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Tag: Gaza City

  • IDF targets latest high-rise building used by Hamas terrorists as it ramps up pressure on Gaza City

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    The IDF issued evacuation warnings earlier for those located in the Gaza Port area and the southern al-Rimal neighborhood.

    The IDF struck a high-rise in Gaza City used by Hamas for intelligence gathering and observation posts to target Israeli troops, the military said Sunday morning.

    IDF targets high-rise building used by Hamas, September 14, 2025. (illustration) (credit: IDF SPOKESPERSON’S UNIT)

    The IDF said Hamas systematically exploits civilians and infrastructure as human shields and vowed to continue operations against terrorist groups.

    The IDF issued evacuation warnings earlier for those located in the Gaza Port area and the southern al-Rimal neighborhood of Gaza City, specifically in blocks 727, 786, 787, 788, and the Al-Kawthar Tower, the military’s Arabic-language spokesperson, Lt.-Col. Avichay Adraee said on X/Twitter before the strike.

    Adraee urged residents to evacuate southward towards al-Mawasi’s humanitarian area.

    Givati Brigade combat teams have killed over 10 terrorists in Jabaliya, and on the outskirts of Gaza City in collaboration with artillery teams, the IDF said.

    Meanwhile, the 401st Brigade’s combat teams operated in Sheikh Radwan, killing around 10 Hamas terrorists and dismantling terror infrastructure.

    The military has been striking a series of Gaza City high-rises in the past week. More than 280,000 Gazans have already left the city, KAN reported Saturday, citing assessments by security officials.

    Displaced Palestinians flee amid an Israeli military operation, after Israeli forces ordered residents of Gaza City to evacuate to the south, in Gaza City, September 14, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/DAWOUD ABU ALKAS)

    Displaced Palestinians flee amid an Israeli military operation, after Israeli forces ordered residents of Gaza City to evacuate to the south, in Gaza City, September 14, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/DAWOUD ABU ALKAS)

    On Saturday, the IDF struck the Burj al-Noor tower.

    IDF continues series of strikes on high-rise buildings in Gaza City

    In early September, the military destroyed three buildings after the IDF had warned residents to evacuate the area surrounding each of them.

    Although the IDF has said that Hamas or other terror groups are using the buildings as lookout posts to follow the movements of its forces and to potentially plan or direct ambushes, it seems that the military is also destroying buildings to increase the stream of evacuees southward from Gaza City.

    For weeks, the IDF has been warning Palestinians to evacuate Gaza City and head south.

    This is a developing story.

    Yonah Jeremy Bob contributed to this report.

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  • Barrage of Israeli airstrikes kills 32 in Gaza City, including 12 children, hospital says

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    A barrage of airstrikes killed at least 32 people across Gaza City as Israel ramps up its offensive there and urges Palestinians to evacuate, medical staff reported Saturday.The dead included 12 children, according to the morgue in Shifa Hospital, where the bodies were brought.In recent days, Israel has intensified strikes across Gaza City, destroying multiple high-rise buildings and accusing Hamas of putting surveillance equipment in them.On Saturday, the army said it struck another high-rise used by Hamas in the area of Gaza City. It has ordered residents to leave as part of an offensive aimed at taking over the largest Palestinian city, which it says is Hamas’ last stronghold. Hundreds of thousands of people remain there, struggling under conditions of famine.One of the strikes overnight and into early morning Saturday hit a house in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood, killing a family of 10, including a mother and her three children, said health officials. The Palestinian Football Association said a player for the Al-Helal Sporting Club, Mohammed Ramez Sultan, was killed in the strikes, along with 14 members of his family. Images showed the strikes hitting followed by plumes of smoke.Israel’s army did not immediately respond to questions about the strikes.Hostages’ relatives rally in IsraelMeanwhile, relatives of Israeli hostages held by Hamas rallied in Tel Aviv on Saturday to demand a deal to release their loved ones and criticized what they said was a counterproductive approach by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in securing a resolution.Einav Zangauker, the mother of hostage Matan Zangauker, described Israel’s attempted assassination of Hamas leaders in Qatar this week as a “spectacular failure.”“President Trump said yesterday that every time there is progress in the negotiations, Netanyahu bombs someone. But it wasn’t Hamas leaders he tried to bomb — it was our chance, as families, to bring our loved ones home,” Zangauker said.Some Palestinians are leaving Gaza City, but many are stuckIn the wake of escalating hostilities and calls to evacuate the city, the number of people leaving has spiked in recent weeks, according to aid workers. However, many families remain stuck due to the cost of finding transportation and housing, while others have been displaced too many times and do not want to move again, not trusting that anywhere in the enclave is safe.In a message on social media Saturday, Israel’s army told the remaining Palestinians in Gaza City to leave “immediately” and move south to what it’s calling a humanitarian zone. Army spokesman Avichay Adraee said that more than a quarter of a million people had left Gaza City — from an estimated 1 million who live in the area of north Gaza around the city.The United Nations, however, put the number of people who have left at around 100,000 between mid-August and mid-September. The U.N. and aid groups have warned that displacing hundreds of thousands of people will exacerbate the dire humanitarian crisis. Sites in southern Gaza where Israel is telling people to go are overcrowded, according to the U.N., and it can cost money to move, which many people do not have.An initiative headed by the U.N. to bring temporary shelters into Gaza said more than 86,000 tents and other supplies were still awaiting clearance to enter Gaza as of last week.Gaza’s Health Ministry said Saturday that seven people, including children, died from malnutrition-related causes over the past 24 hours, raising the toll to 420, including 145 children, since the war began.The bombardment Friday night across Gaza City came days after Israel launched a strike targeting Hamas leaders in Qatar, intensifying its campaign against the militant group and endangering negotiations over ending the war in Gaza.Families of the hostages still held in Gaza are pleading with Israel to halt the offensive, worried it will kill their relatives. There are 48 hostages still inside Gaza, around 20 of them believed to be alive.The war in Gaza began when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, abducting 251 people and killing some 1,200, mostly civilians. Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 64,803 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not say how many were civilians or combatants. It says around half of those killed were women and children. Large parts of major cities have been completely destroyed, and around 90% of some 2 million Palestinians have been displaced.

    A barrage of airstrikes killed at least 32 people across Gaza City as Israel ramps up its offensive there and urges Palestinians to evacuate, medical staff reported Saturday.

    The dead included 12 children, according to the morgue in Shifa Hospital, where the bodies were brought.

    In recent days, Israel has intensified strikes across Gaza City, destroying multiple high-rise buildings and accusing Hamas of putting surveillance equipment in them.

    On Saturday, the army said it struck another high-rise used by Hamas in the area of Gaza City. It has ordered residents to leave as part of an offensive aimed at taking over the largest Palestinian city, which it says is Hamas’ last stronghold. Hundreds of thousands of people remain there, struggling under conditions of famine.

    One of the strikes overnight and into early morning Saturday hit a house in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood, killing a family of 10, including a mother and her three children, said health officials. The Palestinian Football Association said a player for the Al-Helal Sporting Club, Mohammed Ramez Sultan, was killed in the strikes, along with 14 members of his family. Images showed the strikes hitting followed by plumes of smoke.

    Israel’s army did not immediately respond to questions about the strikes.

    Hostages’ relatives rally in Israel

    Meanwhile, relatives of Israeli hostages held by Hamas rallied in Tel Aviv on Saturday to demand a deal to release their loved ones and criticized what they said was a counterproductive approach by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in securing a resolution.

    Einav Zangauker, the mother of hostage Matan Zangauker, described Israel’s attempted assassination of Hamas leaders in Qatar this week as a “spectacular failure.”

