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Gaza rescuers say Israeli strikes kill 44

Gaza rescuers say Israeli strikes kill 44
Palestinian children stand near the site of an Israeli strike on a house, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip April 6, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 07 April 2025

Gaza rescuers say Israeli strikes kill 44

Gaza rescuers say Israeli strikes kill 44
  • A Hamas statement called the strike “a deliberate act of child killing” and a “confirmation of the sadistic and barbaric nature of the occupation and its fascist leaders”

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: Gaza’s civil defense agency said Israeli strikes killed at least 44 people on Sunday as Israel’s prime minister vowed a “strong response” to a rare salvo of rockets fired from the Hamas-ruled territory.
Dozens of Palestinians have been killed almost daily since Israel resumed its military offensive in Gaza on March 18, ending a two-month ceasefire that had brought relative calm to the territory.
“The death toll as a result of Israeli air strikes since dawn today is at least 44, including 21 in Khan Yunis,” a city in the southern Gaza Strip, civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP.
One strike killed six people on Al-Nakheel Street in the Al-Tuffah neighborhood of Gaza City, where a group had gathered near a bakery, Bassal said.
Three children were among the dead, he said.
A Hamas statement called the strike “a deliberate act of child killing” and a “confirmation of the sadistic and barbaric nature of the occupation and its fascist leaders.”
AFP footage captured thick plumes of smoke rising from central and northern Gaza as Israeli forces bombarded areas of the besieged Palestinian territory.
A ceasefire brokered by the United States, Egypt and Qatar ended on March 18 as Israel resumed its offensive in response to the Hamas attacks of October 7, 2023.
Elsewhere Israel said it shot dead “one terrorist” in the West Bank for throwing rocks, with Palestinian officials claiming it was a 14-year-old boy with US citizenship.
Gaza has since endured a new wave of relentless strikes and artillery fire, with dozens of fatalities reported on a near-daily basis.
Efforts to revive the ceasefire and secure the release of the remaining hostages held in Gaza have so far failed.
The stalled efforts will be on the agenda during a meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump, set for Monday in Washington.
Netanyahu ordered a “strong response,” his office said, after the Israeli military reported about 10 “projectiles” had been fired from Gaza within minutes of each other on Sunday. Most were intercepted.
The Israeli offensive since 2023 has severely weakened Hamas, but the army has recorded 10 other rockets fired at Israel over the past two weeks.
Israeli police said debris fell in Ashkelon, near the Gaza border, and paramedics said one man had been wounded.
“The prime minister instructed to deliver a strong response and approved the continuation of the intensified IDF operations in Gaza against Hamas,” Netanyahu’s office said.
One Israeli strike on Sunday hit the home of the Abu Issa family in Deir el-Balah, killing women and children, according to witnesses.
“There were no wanted individuals in the house — even the men were at the mosque,” said Mohammad Al-Azaizeh, a resident.
“They were all civilians — children, women and girls. A missile tore through every floor, flattening the house. It felt like a nuclear bomb had hit us.”
AFP footage from another strike late on Saturday in Gaza City showed scenes of devastation at a hospital, where men and women mourned bodies wrapped in white shrouds.
“We heard the explosion and rushed to check on the children,” said Umm Haytham Al-Salakhi through tears, as she grieved a relative at Al-Ahli Hospital.
“I kept calling out for all our children.”
One sobbing man cradled a relative’s body, as dozens gathered to perform funeral prayers before the victims were taken for burial.
“They struck unarmed civilians while they slept,” said another resident, Mohammad Rahmi, who also lost a relative in the bombing.
Several men held the bodies of children wrapped in shrouds, while rescuers transported the wounded to the hospital, according to AFP images.
Some of the wounded, including children, were treated in the hospital’s corridor as relatives gathered nearby.
Scenes from a destroyed home revealed collapsed concrete slabs and twisted metal, as children sifted through the rubble in search of salvaged belongings.
Since Israel’s military resumed its offensive in Gaza last month, more than 1,330 people have been killed in the territory, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.
The war began after Palestinian militants attacked southern Israel on October 7, 2023, resulting in the deaths of 1,218 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
The overall death toll since the war erupted now stands at 50,695, according to the Gaza health ministry.


