
The air attacks beat the Gaza Strip on Wednesday, killing dozens of people, they said health officials, since Israel reiterated his plans to capture more land in the enclave and force all the two million residents of Gaza to live in the South.
The most fatal bombing hit near a popular coffee in the city of Gaza, where young people gathered to use the Internet, killing 33, according to the Ministry of Health of Gaza. The hospitals through the Gaza Strip reported from victims caused by other air attacks during the day, said an official of the ministry, Zaher al-Wuhaids. The Israeli army did not immediately respond to requests for comments on the goal of the attack.
The renewed violence came after Israel announced at the beginning of this week that he was inviting tens of thousands of military reservists to issue the expansion of the war. The Israeli leaders claim to hope that the campaign will take pressure Hamas to compromise in the negotiations of ceased ceasers and release the hostages that still keeps in Gaza.
In Gaza City, the bodies of young people were scattered out of the coffee while the women looked with horror, according to a New York Times photographer on the scene. A mourning outside the Al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, tightening his head in agony, wore a sweatshirt that said: “Be kind”.
A hospital was unable to accommodate the high number of victims, said dr. Munir Al-Bursh, general manager of the Ministry of Health of Gaza. The tense strike A health sector already overwhelmed in the Gaza strip. Health officials said 59 people were killed through the enclave on Wednesday. Their tolls do not distinguish between fighters and civilians.
The video obtained by the Reuters news agency showed people who ran as they transported the barelle with the injured. A donkey has been seen moving in a pool of blood on the ground.
“Neither the people nor the animals were safe, neither the young nor the old ones, as you can see,” Ahmed al-Saoudi said, an eye witness.
“Enough, enough of the bloodshed that is happening,” he said.
Gazas' misery of Gazans is a terrible humanitarian situation. The hunger in Gaza has risen since Israel has imposed a block on aid supplies in March, pushing the United Nations to warn this week of a “growing humanitarian catastrophe”. Israel claimed that his blockage is lawful and that Gaza still has quite available provisions.
Speaking with the Israeli forces, the Minister of Defense Israel Katz said that Gazas' displacement – many of whom had only recently been allowed to return to their homes in the north of Gaza – would protect Israeli forces “against all types of threats”.
He described it as part of a new military offensive that would start after visiting President Trump in the Middle East next week. Until then, he said, Hamas had “a window of opportunities” to agree on new negotiations of ceased fire and release Israeli hostages.
“The entire population of Gaza will be evacuated in the areas of the south of Gaza, while it will create a distinction between them and the terrorists of Hamas,” said Katz. “Unlike the past, the IDF will remain in any conquered territory, to prevent the return of terrorism and to eliminate and contrast any threat.”
A spokesman for Hamas, Bassem Naim, accused Israel of having tried to force the negotiations “through hunger tactics, continuous genocide and threats to intensify military operations” -But not with the insurance to end the 18-month war. “Such attempts will not be able to break the will of our people or their resistance,” said Naim.
Even before the announcement of Mr. Katz, the plans to force people to the north of Gaza had pushed a new wave of despair among the Palestinian civilians in the area, many of whom have already been displaced several times since the beginning of the war.
“We don't even want to hear the word” evacuation “again,” said Anees Jneed, 31 years old, a thinly Palestinian who lives in an improvised refuge in the north of Gaza. Jneed said that his family had already been cracked at least six times from the beginning of the war in October 2023.
“The displacement means death, humiliation, homeless,” added Jneed.
Mr. Jneed is probably among the first affected by the Israel plan to capture large sections of Gaza and force those who live there to move to the south. On Monday, the Israeli authorities said they were inviting tens of thousands of military reservists to issue the expansion of the war. The Israeli leaders claim to hope that the campaign will take pressure Hamas to compromise in the negotiations of ceased ceasers and release the hostages that still keeps in Gaza.
All this has contributed to a deeper sense of darkness among the civilians of Gaza. Wafa al -ghauty, 35 years old, accounting and mother of five children, said she was unleashed seven times since the beginning of the war. Now she repairs in a curtain in a coastal area of the south of Gaza.
“The situation is extremely demanding, not only because of the repeated displacement, but because of the hunger and impotence of not being able to provide even a loaf,” said Mrs. Al-Gouty in an interview. “Every time we are satisfied, we are forced to move again.”
Mrs. Al-Gouty said she planned to cook her last pasta bag within 24 hours. “Sometimes we are so focused on survival – find food and medicine for children – that we are missing news,” he said. “But this announcement struck like lightning.” He said he had already packaged a small bag with the clothes of his children and key documents, preparing for what he might come later.
Almost two months have passed since Israel resumed his military campaign after the interviews of ceased the fire broke. The renewed assault brought almost daily air attacks and growing earth operations, causing thousands of deaths and injuries.
According to the United Nations, over 1.9 million people – most of the population of Gaza – have been displaced since the beginning of the war.
The humanitarian situation has significantly worsened in recent weeks due to the blocking of Israel on aid supplies. Most of the bakeries are no longer operational, food stocks are exhausted and medical supplies are critically low.
Jneed said she fought to provide basic needs for her two children. The family now survives in one meal a day.
“Every hour who passes,” he said, “it's worse than the previous one.
Aaron Boxerman Contributed relationships.