
Israel pummels Gaza City, as Hamas leader due for talks
The latest round of indirect talks in Qatar ended in deadlock in late July with Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas trading blame over the lack of progress on a US proposal for a 60-day truce and hostage release deal.
Israel has since said it will launch a new offensive and seize control of Gaza City, which it captured shortly after the war's outbreak in October 2023 before pulling out.
Militants regrouped and have waged largely guerrilla-style war since then.
It is unclear how long a new Israeli military incursion into the sprawling city in north Gaza, now widely reduced to rubble, could last or how it would differ from the earlier operation.
But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's plan to expand military control over Gaza, expected to be launched in October, has increased a global outcry over the widespread devastation of the territory and a hunger crisis spreading among Gaza's largely homeless population of more than two million.
It has also stirred criticism in Israel, with the military chief of staff warning it could endanger surviving hostages and prove a death trap for Israeli soldiers.
It has also raised fears of further displacement and hardship among the estimated one million Palestinians in the Gaza City region.
Witnesses and medics said Israeli planes and tanks pounded eastern districts of Gaza City again overnight, killing seven people in two houses in the Zeitoun suburb and four in an apartment building in the city centre.
In the south of the enclave, five people including a couple and their child were killed by an Israeli air strike on a house in the city of Khan Younis and four by a strike on a tent encampment in nearby, coastal Mawasi, medics said.
The Israeli military said it was looking into the reports and that its forces took precautions to mitigate civilian harm.
Separately, it said its forces had killed dozens of militants in north Gaza in the past month and destroyed more tunnels used by militants in the area.
Five more people, including two children, had died of starvation and malnutrition in Gaza in the past 24 hours, the territory's health ministry said.
The new deaths raised the number of deaths from the same causes to 227, including 103 children, since the war started, it said.
Israel disputes the malnutrition fatality figures reported by the health ministry in the Hamas-run enclave.
The war began on October 7, 2023, when Hamas-led militants stormed over the border into southern Israel, killing 1200 people and taking 251 hostages, according to Israeli figures, in the country's worst-ever security lapse.
Israel's ground and air war against the Islamist Hamas in Gaza since then has killed more than 61,000 Palestinians, left much of the enclave in ruins.
Netanyahu, whose far-right ultranationalist coalition allies want an outright Israeli takeover and resettlement of Gaza, has vowed the war will not end until Hamas is eradicated.
A Palestinian official with knowledge of the ceasefire talks said Hamas was prepared to return to the negotiating table.
However, the gaps between the sides appear to remain wide on key issues including the extent of any Israeli military withdrawal and demands for Hamas to disarm, which it has ruled out before a Palestinian state is established.
An Arab diplomat said mediators Egypt and Qatar had not given up on reviving the negotiations.
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