Palestinian held without charge dies in Israeli detention

Palestinian held without charge dies in Israeli detention
Updated 07 October 2025

Palestinian held without charge dies in Israeli detention

Palestinian held without charge dies in Israeli detention
  • Ahmad Khdeirat, 22, who was under administrative detention, is the 78th person to die in an Israeli prison since Oct. 7, 2023
  • He had diabetes before he was detained in May 2024, and contracted scabies in the notorious Negev prison

LONDON: A 22-year-old Palestinian detainee died on Tuesday in an Israeli hospital, the Palestinian government’s Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs Committee, and the nongovernmental Palestinian Prisoner’s Society said.

Ahmad Khdeirat, who had been in custody since May 23, 2024, is reportedly the 78th prisoner to die in Israeli detention since Oct. 7, 2023.

The Prisoner’s Society accused the Israeli prison authority of “deliberate” medical negligence. Khdeirat had diabetes before his detention, it said, and he contracted scabies while held in the notorious Negev prison. His health deteriorated during captivity, including episodes of hunger, a drop in blood sugar levels, and a 40 kilogram weight loss, the organization added.

Khdeirat was held under administrative detention, which grants Israeli authorities the power to imprison people without charge or trial for a six-month period that can be renewed indefinitely. He lived in the city of Adh-Dhahiriya, 22 kilometers southwest of Hebron in the southern West Bank.

According to Palestinian rights group Addameer, 3,544 Palestinians are held under administrative detention, out of a total of 11,100 political prisoners in Israeli prisons and detention centers. They include 400 children and 53 women.


Thousands missing, tormented families look for clues

Smoke rises following an Israeli strike during a military operation in Gaza City, October 7, 2025. (REUTERS)
Smoke rises following an Israeli strike during a military operation in Gaza City, October 7, 2025. (REUTERS)
Updated 07 October 2025

Thousands missing, tormented families look for clues

Smoke rises following an Israeli strike during a military operation in Gaza City, October 7, 2025. (REUTERS)
  • Thousands in Gaza are looking for relatives who are missing. Some are buried under destroyed buildings. Others, like Al-Najjar’s son, simply disappeared during Israeli military operations

GAZA CITY: When Israeli bombs began falling, Mohammad Al-Najjar, his wife and six children fled their house in southern Gaza in the dead of night, dispersing in terror alongside hundreds of others from their neighborhood.
When the dust settled and Al-Najjar huddled with his family in a shelter miles away, his son Ahmad, 23, was missing. After daybreak, the family searched nearby hospitals and asked neighbors if they had seen him.
There was no trace. Nearly two years later, they are still looking.
Thousands in Gaza are looking for relatives who are missing. Some are buried under destroyed buildings. Others, like Al-Najjar’s son, simply disappeared during Israeli military operations.
The Israeli military has taken an unknown number of bodies, saying it is searching for Israeli hostages or Palestinians it identifies as militants. It has returned several hundred corpses with no identification to Gaza, where they were buried in mass graves.

 


Dubai airshow bars Israeli companies from exhibiting: organizer

Dubai airshow bars Israeli companies from exhibiting: organizer
Updated 07 October 2025

Dubai airshow bars Israeli companies from exhibiting: organizer

Dubai airshow bars Israeli companies from exhibiting: organizer
  • Since then, the Gaza war has dramatically worsened Israel’s standing with its Arab neighbors

DUBAI: Israeli defense companies have been barred from the upcoming Dubai Airshow after a “technical review,” its organizer said on Tuesday, without providing further details, two years into the devastating Gaza war.
Registrations were withdrawn for all six Israeli defense companies that were due to take part, said Tim Hawes, managing director of Informa Markets, which organizes the show.
“The (Israeli) exhibitors that were previously coming won’t be participating,” said Hawes, on the sidelines of a press conference to announce details of the exhibition.
“There was a technical review which we do of all companies that take part in the show,” he said, adding the decision had been taken by the airshow’s technical committee. Hawes did not elaborate on the reasons for the decision. The next edition of the biennial airshow, one of the world’s biggest, takes place in November.
Israel’s inaugural participation in 2023 was overshadowed by the start of the Gaza war. Israeli defense exhibitions were empty and unstaffed at the start of the show.
The United Arab Emirates is among a handful of Arab nations with ties to Israel.
It established normal diplomatic relations with Israel under the Abraham Accords in 2020.
Since then, the Gaza war has dramatically worsened Israel’s standing with its Arab neighbors.
Tuesday marks the two-year anniversary of the Oct. 7, 2023 attacks by Hamas that triggered the war, which has left tens of thousands dead and much of Gaza in ruins.

