it will worsen the already dire humanitarian situation in Gaza.

Israeli officials cited the involvement of a handful of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees’ thousands of staffers in the October 7, 2023 attack and a few staffers’ membership in Hamas and other armed groups.

UNRWA head Philippe Lazzarini described the move as “collective punishment”.

It was unclear yet how the decision will impact the lives of Palestinians, especially in the Gaza Strip, where the UN said most of its 2.3 million people have become internally displaced since the war broke out over a year ago.

Reuters

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