    “President Trump said yesterday that every time there is progress in the negotiations, Netanyahu bombs someone. But it wasn’t Hamas leaders he tried to bomb — it was our chance, as families, to bring our loved ones home,” Zangauker said.

    Some Palestinians are leaving Gaza City, but many are stuck

    In the wake of escalating hostilities and calls to evacuate the city, the number of people leaving has spiked in recent weeks, according to aid workers. However, many families remain stuck due to the cost of finding transportation and housing, while others have been displaced too many times and do not want to move again, not trusting that anywhere in the enclave is safe.

    In a message on social media Saturday, Israel’s army told the remaining Palestinians in Gaza City to leave “immediately” and move south to what it’s calling a humanitarian zone. Army spokesman Avichay Adraee said that more than a quarter of a million people had left Gaza City — from an estimated 1 million who live in the area of north Gaza around the city.

    The United Nations, however, put the number of people who have left at around 100,000 between mid-August and mid-September. The U.N. and aid groups have warned that displacing hundreds of thousands of people will exacerbate the dire humanitarian crisis. Sites in southern Gaza where Israel is telling people to go are overcrowded, according to the U.N., and it can cost money to move, which many people do not have.

    An initiative headed by the U.N. to bring temporary shelters into Gaza said more than 86,000 tents and other supplies were still awaiting clearance to enter Gaza as of last week.

    Gaza’s Health Ministry said Saturday that seven people, including children, died from malnutrition-related causes over the past 24 hours, raising the toll to 420, including 145 children, since the war began.

    The bombardment Friday night across Gaza City came days after Israel launched a strike targeting Hamas leaders in Qatar, intensifying its campaign against the militant group and endangering negotiations over ending the war in Gaza.

    Families of the hostages still held in Gaza are pleading with Israel to halt the offensive, worried it will kill their relatives. There are 48 hostages still inside Gaza, around 20 of them believed to be alive.

    The war in Gaza began when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, abducting 251 people and killing some 1,200, mostly civilians. Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 64,803 Palestinians, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not say how many were civilians or combatants. It says around half of those killed were women and children. Large parts of major cities have been completely destroyed, and around 90% of some 2 million Palestinians have been displaced.

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  • ‘Get out of there!’ Israel warns Gaza City to evacuate

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    Israel on Tuesday ordered the evacuation of the entire city of Gaza, the first time it has done so in the run-up to its planned full invasion of the largest urban center in the Gaza Strip’s north.

    Home to roughly 1 million residents before the war, Gaza City still has hundreds of thousands of residents who are enduring famine conditions and fearful of displacement to other parts of an enclave where nowhere has proven safe in Israel’s almost-two-year campaign to destroy Hamas.

    Six Palestinians died of hunger on Tuesday, according to Palestinian health authorities, increasing the death toll of starvation victims to 399.

    “There’s no place left to go, not in the south, not in the north, nothing,” said Bajess AlKhaledi, a Gaza resident interviewed on Tuesday by Qatari broadcaster Al Jazeera English. “We’re completely trapped.”

    The evacuation order came the same day Israel launched an attack on Hamas leaders in the Qatari capital of Doha.

    Some 50,000 have left northern Gaza to areas south, according to the United Nations and partner humanitarian agencies on Sunday. They warn that hundreds of thousands are expected to stay put in Gaza City because of logistical and financial difficulties, and that plans for large-scale displacement would amount to forced migration — a war crime under international law.

    It remains unclear when the Gaza City invasion will start, though Israel has already called up tens of thousands of reservists and destroyed dozens of high-rise residential towers in recent days. The Israeli military said the towers were being used by Hamas, a charge Hamas denied.

    The Israeli military says it controls some 40% of the city.

    “All of this is only the introduction, only the beginning of the main intensive operation — the ground incursion of our forces, that are now getting organized and gathering, into Gaza City,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a televised address on Monday.

    “To the residents of Gaza, listen to me carefully: You have been warned; get out of there!”

    Israel claims Hamas remains bunkered in Gaza City and has vowed to destroy its remaining bastions there to prevent it from regrouping, despite repeated warnings by the U.N. and rights groups that no area in the enclave could handle large-scale displacement.

    “Gaza is being obliterated, reduced to a wasteland,” said Philippe Lazzarini, head of the U.N. Palestinian refugee agency, UNRWA, in a social media post on Tuesday.

    “There is no safe place in Gaza, let alone a humanitarian zone. It is a large and growing camp concentrating hungry Palestinians in despair,” Lazzarini wrote.

    The Palestinian health ministry in Gaza, meanwhile, called for “immediate protection” of hospitals and medical crews, and warned of “a humanitarian catastrophe that threatens the lives of thousands of patients and wounded individuals.”

    The majority of Gaza’s 2.1 million residents have already suffered multiple displacements since the war began, as Israel’s military campaign has attacked designated “safe zones” and left wide swaths of the Strip obliterated. Famine, spurred by a months-long total blockade by Israel, stalks additional victims every day.

    Israel’s plans to invade Gaza City continue even as torturous back-and-forth negotiations with Hamas received a push from President Trump over the weekend.

    On Sunday, Trump issued what he called a final warning to Hamas to accept a deal he proposed.

    Details remain scant, but the agreement stipulates the Palestinian group release all hostages in its custody in exchange for the release of an unspecified number of Palestinian prisoners and detainees in Israel jail.

    “The Israelis have accepted my Terms. It is time for Hamas to accept as well,” Trump said on Truth Social. “I have warned Hamas about the consequences of not accepting. This is my last warning, there will not be another one!”

    Hamas responded in a statement on Sunday that it was ready to “immediately” sit at the negotiating table to release all hostages. In return, Hamas wants “a clear declaration” from Israel to end the war, a complete withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, and the formation of an independent committee to administer the Strip.

    It added that it wanted guarantees Israel would adhere to the agreement. Israel broke a U.S.-brokered ceasefire in March. It did not respond to another U.S. proposal in August that Hamas accepted.

    Israel has also demanded Hamas surrender and lay down its arms. The group says it will not disarm until Israel agrees to the creation of an independent Palestinian state over Gaza and the Israeli-occupied West Bank, which would have East Jerusalem as its capital. East Jerusalem is considered occupied under international law, though Israel says it is part of its capital.

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    Nabih Bulos

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  • Israeli military extends regional campaign with strike on Hamas in Qatar

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    Israel announced it conducted “a precise targeted strike” on Hamas’s leadership on Tuesday, without elaborating on the strike’s location even as blasts rang out in the Qatari capital Doha and Qatari authorities condemned the “cowardly Israeli attack.”

    The attack comes as Israel is ramping up for a full invasion of Gaza City, even as stalled negotiations with Hamas officials in Doha appeared to have regained some momentum after the weekend.

    “The members of the leadership who were struck led the terror organization’s activities for years, and are directly responsible for carrying out the Oct. 7 massacre and waging the war against the State of Israel,” said a statement from the Israeli military.

    The statement referred to the date in 2023 when the Hamas-led militants killed 1,200 people — two-thirds of them civilians — and kidnapped 251 others to Gaza, according to Israeli figures. More than 64,000 Palestinians, most of them civilians, Palestinian authorities say, have been killed in Israel’s subsequent campaign on the enclave.

    Videos and television broadcasts showed black smoke rising from a series of buildings in Doha’s Katara district, a normally quiet residential area where Hamas and several of its top-ranking members have lived for years. One video depicts pedestrians in Katara running and screaming in fear as a pair of explosions echo through the neighborhood.

    Qatari security personnel were seen swarming the area and setting up roadblocks.

