Rescuers say nine children of Gaza doctor couple killed in Israeli strike
Israel has stepped up its campaign in Gaza in recent days, drawing international criticism as well as calls to allow in more supplies after it partially eased a total blockade on aid imposed on March 2.
Civil defense spokesman Mahmud Bassal said the agency had retrieved "the bodies of nine child martyrs, some of them charred, from the home of Dr. Hamdi al-Najjar and his wife, Dr. Alaa al-Najjar, all of whom were their children."
He added that Hamdi al-Najjar and another son, Adam, were also seriously wounded in the strike on Friday.
A medical source at Nasser Hospital, where Alaa al-Najjar works, gave Adam's age as 10 years old.
Footage of the aftermath released by the civil defense agency showed rescuers recovering badly burned remains from the damaged home.
Asked about the incident, the Israeli military said it had "struck a number of suspects who were identified operating from a structure" near its troops.
"The Khan Younis area is a dangerous warzone," it added.
"The claim regarding harm to uninvolved civilians is under review."
The army had issued an evacuation warning for the city on Monday.
The children's funeral took place at Nasser Hospital.
Muneer Alboursh, director general of the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza, said on X that the strike happened shortly after Hamdi Al-Najjar returned home from driving his wife to work.
"This is the reality our medical staff in Gaza endure. Words fall short in describing the pain," he said, accusing Israel of "wiping out entire families."
Bassal said that Israeli strikes killed at least 15 people on Saturday across Gaza.
He said the dead included a couple who were killed with their two young children in a predawn strike on a house in the Amal quarter of Khan Younis.
To the west of the city, at least five people were killed by a drone strike on a crowd of people that had gathered to wait for aid trucks, he added.
At Nasser Hospital, tearful mourners gathered Saturday around white-shrouded bodies outside.
"Suddenly, a missile from an F-16 destroyed the entire house, and all of them were civilians — my sister, her husband and their children," said Wissam Al-Madhoun.
"What did this child do to (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu?"
A Palestinian woman shows photos of the children of the al-Najjar family who were killed in an Israeli strike, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip on Saturday. |
Reuters
In a statement, the military said that over the past day the air force had struck more than 100 targets across the territory.
Israel resumed operations in Gaza on March 18, ending a two-month ceasefire.
Gaza's health ministry said Saturday that at least 3,747 people had been killed in the territory since then, taking the war's overall toll to 53,901, mostly civilians.
United Nations chief Antonio Guterres said on Friday that Palestinians were enduring "the cruelest phase" of the war in Gaza, where Israel's lengthy blockade has led to widespread shortages of food and medicine.
Limited aid deliveries to the Gaza Strip restarted on Monday for the first time since March 2.
The Gaza City municipality, meanwhile, warned Saturday of "a potential large-scale water crisis" due to a lack of supplies needed to repair damaged infrastructure.
Hamas's October 2023 attack on Israel that triggered the war resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, mostly civilians, according to a tally based on official figures.
Militants also took 251 hostages, 57 of whom remain in Gaza including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.
Demonstrators gathered yet again in Tel Aviv on Saturday night for their regular protest calling for the captives' freedom, carrying a giant banner that read "Save the hostages, end the war."
"We want the war to end now because we see ... that the war will not lead to the release of the hostages, and that it will bring more death, more misery on both sides," demonstrator Jonathan Adereth said.
Early Saturday morning, Israel's National Cyber Directorate said it had received "numerous inquiries" regarding citizens "receiving phone calls in which recordings are played featuring the voice of a hostage, sounds of explosions and screams."
Israeli media said the calls featured audio apparently taken from a video of hostage Yosef Haim Ohana published by Hamas earlier this month.
"This is an attempt to sow panic and confusion among the public," the directorate said of the calls, adding "the matter is under investigation."
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