
9 children of Gaza doctor couple killed in Israeli strike
A Palestinian man carries items he salvaged from a house targeted in an Israeli strike at the Nuseirat camp for refugees in the central Gaza Strip on May 24. Photo: AFP
Gaza's civil defence agency said Saturday that an Israeli strike in the southern city of Khan Yunis killed nine children of a pair of married doctors, with the Israeli army saying it was reviewing the reports.
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 defence 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, and that the family was taken to Nasser Hospital. A medical source at the hospital gave Adam's age as 10 years old.
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, a paediatric specialist, to work at the same facility.
"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".
Footage of the aftermath released by the civil defence 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 Yunis 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, AFP footage showed.
Bassal told AFP that Israeli strikes since the early hours had killed at least 15 people across Gaza as of Saturday afternoon.
He said the dead included a couple killed with their two young children in a pre-dawn strike on a house in the Amal quarter of Khan Yunis.
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.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Express Tribune
4 hours ago
- Express Tribune
How House got it wrong
He's the maverick medic who loved to confound the medical establishment with his brilliant, unorthodox diagnoses. But Dr Gregory House, the misanthropic genius who was the star of the long-running House television series, got an awful lot wrong himself, Croatian doctors claim, as reported by AFP. In a paper titled 'House MD Between reality and fiction' published in May, Denis Cerimagic, a professor at Dubrovnik University, and two fellow neurologists — all big fans of the series — listed 77 errors after analysing all 177 episodes of the show, which ran from 2004 to 2012. "We focused on the diagnoses of main cases, reality of clinical practice presentation and detection of medical errors," Cerimagic told AFP. He and his peers - Goran Ivkic and Ervina Bilic — broke the mistakes down into five categories including misuses of medical terminology, misinformation and simple weirdness — something which the show's anti-hero, played by British star Hugh Laurie, possessed in abundance. That limp The errors included the use of mercury thermometers, the term heart attack and cardiac arrest being used interchangeably, vitamin B12 deficiency being corrected with just one injection and a universal chemotherapy for all types of malignant tumours, medical procedures being done by specialists who had no business being there such as an infectologist performing an autopsy, complex lab tests showing results within hours and doctors breaking into patients' homes to look for causes. But arguably the biggest error of all is that Laurie — whose character's genius for deduction comes from the misdiagnosis that left him with a limp and chronic pain – uses his cane on the wrong side. The stick should be carried on his unaffected side, Cerimagic said, though he understood why the actor had done it because "it's more effective to see the pronounced limp on the screen". Medical errors Whatever their criticisms, the researchers say that modern medical series are far better produced than in the past, thanks to medical advisors. Despite its flaws, they thought the series could even be used to help train medical students. "The focus could be on recognising medical errors in the context of individual episodes, adopting the teamwork concept and a multidisciplinary approach in diagnosis and treatment," Cerimagic said. He said he and his colleagues were taken aback by the response to their paper. "The idea was to make a scientific paper interesting not only to doctors but also to people without specific medical knowledge."


Business Recorder
6 days ago
- Business Recorder
WHO says trucks with medical aid must be allowed into Gaza
GENEVA: A top World Health Organization official deplored Monday that none of the agency's trucks with medical aid had been allowed to enter the Gaza Strip since Israel ended its blockade. Humanitarian aid has begun trickling back into the Palestinian territory in recent days after more than two months of blocked access. For more than 11 weeks, 'there has been no WHO trucks entering into Gaza for medical care support', the WHO's Eastern Mediterranean regional director Hanan Balkhy told a press conference in Geneva. 'The situation is devastating. We are not only worried about the immediate work that we are supporting, and are willing and hoping to continue to support the people, but we are extremely concerned about the aftermath of this,' she said, citing an impact on generations to come. Israel has stepped up a renewed offensive to destroy the Hamas group, drawing international condemnation of the blockade since early March that has sparked severe food and medical shortages. Sweden PM says to summon Israel envoy over Gaza aid access 'Around 400 trucks were cleared to go into Gaza… but supplies from only 115 trucks have been able to go through – and nothing has reached the besieged north,' said Balkhy, adding that none of those were WHO trucks. She said 51 trucks with medical equipment on board were waiting to cross the border. Ahmed Zouiten, the WHO region's emergencies director, said he hoped it was just a question of time before the UN health agency's trucks could cross into the territory. But he said it was 'too early for us to know' whether they would cross soon or whether there were 'any issues that we have to follow up on'. Israel's renewed offensive has triggered international criticism, with European and Arab leaders meeting in Spain calling for an end to the 'inhumane' and 'senseless' war, while humanitarian groups say the trickle of aid is not nearly enough. Hamas's October 2023 attack on Israel that triggered the war resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures. Hamas also took 251 hostages, 57 of whom remain in Gaza, including 34 who the Israeli military says are dead. On Monday, the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said at least 3,822 people had been killed in the territory since a ceasefire collapsed on March 18, taking the war's overall toll to 53,977, mostly civilians.


Business Recorder
6 days ago
- Business Recorder
UK surgeon in Gaza says ‘never seen so many blast injuries'
KHAN YUNIS: A British surgeon visiting a Gaza hospital said Monday she had 'never seen so many blast injuries' as Israel ramps up operations in the coastal Palestinian territory ravaged by 20 months of war. 'I've never seen so many blast injuries in my life and I've never seen so many injuries in Gaza in my life,' said Victoria Rose, a part of a British medical delegation to Nasser Hospital in south Gaza's Khan Yunis. Rose, who has previously visited Gaza to work, said she had seen a lot of severe burns, typical injuries for people who have been in an explosion. 'We're seeing these injuries in really small children as well', Rose said from Nasser Hospital's paediatric wing. With Israel conducting dozens of air strikes every day in Gaza since restarting bombardments on March 18, humanitarians have said that nowhere is safe in Gaza. Israeli strike on Gaza: Father in intensive care after nine children killed The surgeon added that the large burns she had witnessed during her visit 'are very difficult to survive from even in the Western countries where there is no war, and we have functioning hospitals and all the medical supplies at our fingertips.' 'So, here, most of these burns are going to be unsurvivable.' Rose said the other type of injuries from blasts occurred when 'whatever is around you gets whipped up in the explosion and ejected at very high force, and that then hits the civilians and it causes penetrating injuries'. Often, the victims suffer partial or complete amputations in the bombings, Rose said, and because they are living in tents they turn up with large amounts of dirt in their wounds. 'Our first course of action is to try and clean the wounds, and then to try and cover them and salvage as much of the body part as we can.' These challenges are compounded by the dwindling number of functional medical facilities in Gaza, Rose said, including Nasser Hospital. 'On the second floor, one of the wards has been blown up, and also on the fourth floor the burns unit was blown up'. The UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said last week that '94 per cent of the hospitals in Gaza are now damaged or destroyed, and half of them are no longer operational'. Rescuers said Israeli strikes in the Gaza Strip killed at least 52 people on Monday, 33 of them in a school turned shelter.