    Qatar agreed to host a political office for Hamas at the request of the U.S. government, it says. Hamas is one of several groups it has allowed on its soil as part of its growing reputation as a regional facilitator. It has hosted repeated mediation efforts between Hamas and Israel over the last 23 months of the war.

    An unnamed Hamas source speaking to Qatari broadcaster Al Jazeera said the attack targeted negotiators meeting to discuss the latest ceasefire proposal issued by President Trump. There were conflicting reports as to whether anyone survived, but the meeting is thought to have included senior Hamas officials Khalil al-Hayya, Khaled Mishaal, Zaher Jabarin and Muhammad Darwish.

    In its statement, the Israeli military said “measures were taken in order to mitigate harm to civilians, including the use of precise munitions and additional intelligence.”

    But Qatari foreign ministry spokesman Majed al-Ansari, in a furious statement issued on the messaging platform X on Tuesday, described the strike as “a criminal assault [that] constitutes a blatant violation of all international laws and norms, and poses a serious threat to the security and safety of Qataris and residents in Qatar.”

    “While the State of Qatar strongly condemns this assault, it confirms that it will not tolerate this reckless Israeli behavior and the ongoing disruption of regional security, nor any act that targets its security and sovereignty.”

    The strike on Doha adds to a growing list of Arab countries Israel has struck in the last month, emphasizing the Israeli government’s more belligerent post-Oct. 7 strategy against its longtime adversaries in the region. Aside from its expanding campaign in Gaza, the Israeli military has over the last few weeks conducted strikes in Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and now Doha.

    The attack coincided with the Israeli military issuing an evacuation order encompassing the entire city of Gaza, the first time it has done so in the run-up to its planned full invasion of the largest urban center in the eponymous enclave’s north.

    An unnamed White House official told the BBC that the Trump administration was informed ahead of time of the strike on Qatar, which is home to Al Udeid, the largest U.S. base in the Middle East and the regional headquarters for U.S. Central Command. Some 10,000 U.S. troops are stationed there.

    An Israeli official, speaking to Israeli broadcaster Channel 12, said President Trump gave the green light for the operation.

    But Netanyahu issued a statement on Tuesday saying “today’s action against the top terrorist chieftains of Hamas was a wholly independent Israeli operation. Israel initiated it, Israel conducted it, and Israel takes full responsibility,” the statement said.

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    Nabih Bulos

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  • Survey reveals heavy toll on families of Israel’s army reservists

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    The ongoing impact of the war in Gaza extends beyond those directly participating in the war efforts.

    Two years of war have left a lasting mark on the families of Israel army reservists, with one-third reporting financial hardship as a direct result of their loved ones’ service, according to an Israeli survey released on Sunday. Beyond the battlefield, spouses and children have faced disruptions to work, education, and daily life.

    The survey, conducted by Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) in April–May 2025, focused on spouses of reservists who served routinely or under special mobilization orders between October 7, 2023, and February 1, 2025. The study was designed to provide data on the impact of reserve service on family members and guide policymakers in developing programs to support those affected by the exceptional challenges of the war.

    The results were released as thousands of reservists were called up for duty on Tuesday for an offensive into Gaza City, the last major Hamas stronghold in the Gaza Strip.

    The survey found that employment was disrupted for many families. About a quarter of spouses reported harm to their work, and 73% of independent spouses of reservists experienced setbacks. Among those who had not worked before the war, 46% entered the workforce, primarily as employees, while only a small fraction of previously self-employed spouses were able to continue their businesses.

    Education also suffered. Reservists enrolled in undergraduate programs canceled registration and dropped out at lower rates than other students, suggesting strong personal motivation despite military duties. Spouses pursuing studies were more affected: nearly half of female students married to reservists reported declining grades, 29% deferred courses, and 8% discontinued studies altogether. Academic institutions provided exemptions to 45% of these students in an effort to ease the strain.

    IDF reservist soldier, Benjamin Sipzner, stands in the rubble within the Gaza strip in the midst of the Israel-Hamas war. (credit: BENJAMIN SIPZNER)

    Financial pressure added another layer of hardship. Divorced women and single mothers with children by a reservist were most affected, with 58% and 48%, respectively, reporting economic difficulties. Families of soldiers serving in the ground forces also faced high levels of financial strain. The study found that economic hardship increased with the number of reserve days served, showing how repeated military obligations can destabilize households over time.

    Unprecedented number of reservists called back to service

    About 130,000 reservists and five regular divisions are expected to take part in the operation, which will unfold in stages and extend into 2026. Two divisions already maneuvering in the Strip have begun encircling Gaza City, while additional brigades are gathering in nearby staging areas. Not all reservists will be sent into Gaza; many will replace standing troops on other fronts.

    In August, the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee authorized the army to summon up to 430,000 soldiers. The IDF said call-up orders would be staggered, with 40,000 to 50,000 reservists reporting on September 2, followed by additional waves in late 2025 and early 2026.

    Reservists have faced repeated call-ups since Hamas’s October 7 attack. Emergency orders allowing the army to summon large numbers of civilians on short notice have been renewed every few months. In peacetime, such mobilizations are tightly limited, and soldiers must be given advance notice and shorter service terms.

    Approximately 1,200 people were killed and 252 Israelis and foreigners were taken hostage in Hamas’s attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on October 7. Of the 48 remaining hostages, about 20 are believed to be alive.

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  • Almost half of Israelis believe Gaza op. has low chance of defeating Hamas

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    The poll found that 46% believe that the IDF op. in Gaza City has a low chance of defeating Hamas, 38% are confident it will succeed in this goal, and 16% are unsure.

    Almost half of Israelis polled believe that the IDF’s expansion of operations into Gaza City has a low chance of defeating the Hamas terror organization, according to a poll published on Saturday.

    The poll found that 46% of Israelis feel this way, while 38% of those polled believe that the expanded operations will succeed in achieving this goal.

    Approximately one-sixth of those polled, at 16%, were unsure.

    Division over Oct. 7 investigation commission members

    The poll also found that over half of Israelis, at 52%, believe that a state commission of inquiry is the proper tool to investigate the failures of October 7, 2023, as opposed to a commission with members appointed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    The poll also found that 30% support Netanyahu’s proposal that the commission of inquiry should consist of members appointed by him, while 18% said they were unsure.

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in Jerusalem on August 11, 2025. (credit: YONATAN SINDEL/FLASH90)

    The poll was conducted by Lazar Research under Dr. Menachem Lazar together with the online response panel Panel4All. It surveyed 500 respondents, both Jewish and Arab, with a maximum margin of error of 4.4%.

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  • Israel bombs more Gaza City high-rises after forced evacuation orders

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    The Israeli army has bombed another high-rise in Gaza City after telling Palestinian residents to evacuate or face being killed amid its ongoing siege and imposed mass starvation in the enclave.

    The Israeli military designated more high-rise towers as targets in a map released on Saturday. Shortly after releasing the map, it bombed the 15-storey Soussi Tower, which is located opposite a building belonging to the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) in the Tal al-Hawa neighbourhood.

    “These attacks are causing panic amongst the people, especially considering the time they are given to evacuate. Half an hour or an hour is not enough time for people to escape from these buildings,” Al Jazeera’s Hani Mahmoud said, reporting from Gaza City.

    The Israeli military said in a statement, without offering evidence, that the buildings struck were used by Hamas to gather intelligence to monitor the locations of the Israeli army. It also said armed Palestinian groups planted “numerous explosive devices” and dug a tunnel in the area.