 


Grief piles up for Gaza woman who lost family in Israeli strikes

Grief piles up for Gaza woman who lost family in Israeli strikes
Updated 07 October 2025

Grief piles up for Gaza woman who lost family in Israeli strikes

Grief piles up for Gaza woman who lost family in Israeli strikes
  • Inas now lives with orphaned nephew
  • The war destroyed us all. It destroyed our family, destroyed our homes. It left pain and loss in our hearts

GAZA: Two years of Israeli bombardment of Gaza has piled grief upon grief for displaced Palestinian Inas Abu Maamar.

In the first days of the war, a photograph showed Abu Maamar stricken in a hospital morgue, cradling the shrouded body of her five-year-old niece Saly.
Since then, Israeli airstrikes and tank shells have killed many of her close relatives and left her bereaved, hungry and homeless, caring for her orphaned young nephew.

Palestinian woman Inas Abu Maamar, 36, embraces the body of her 5-year-old niece Saly, who was killed in an Israeli strike, at Nasser hospital in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, October 17, 2023. (REUTERS)

Saly was killed when an Israeli missile struck the family home in Khan Younis in southern Gaza. Photographer Mohammed Salem found Abu Maamar embracing her body at the Nasser Hospital morgue in Khan Younis on Oct. 17, 2023.
The blast also killed Abu Maamar’s aunt and uncle, her sister-in-law and her cousins, as well as Saly’s baby sister Seba. This summer, her father and her brother Ramez, Saly’s father, were killed while bringing food back to the family. They are among more than 67,000 Palestinians who have been killed in Israel’s onslaught in Gaza. 
Thousands more are believed to be lying dead under the rubble but not counted in the official death toll.
“The war destroyed us all. It destroyed our family, destroyed our homes. It left pain and loss in our hearts,” said Abu Maamar, who is now 38.
Abu Maamar and her remaining relatives have fled waves of Israeli bombing and ground incursions several times over the past two years and are now living in a crowded tent encampment on bare sand near the beach.
Conditions are harsh. Sickness is rife. Food and clean water are scarce. Israeli bombardments terrify the traumatized population.
Abu Maamar’s greatest concern is for her nephew Ahmed, the son of Ramez and younger brother of Saly.
Having lost his mother, both sisters and maternal grandparents 10 days into the conflict, he lost his father and paternal grandfather when they were killed while fetching food in June after it had run out the previous day, Abu Maamar said.
“His father would take him around, play with him, take him to the beach, take him around to see his aunts,” Abu Maamar said of her nephew.

 


18 young lives have been lost in the West Bank this year

18 young lives have been lost  in the West Bank this year
Updated 07 October 2025

18 young lives have been lost in the West Bank this year

18 young lives have been lost  in the West Bank this year
  • Deaths mark the third consecutive year child fatalities in the territory have reached double digits

JERUSALEM: One child was sitting on her mother’s lap. Another had just stepped outside his home. Another was picking almonds.

The United Nations reports that at least 18 children under the age of 15 have been killed by Israeli gunfire in the occupied West Bank this year, marking the third consecutive year child fatalities in the territory have reached the double digits.
Some died during Israeli military raids; others were shot while walking in their neighborhoods, playing outside or staying inside their homes. More than 300 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank since January.

FASTFACT

Some died during Israeli military raids; others were shot while walking in their neighborhoods, playing outside or staying inside their homes. More than 300 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank since January.

Among the children killed were Layla, 2, shot in Jenin while perched on her mother’s lap; Saddam, 10, killed while holding his father’s phone in Tulkarem; Amer, 14, a US citizen from New Jersey whose father said he was shot while picking almonds; Ayman, 12, killed outside his grandfather’s home in Hebron; Rimas, 13, shot in the Jenin refugee camp while playing outside; Ahmad, 14, killed in Sebastia under unclear circumstances; and Mahmoud, 14, one of five people killed in a Jenin missile strike that spared only his father.
Parents cling to the belongings their children left behind — savings books, toys and photographs. They inhale the scent of clothes once worn. Young boys and girls proudly show pendants emblazoned with their dead sibling’s face.
Abandoned bikes, silent courtyards and empty bedrooms remain, reminders of absence. Israeli authorities said their operations target militants and that soldiers are prohibited from firing at civilians, especially minors.
But the circumstances of the children’s deaths call those claims into question. The military says investigations into some of the cases are ongoing, but families report receiving no information about what happened to their children and demand accountability.
Each case is documented with names, ages, locations and circumstances, underscoring both the personal loss and the scale of child casualties in the conflict.