    Gaza’s Government Media Office rejected the claims and called them “part of a systematic policy of deception used by the occupation to justify the targeting of civilians and infrastructure” and forcibly displace Palestinians from their homes. It said 90 percent of Gaza’s infrastructure has been destroyed by Israel.

    The targeted buildings were near the 12-storey Mushtaha Tower, which on Friday was similarly bombed and razed to the ground, as Israel moves to seize Gaza City despite international criticism.

    At least 68 Palestinians were killed and 362 wounded across the Gaza Strip by the Israeli military over the past day, the enclave’s Ministry of Health said on Saturday afternoon.

    The toll includes 23 aid seekers killed and 143 wounded by Israeli forces. At least six more Palestinians also died of Israeli-induced starvation, bringing the total number of starvation deaths during nearly two years of war to 382, including 135 children.

    At least 64,368 Palestinians have been killed and 162,367 wounded by Israel since the start of the war in the aftermath of the Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel on October 7, 2023.

    Israel declares new ‘humanitarian zone’, bombs the area

    Sources at Nasser Hospital, located in southern Gaza’s Khan Younis, told Al Jazeera that at least two Palestinians were killed and many wounded in an Israeli air strike on a tent housing displaced people in the al-Mawasi area.

    While this area was designated as a “humanitarian” or “safe” zone by the Israeli army early in the war, it has been repeatedly bombed, leading to the deaths of hundreds of displaced civilians.

    Hours before the latest bombings, the Israeli army had announced the establishment of another similar zone in al-Mawasi, which runs along Gaza’s Mediterranean coast. It claimed the area will have infrastructure such as field hospitals, water lines, desalination facilities and food supplies.

    Palestinians mourn the loss of loved ones killed by the Israeli military on September 6, 2025 [Hamza ZH Qraiqea/Anadolu]

    Reporting from central Gaza’s Deir el-Balah, Al Jazeera’s Hind Khoudary said Palestinians do not trust the so-called humanitarian area as tents in similar zones have been attacked by Israel many times before and nowhere is safe.

    But people in Gaza City have few options: If they stay, they risk being killed, and if they leave, they face dangers on the road and may have to spend considerable money to move their belongings south.

    Those who have returned to their homes in Gaza City’s Zeitoun neighbourhood, where Israeli forces withdrew recently after weeks of ground assaults, have found everything they owned destroyed.

    “What we have built in 50 years was flattened in five days,” resident Aqeel Kishko told Al Jazeera. “Nothing remains standing – buildings, roads and infrastructure. We are walking not only on ruins but also on dead bodies of our loved ones.”

    Nohaa Tafish said it would be impossible for Gaza’s largest urban centre to be revived.

    “What would people return to? There is nothing to return to,” she said.

    Ahmed Rihem also had his home in Gaza City reduced to rubble. “It is as if the entire Zeitoun neighbourhood was hit with a nuclear bomb,” he said.

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  • IDF begins first strikes of Gaza City op.

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    “Once the door opens, it will not close, and IDF activity will intensify until the Hamas murderers and rapists accept Israel’s conditions to end the war,” Katz said.

    The IDF will intensify its activity in Gaza City until Hamas agrees to end the war on Israel’s terms, Defense Minister Israel Katz stated on Friday.

    He added that Israel has issued an evacuation notice to a “multi-story terror building in Gaza City.”

    “Once the door opens, it will not close, and IDF activity will intensify until the Hamas murderers and rapists accept Israel’s conditions to end the war, foremost among them the release of all the hostages and disarmament, or they will be destroyed.”

    The IDF distributed evacuation leaflets for the Radwan neighborhood in Gaza City, according to Channel 12.

    IDF operates in Gaza, August 29, 2025. (credit: IDF SPOKESPERSON UNIT)

    “In the coming days, the IDF will carry out precise, targeted strikes against terrorist infrastructure that poses a direct threat to IDF troops,” the military stated.

    “Prior to the strikes, numerous measures will be taken to minimize the risk of harming civilians as much as possible, including targeted warnings, the use of precision munitions, aerial surveillance, and additional intelligence.”

    Hamas reveals footage of Gaza hostage Guy Gilboa-Dalal

    Hamas released a video ofGaza hostage Guy Gilboa-Dalal and a second hostage whose family requested he not be named on its Telegram on Friday.

    “Time is running out,” Hamas wrote.

    In the video, Gilboa-Dalal said he couldn’t believe he was still alive after 22 months of war, and that he was being held in Gaza City.

    Gilboa-Dalal stated that he and the remaining hostages would remain in Gaza City during the upcoming IDF operation, and that Hamas would move them to wherever the IDF operates.

    Shir Perets contributed to this report.

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  • Large-scale evacuation of Gazans from north Gaza, Gaza City to begin soon

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    Hamas distributed media messages to deter residents from moving south, in order to continue using them as human shields.

    The large-scale movement of the population from northern Gaza and Gaza City is expected to begin soon, according to officers in the Southern Command.

    Estimates suggest that hundreds of thousands of Palestinians will move to shelter areas in the southern Gaza Strip. The officers said that the transfer will be accompanied by the distribution of leaflets and media announcements to residents of the Strip. The move will also be accompanied by intensified ground and air operations.

    Additionally, thousands of tents and shelter equipment entered Gaza on Thursday, COGAT said on X/Twitter, in preparation for the IDF’s plans. Tens of thousands more tents are in the pipeline and are expected to enter Gaza in the coming days.

    “COGAT, together with international partners, is working to ensure the population has humanitarian supplies, including food, medical supplies, and shelter equipment,” the agency said.

    The defense establishment estimates that between 70,000 and 80,000 residents have left Gaza City for the south over the past two weeks due to fears of an escalation in fighting by Israel.

    A Palestinian displaced by the Israeli military offensive walks in a tent camp, as Israeli forces escalate operations around Gaza City, in Gaza City, September 3, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/Mahmoud Issa)

    Hamas fears the movement of residents, who are used by the group as human shields, and is therefore trying to prevent it. After IDF Arabic-language spokesperson Avichay Adraee published messages to Gaza residents about designated humanitarian zones in the Strip,

    Hamas’s Government Information Office claimed that the Al-Mawasi area and the central camps were not suitable for absorbing evacuees, warning of suffering, overcrowding, and hunger. A channel operated by Hamas’s military wing told residents that the announcement was merely “a deception to force residents to evacuate to areas near our positions, where they continue to be targets for attacks.”

    Ahead of the implementation of the plan to capture Gaza City, which is expected to include the evacuation of the city’s population to the south, security officials told Walla that Hamas has launched a new campaign against the movement of Palestinians.

    Hamas distributes media messages to deter residents from moving south

    As part of the campaign, Hamas distributed media messages to deter residents from moving south, in order to continue using them as human shields.

    Hamas also began distributing leaflets forbidding residents from leaving and claimed that prices in Gaza City were being reduced, in an attempt to keep the population in place.

    The IDF has received testimonies, including video documentation, showing Palestinians from the Zeitoun neighborhood evacuating south, saying, “There is no other place we want to go.”

    Residents expressed concern over their inability to afford rent in a new location if they fail to find tents in the shelter areas in the south.

    Jerusalem Post Staff contributed to this report.

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  • Hamas prevents evacuation from Gaza City with threats and attacks on civilians

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    60,000-80,000 out of one million have left the city, with the majority still staying because of threats from Hamas terrorists.

    A senior defense source on Wednesday said that Hamas is working hard to block Palestinian civilians from evacuating from Gaza City in northern Gaza despite the military’s two-week effort to encourage them to leave as the clock ticks down to an expected large-scale invasion.

    To date, there are varying estimates between Israel and the UN, but around 60,000-80,000 Palestinians have evacuated southward from Gaza City since the IDF started to press for this.

    Those numbers come from a total of around one million Palestinians currently present in the Gaza City area.

    According to the defense source, Hamas wants to keep as many civilians as possible in Gaza City, both to serve directly as human shields from IDF attacks and also to place more diplomatic pressure on Israel to end the war in the event that Palestinian civilians are caught up in the crossfire.

    In the senior defense official’s view, Hamas views the deaths of its own population as a strategic asset to play against Israel’s reputation globally.

    Smoke rises from Gaza following an explosion, as seen from Israel, May 16, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/AMMAR AWAD)

    Hamas’s tactics to keep Palestinians from evacuating

    Hamas tactics to prevent Palestinians from leaving Gaza City have varied from scaring them by (falsely) claiming that conditions in southern Gaza are worse in terms of insufficient tents, food, and medical care, versus physically shooting or beating those Palestinians who do try to flee.

    In addition, Hamas’s public relations units are working to reassure Palestinians in Gaza City with the idea that it is their patriotic duty to stay in Gaza City as Hamas prepares to try to repel the IDF’s invasion.

    Questioned about what happened to protests against Hamas from some months ago, the source acknowledged that those had eventually died down.

    The senior defense official did add that there are still parts of Gaza over which Hamas has weaker control due to resistance by tribal clans or gangs, but that these are limited problems for Hamas and have not taken a broader toll on its control over Gaza.

    Despite Hamas’s efforts, the senior defense source expressed optimism that, closer to the real start of hostilities, most Palestinian civilians will flee.

    The source added that possibly around 200,000 civilians might stay longer, and some might only flee as artillery fire and aerial bombs start falling.

    Next, the defense official said that there are now 100,000 tents designated to receive the fleeing population.

    In addition, the sources said that there are already around one million Palestinians living in other tents throughout the Strip.

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  • Security forces kill Hamas terrorist who held Emily Damari, Romi Gonen, and Naama Levy hostage

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    Naeem held several roles in Hamas’s Gaza City brigade, and throughout the war, was a senior operative in military intelligence and was close to Gaza City brigade commander Ezz al-Din Haddad.

    Security forces killed Hamas terrorist Hazem Awni Naeem, who held Emily Damari, Romi Gonen, and Naama Levy hostage, the IDF and Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) confirmed on Tuesday.

    Naeem was killed in a coordinated strike by the IDF and Shin Bet on August 28 in the Gaza City area, the military said.

    Naeem held several roles in Hamas’s Gaza City brigade, and throughout the war, was a senior operative in military intelligence and was close to Gaza City brigade commander Ezz al-Din Haddad.

    The IDF and ISA eliminated the senior terrorist Hazem Awni Naeem in the Gaza City area. (credit: IDF SPOKESPERSON UNIT)

    Reports from Naeem’s death surfaced on Sunday, with the IDF confirming his death on Monday through its official channels.

    Damari reacted to the news of his death with an Instagram post where she thanked Israel’s security forces, who “never rest for a moment on behalf of all of us,” and hoped that good news, including the announcement of the return of the remaining 48 hostages, would come “sooner than expected.”

    Previous killing of other Damari terror captor

    Mohammed Nasser Ali Qanita, another Hamas terrorist who held Damari and the others captive, was confirmed killed by the IDF and Shin Bet in July, following a targeted attack in mid-June.

    Qanita was a member of Hamas’s military intelligence’s al-Furqan Battalion. He infiltrated Israel on October 7 and then held Damari hostage in his home at the start of the war.

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  • Israeli leaders speak to reservists ahead of Gaza City operation

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    As Israel starts to mobilize 60,000 reservists for an intensified war in Gaza, its leaders stressed to soldiers on Tuesday the importance of their mission to defeat the Hamas militia which attacked the country nearly two years ago.

    “We are fighting a stubborn and just war without peer,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a video message to soldiers.

    “But what began in Gaza must end in Gaza.”

    Earlier on Tuesday, Israeli Chief of General Staff Eyal Zamir told a meeting of reservists that the Gaza operation would be intensified.

    “We have already begun the ground operation in Gaza – make no mistake,” Zamir said, as reported on the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Telegram channel.

    “We are already entering places we have never entered before,” he added.

    “We will not stop the war until we defeat this enemy,” he said.

    IDF says top Hamas terrorist eliminated in Gaza City

    Late on Tuesday, the IDF reported that it killed in a joint operation with the Israel Security Agency (ISA), Hazem Awni Naeeem, the terrorist who held hostages Emily Damari, Romi Gonen and Naama Levy in captivity. The three were released in a hostage deal in January.

    The Hamas militant was a senior operative in military intelligence in the Gaza City brigade, the IDF said.

    Israel is planning to capture Gaza City, the largest settlement in the sealed-off strip and home to some 1 million, to rid it of Hamas terrorists, the government has said.

    The move has been denounced by hostage relatives and many others in Israel who worry that an occuupation of Gaza City will endanger the lives of those still held captive.

    According to Israeli sources, 48 hostages are still being held in Gaza, 20 of whom are believed to be alive. Other critics argue that Hamas cannot be defeated militarily and no longer poses a threat to Israel.

    On the ground in Gaza

    At least five children were killed in the latest Israeli attack on southern Gaza, local media reported on Tuesday.

    Palestinian news agency WAFA said the shelling took place in al-Mawasi, an area that has been designated as a humanitarian zone by the Israeli military.

    A spokesman for the military said it was investigating the reports.

    Images circulating on social media show the dead bodies of several children. It was not possible to independently verify them.

    According to WAFA, dozens of people were killed in earlier attacks across Gaza.

    The war was triggered by the Hamas-led attacks on Israel on October 7, 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and more than 250 were taken hostage.

    More than 63,600 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli attacks since the start of the conflict, according to figures from the Hamas-controlled health authorities in the territory.

    The tally does not distinguish between civilians and fighters, but the figures are seen as credible by the United Nations.

    The military’s Arabic spokesman on Tuesday again called on the population to evacuate, suggesting people move south to al-Mawasi, where conditions are said to be catastrophic.

    Aid organisations, citing satellite images, report that more than 70% of homes have been destroyed or damaged, with some areas of Gaza seeing destruction rates as high as 90%.

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  • Israeli forces kill pregnant woman and her unborn baby in Gaza City assault

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    The Israeli military has killed a pregnant woman and her unborn baby near the Shati refugee camp as it continued its large-scale assault on Gaza City, with several strikes targeting civilians.

    Medical sources at Gaza City’s al-Shifa Hospital said that another child was also killed in the attack on a house near the camp on Monday, according to the Wafa news agency.

    The military also continued to pummel the Zeitoun and Sabra neighbourhoods in the south of the city, where more than 1,000 buildings have been levelled since Israel began its push to take over the urban centre last month, killing 10 people on Monday.

    Earlier in the day, scenes of chaos played out at a crowded market on Gaza City’s Nasser Street, with locals scattering in all directions amid the debris after an Israeli attack, which killed at least four people and wounded dozens of others.

    Reporting from the scene, Al Jazeera’s Moath al-Kahlout said people were panic-stricken.

    “They don’t know what to do and where to go. They are trying so hard to find a safer place, but the Israeli army keep attacking every corner in the city,” he said.

    Further south, in Deir el-Balah, Israel targeted a group of citizens inside Al-Mazra’a School. Later, Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital announced the death of Anas Saeed Abu Mughsib, Wafe reported.

    Medical sources said that in total, at least 59 people were killed in Israeli attacks across the Strip on Monday.

    ‘Man-made famine in the 21st Century’

    Already displaced by war multiple times, Gaza City residents now face the twin threats of war and famine.

    Hunger caused by Israel’s months-long blockade led to the deaths of three infants on Monday. Children account for more than a third of the nearly 350 deaths from hunger and starvation in the enclave since Israel’s war began in October 2023.

    Authorities say the number of humanitarian aid trucks that Israel has allowed into the Strip in the last month has only met 15 percent of the starving population’s needs.

    Yet, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected a report in August from the world’s leading authority on food crises, the Integrated Food Security Classification (PIC), that famine was under way in Gaza City, calling it an “outright lie”.

    On Monday, United Kingdom Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs David Lammy acknowledged the United Nations-backed IPC declaration, saying he was “outraged” by Israel for not allowing enough aid to enter Gaza.

    “This is not a natural disaster, it’s a man-made famine in the 21st century,” he said.

    “We need a massive, massive humanitarian response to prevent more deaths, crucial NGOs, humanitarians and health workers allowed to operate, and stockpiles of aid on Gaza’s borders released.”

    ‘Power-hungry ruler’

    Meanwhile, in Israel, mourners gathered for the separate funerals of Idan Shtivi and Ilan Weiss, captives taken from Israel during the October 2023 Hamas attack, whose remains were recovered in an Israeli military operation in Gaza last week.

    Some expressed anger at the government for not reaching a deal with Hamas to end the fighting and return the remaining captives.

    “It’s a horror, it’s profound sadness and grief beyond words to describe the anger, the insult to the hostages, the insult to the fallen, the insult to the soldiers sent once again to Gaza,” mourner Ruti Taro told The Associated Press news agency.

    “No one knows why, except for the power-hungry ruler,” he said.

    Israeli news site Ynet reported on Monday that Israeli army chief Eyal Zamir had warned of the implications of Netanyahu’s intention to take over Gaza without making any post-war plans.

    “You are heading to a military government,” Zamir reportedly told a meeting of the Israeli security cabinet late on Sunday. “Your plan is leading us there. Understand the implications”.

    Israel’s war on Gaza has so far killed more than 63,000 Palestinians. About one million inhabitants of Gaza City, many of whom have already been displaced multiple times, are now being forced out under sustained Israeli attacks, with no safe zones to flee to in the enclave.

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  • Report: Israeli army chief warns Gaza will need military government

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    Israeli military chief Eyal Zamir has warned that the plan to seize Gaza City will lead to an Israeli military administration in the territory, the Israeli news site ynet reported on Monday.

    “You are heading to a military government,” Zamir reportedly told a meeting of the Israeli Security Cabinet late on Sunday.

    “Your plan is leading us there. Understand the implications,” he said, according to ynet.

    The chief of the Israeli general staff said Israel’s political leadership was not preparing any alternative for the period after the war.

    Israel put the coastal strip under military administration following the 1967 Six Day War. It had previously been administered by Egypt.

    In the context of agreements with the Palestinians, Israel returned civil administration to the Palestinian Authority more than 30 years ago, while continuing to control the borders.

    Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip in 2005 led to the end of an Israeli military presence, although Israeli forces continued to control the borders. Hamas took power in the area in 2007.

    A return to military administration would represent a step backwards and dampen hopes for a two-state solution.

    According to the ynet report, Zamir urged a deal with Hamas for the release of more hostages. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke out against a vote on the issue, noting that it was not on the meeting’s agenda.

    Hamas said in the middle of last month that it had agreed to a new proposal by mediators for a ceasefire. Israel has yet to respond to the initiative.

    There are still 48 hostages being held in the Gaza Strip, 20 of whom are believed by the Israeli government to be still alive.

    Zamir has warned in the past that taking control of Gaza City would endanger their lives.

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  • Aid ship carrying Greta Thunberg, other activists, sets sail to Gaza

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    A flotilla carrying activist Greta Thunberg and others departed from Barcelona for the Gaza Strip on Sunday with humanitarian aid on board.

    The Global Sumud Flotilla will try to break the Israeli blockade of the Palestinian territory and bring humanitarian aid, food, water and medicine to Gaza as Israel steps up its offensive in Gaza City.

    “The story here is about Palestine,” Thunberg said at a press conference in Barcelona. “The story here is how people are being deliberately deprived of the very basic means to survive.”

    Food experts warned earlier this month that Gaza City was in famine and that half a million people across the strip were facing catastrophic levels of hunger. The nearly 23-month war has killed more than 63,000 people, with at least 332 Palestinians dying of malnutrition, including 124 children, according to the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry.

    Activists, including Swedish campaigner Greta Thunberg, are departing Barcelona for Gaza as part of the Global Sumud Flotilla (GSF), a self-described

    The maritime convoy, comprising approximately 20 boats and delegations from 44 countries, will be joined by additional ships from ports in Italy, Greece, and Tunisia in the coming days as it navigates its route from the western Mediterranean to the Gaza Strip, organizers said.

    Thunberg and “Game of Thrones” actor Liam Cunningham are some of the most recognizable figures on the expedition, as well as activists, politicians like former mayor of Barcelona, Ada Colau, and journalists.

    “It has been very clear that Israel has been continuously violating international law by either attacking, unlawfully intercepting the boats in international waters, and continuously preventing the humanitarian aid from coming in”, said Thunberg in an interview with The Associated Press on Saturday.

    It is not the first time Thunberg and Cunninham will attempt to reach Gaza waters this year. She was deported in June when the ship she was traveling on with 11 other people, the Madleen, was stopped by the Israeli military.

     The flotilla, which will be joined by others launching from various locations on September 4, includes activists, seafarers, doctors, and artists from over 40 countries. / Credit: Mario Wurzburger / Getty Images

    The flotilla, which will be joined by others launching from various locations on September 4, includes activists, seafarers, doctors, and artists from over 40 countries. / Credit: Mario Wurzburger / Getty Images

    Cunningham, who will join the flotilla, played a video showing a girl singing while planning her own funeral. The girl, Fatima, died four days ago, he said.

    “What sort of world have we slid into where children are making their own funeral arrangements?” Cunningham told reporters.

    In late July, the Israeli military stopped another aid ship, detained 21 international activists and reporters, and seized its cargo, including baby formula, food and medicine, according to Freedom Flotilla Coalition.

    An Israeli official said Saturday that the country will soon halt or slow humanitarian aid into parts of northern Gaza, as it expands its military offensive against Hamas, a day after the city was declared a combat zone.

    The war began on Oct. 7, 2023, when an attack by Hamas terrorists inside Israel claimed the lives of 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and took 251 people hostage.

    Editor’s Note: This article has been corrected. A representative for Susan Sarandon tells CBS News that while the actress is supportive of the cause, she was not on the flotilla, as was previously reported by the Associated Press.

    “Portrait of a person who’s not there”: Documenting the bedrooms of school shooting victims

    The Long Island home renovation that uncovered a hidden story

    Passage: In memoriam

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  • ‘Fields of rubble’: Israel, destroying Gaza City, kills 78 across enclave

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    Israel has stepped up its destruction of Gaza City as it plans to seize Gaza’s largest urban centre and forcibly displace around one million Palestinians to concentration zones in the south, as it killed at least 78 people across the besieged enclave since dawn, including 32 desperately seeking food.

    On Sunday, in Gaza City, the Palestinian Civil Defence reported a fire in tents near al-Quds Hospital after Israeli shelling. At least five people were killed and three wounded when a residential apartment was hit near the Remal neighbourhood.

    Ismail al-Thawabta, director of Gaza’s Government Media Office, said the Israeli army is also using “explosive robots” in residential areas and forcibly displacing Palestinians in Gaza City.

    In a statement on X on Sunday, al-Thawabta said the army has detonated more than 80 such devices in civilian neighbourhoods over the past three weeks, calling it a “scorched-earth policy” that has destroyed homes and endangered lives.

    He said more than one million Palestinians in Gaza City and the north of the enclave “refuse to submit to the policy of forced displacement and ethnic cleansing” despite the destruction and starvation caused by the Israeli assault.

    Footage posted on Instagram by Palestinian journalist Faiz Osama and verified by Al Jazeera showed the moments that followed an Israeli aerial attack on the Sabra neighbourhood, in the southern part of Gaza City.

    In the footage, as plumes of smoke rise to the sky, a child can be seen screaming with a wound to the leg. A man also lays on the ground with what appears to be a head injury.

    The video also shows the destruction left by the strike after residential buildings were flattened by the explosion.

    Israel’s forces have carried out sustained bombardment on Gaza City since early August as part of a deepening push to seize the area in the latest phase of its nearly two-year genocidal war.

    On Friday, the Israeli military said it had begun the “initial stages” of its offensive, declaring the area a “combat zone”.

    ‘Fields of rubble’

    Reporting from Gaza City on Sunday, Al Jazeera’s Hani Mahmoud said intensifying Israeli attacks have been turning parts of Gaza City, once teeming and crowded with residential buildings, into “fields of rubble”.

    “There is non-stop heavy artillery targeting the Zeitoun area and Jabalia, where we are seeing the systematic demolition of homes. There is hardly any fighting going on, but heavy artillery and bulldozers are moving from one street to the other, destroying all of these residential clusters,” he said.

    “The majority of people in those areas do not have the luxury to pack up and leave because there is no safety anywhere.”

    Another Palestinian journalist was also killed on Sunday. A source at al-Shifa Hospital told Al Jazeera that Islam Abed was killed in an Israeli attack on Gaza City and that she worked for Al-Quds Al-Youm TV channel.

    The Government Media Office said the “number of martyred journalists has risen to 247″ since the war began. Other tallies have put the number of journalists and media workers killed at more than 270.

    On Monday, five journalists – one of whom worked for Al Jazeera – were among at least 21 people killed in an Israeli attack on Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza’s Khan Younis.

    ‘Life is difficult, so we will stay in our home’

    Many residents in Gaza City are opting to stay put despite Israel declaring it a “combat zone”.

    It was Gaza’s most populous city before the war began, home to about 700,000 people. Then hundreds of thousands fled under Israel’s forced evacuation threats before many returned, joined by thousands of other displaced from the south, during a January-to-March ceasefire, which Israel broke.

    Fedaa Hamad, who was displaced from Beit Hanoon, said she has “no plans to leave” Gaza City this time despite Israel’s latest warning.

    “We are tired from the first displacement. Where are we going to go? Is there a place in the south? We cannot find it,” she said.

    Akram Mzini, a resident of Gaza City, said he would not leave “because displacement is very difficult”.

    “We were displaced to the south before, and displacement in the south is not simple and it is costly,” he said. “Life is difficult, so we will stay in our home, and whatever God wants will happen.”

    Elsewhere in Gaza on Sunday, an Israeli attack on the centre of Deir el-Balah killed at least four people, Al Jazeera Arabic reported.

    Earlier, medical sources said an Israeli bombardment killed at least one person and wounded several in the city, located in the central part of the Gaza Strip.

    Israeli forces have killed at least 78 Palestinians across Gaza since dawn, including 32 aid seekers, according to medical sources.

    Since the war began, Israel has killed at least 63,459 people and wounded 160,256. A total of 1,139 people were killed in Israel during the Hamas-led October 7, 2023, attacks, and about 200 were taken captive.

    On Sunday, Israeli army chief Eyal Zamir held a situation assessment meeting with his top commanders, saying the military must “initiate” more attacks to surprise and reach its targets anywhere.

    Many more reserve soldiers will assemble this week “in preparation for the continued intensification of the fighting against Hamas in Gaza City”, Zamir was quoted as saying by the military.

    Meanwhile, the armed wing of Hamas said its fighters successfully attacked two invading Israeli military vehicles in Gaza City on Saturday.

    The Qassam Brigades said a Merkava tank of the Israeli army was hit with a Yassin-105 shell, while a D9 military bulldozer was targeted with an explosive device on a street southwest of the Zeitoun neighbourhood of the besieged area.

    As global condemnation against the situation grows, in the largest attempt to break the Israeli blockade of the Palestinian territory by sea, the Global Sumud Flotilla left the Spanish port city of Barcelona on Sunday.

    The flotilla’s launch comes after the United Nations-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) declared a state of famine in Gaza this month.

    The Global Sumud Flotilla, which describes itself as an independent group not linked to any government or political party, did not say how many ships would set sail or the exact time of departure, but Swedish campaigner Greta Thunberg spoke of “dozens” of vessels.

    Sumud means “perseverance” in Arabic.

    Two previous attempts by activists to deliver aid by ship to Gaza were blocked by Israel.

    Mohamad Elmasry of the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies told Al Jazeera that while the flotilla was “an important act of symbolic resistance … ultimately, they will be intercepted”.

    “This is not going to solve the famine,” he said. “What’s going to solve the famine, ultimately, is governments doing their job to stop genocide and deliberate starvation programmes.”

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  • Hamas spokesman Abu Obeida killed in Gaza, Israel says

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    Abu Obeida, the spokesman for Hamas’s armed wing, has been killed in an air strike in Gaza City, Israel has said.

    Israel’s Defence Minister Israel Katz congratulated the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and Israel’s security agency, Shin Bet, for the “flawless execution” in a post on X.

    He gave no detail on the time or location of the operation, but the IDF earlier said its aircraft attacked “a key terrorist” in the al-Rimal neighbourhood on Saturday, prompting reports in Israeli media that Obeida had been the target.

    Hamas has not confirmed his death. The Palestinian armed group earlier said dozens of civilians were killed and injured in Israeli strikes on a residential building in the district.

    Katz warned on Sunday that many more of Obeida’s “criminal partners” would be targeted with “the intensification of the campaign in Gaza” – a reference to a recently approved Israeli plan to seize control of Gaza City.

    Separately, the IDF and Shin Bet offered more details about Saturday’s strikes that targeted the Hamas spokesman.

    They said in a joint statement that the operation had been “made possible due to prior intelligence gathered by [Shin Bet] and the IDF’s Intelligence Directorate” that had identified his hiding place.

    Five missiles struck the second and third floor of the six-storey apartment building simultaneously from two different directions.

    The targeted flat had been used as a dentist’s surgery. Witnesses reported hundreds of thousands of dollars flying into the air because of the strike, with large sums stolen and later recovered by Hamas members.

    Obeida was among the few remaining senior members of Hamas’s military wing from before its deadly 7 October 2023 attack on southern Israel.

    The joint statement said Obeida “served as the public face of the Hamas terrorist organization” and “disseminated Hamas’ propaganda”.

    Over the past few years, Obeida – believed to be about 40 years old – delivered a number of long diatribes against Israel on behalf of Hamas’s military wing, the al-Qassam Brigades.

    Always masked in a Palestinian scarf, he became an idol to Hamas supporters throughout the Middle East.

    In what may have been his final speech on Friday, Obeida said the fate of remaining Israeli hostages would be the same as that of Hamas fighters, warning Israel against its planned invasion of Gaza City.

    Palestinians flee as smoke is seen billowing over Gaza City following an Israeli air strike on Saturday [EPA]

    On Saturday, Hamas accused the IDF of hitting a residential building in the densely populated al-Rimal neighbourhood of Gaza City.

    Local journalists reported that at least seven people had been killed and 20 injured in the strikes, with children among the casualties.

    The IDF said that prior to the attack “many steps were taken to reduce the chance of harming civilians, including the use of precision weapons, aerial observations, and additional intelligence information”.

    BBC News has been unable to independently verify the claims of either the IDF or Hamas.

    In early August, Israel’s security cabinet approved a plan to seize control of Gaza City in a fresh offensive, with the stated aim of bringing the 22-month-long war to an end.

    The UN has repeatedly warned that a complete military takeover would risk “catastrophic consequences” for Palestinian civilians and Israeli hostages held in Gaza. The UK’s ambassador to Israel has said it would be “a huge mistake”.

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to defeat Hamas and defied international criticism of his plans to expand the war.

    Israel’s military operation in Gaza began in response to the Hamas-led 7 October attack, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage. Since then, more than 63,000 Palestinians have been killed, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry.

    While the operation to capture Gaza City has yet to begin in earnest, Israeli attacks on the city – where nearly a million people live – have been ongoing.

    The Israeli military has said it plans to evacuate Gaza City’s entire population and move it to shelters in the south before troops move in. Most of Gaza’s population has already been displaced many times during the conflict.

    More than 90% of the city’s homes are estimated to be damaged or destroyed, and the healthcare, water, sanitation and hygiene systems have collapsed.

    Last week, conditions of famine were confirmed in Gaza City and its surrounding areas for the first time.

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  • IDF targets senior Hamas terrorist in strike on Gaza City residential building

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    Israeli officials said they are optimistic Hamas spokesperson Abu Obeida was killed in the strike. However, his death has not been confirmed.

    The IDF carried out a strike targeting a senior Hamas terrorist in Gaza City, the IDF and Shin Bet confirmed in a joint statement Saturday.

    Hamas military wing spokesperson Abu Obeida was the target of the strike. Israeli officials told The Jerusalem Post they are optimistic he was killed in the strike. However, his death has not been confirmed.

    The strike targeted the first and second floors of a residential building.

    In the strike, one was killed, and several others were wounded, Palestinian state media WAFA reported. Gaza reports said that seven were killed in the strike.

    Scene of the strike in northern Gazs City, where Hamas military spokesman Abu Obeida was reportedly present on August 30, 2025. (credit: TPS-IL)

    Obeida threatens soldiers will be kidnapped, warns hostages held in combat zones

    Hamas’s military wing spokesperson, Abu Obeida, declared on Friday that Israeli hostages are being held alongside its fighters in combat zones under the same perilous conditions, as Israel intensifies preparations for a full-scale invasion of Gaza City.

    “We will preserve the lives of the captives to the extent that we can,” the terror group said. “They will remain with our fighters in the places of confrontation, exposed to the same risks.”

    The IDF’s expansion of operations will increase the chances of capturing IDF soldiers, the Hamas spokesperson warned. He also threatened that Hamas terrorists are on high alert and will teach the IDF, what he referred to a “harsh lesson.”

    Hamas added that for every hostage killed as a result of Israeli military action, it would publish the individual’s name, photograph, and proof of death.

    The IDF said that prior to the strike, it took steps to mitigate harm to civilians, including the use of precise ammunition, aerial surveillance, and intelligence.

    This is a developing story.

    Amichai Stein contributed to this report.

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  • Israel to stop humanitarian aid drops in Gaza City in coming days – KAN

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    Generate Key Takeaways

    The number of people in the city who must begin evacuating south is around 800 thousand, according to the report.

    Israel will reportedly stop dropping humanitarian aid packages over Gaza City in the coming days, according to a Friday report by KAN, Israel’s public broadcaster.

    The report added that Israel will also reduce the flow of aid into the northern part of the Strip, which is done to communicate the message to civilians on the ground that they must begin evacuating south, in light of the IDF’s planned invasion of Gaza City.

    The number of people in the city who must begin evacuating south is around 800 thousand, according to the report.

    The IDF will reportedly take over the city before Rosh Hashanah, after calling up tens of thousands of reserve soldiers. The KAN report described that the military’s operation plan will take about two to three months.

    Adding more GHF distribution centers in light of Gaza City takeover

    The report also added that the IDF is undergoing preparations to establish two more food distribution sites organized by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

    A Palestinian woman carries a box as people seek aid supplies from the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), in the central Gaza Strip, August 4, 2025. (credit: REUTERS/STRINGER)

    On Friday morning, hours before the KAN report, the IDF said that Gaza City had become defined as a full-fledged war zone.

    The military added that any special protection it was offering to NGOs no longer applies to Gaza City.

    Yonah Jeremy Bob contributed to this report.

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  • Israel’s Smotrich calls for phased Gaza annexation if Hamas does not disarm

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    Far-right Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has called for Israel to annex the Gaza Strip if Hamas refuses to disarm, the latest push by an Israeli official to forcibly displace Palestinians and take complete control of the coastal enclave.

    During a news conference on Thursday, Smotrich said if Hamas does not agree to surrender, disarm and release Israeli captives, Israel should annex a section of Gaza each week for four weeks.

    He said Palestinians would first be told to move south in Gaza, followed by Israel imposing a siege on the territory’s north and centre regions, and ending with annexation.

    “This can be achieved in three to four months,” said Smotrich, describing the measures as part of a plan to “win in Gaza by the end of the year”.

    The far-right minister’s annexation push comes as the Israeli army has advanced deeper into Gaza City in an effort to seize the city and forcibly displace about one million Palestinians living there.

    Israel’s intensified attacks on Gaza City have been widely condemned, with United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warning last week that the campaign would cause “massive death and destruction”.

    Meanwhile, Gaza City and the surrounding areas continue to experience famine as Israel continues to block food, water and other humanitarian aid from entering the Strip.

    “Famine is no longer a looming possibility; it’s a present-day catastrophe,” Guterres said on Thursday.

    “People are dying of hunger. Families are being torn apart by displacement and despair. Pregnant women are facing unimaginable risks, and the systems that sustain life – food, water, healthcare – have been systematically dismantled.”

    Israel and its Western allies have long been pushing for Hamas to lay down its weapons, insisting that the Palestinian group cannot be involved in any future governance of Gaza.

    Hamas rejected Smotrich’s remarks on Thursday, saying they represent “an official call to exterminate our people” as well as “an official admission of the use of starvation and siege against innocent civilians as a weapon”.

    “Smotrich’s statement is not an isolated extremist opinion, but rather a declared government policy that has been implemented for nearly 23 months” of Israel’s war on Palestinians in the enclave, Hamas said in a statement.

    “These statements expose the reality of the occupation to the world and confirm that what is happening in Gaza is not a ‘military battle’ but rather a project of genocide and mass displacement,” the group added, urging the international community to hold Israeli leaders accountable.

    During his news conference, Smotrich called on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to adopt his annexation plan “in full immediately”.

    Netanyahu did not comment publicly on Smotrich’s remarks. But the Israeli leader has alluded to a plan for Israel to “take control of all Gaza” and send troops to reoccupy the entire enclave.

    Israel’s military has for weeks been issuing forcible evacuation notices to Palestinians in so-called “combat zones” to relocate to southern Gaza.

    Smotrich, a major backer of Israel’s settler movement who himself lives in an illegal settlement in the occupied West Bank, has expressed support for re-establishing illegal settlements in the Gaza Strip that were dismantled in 2005.

    He and other far-right members of Netanyahu’s governing coalition also have voiced staunch opposition to efforts to reach a deal to end Israel’s war on Gaza, threatening to topple the government if an agreement is reached.

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