The Skeik building, in a quiet road off Omar al-Mukhtar Street in western Gaza City, was a familiar sight to Gaza’s lovers.
The tree-lined street that ran beside it was once a favourite place for courting couples, eager to avoid Gaza’s socially conservative gaze.
But the road nicknamed “Lovers’ Street” – and the six-storey building that overlooks it – is now surrounded by rubble. There are few residents left who remember the old days. Those hiding here now are not running from Gaza’s disapproval, but from Israeli tanks.
Gaza’s war has left this once-glitzy neighbourhood in ruins. The smart shops and restaurants running down to the beach are now pockmarked with shrapnel and bullet holes, the park with its French-manicured trees, is buried under grey rubble.
[BBC]
The Skeik building itself is still standing, but its walls are now splattered by shrapnel and a large artillery-sized hole has punched through an upper floor. Its pre-war faces replaced by an ever-changing confetti of displaced people.
Two years after Gaza’s war began, this one building offers a snapshot of how the conflict has eroded ties to home and community among Gaza’s people, and what impact that has had.
The previous tenants of the Skeik building are long gone. Above the boarded-up storerooms on the ground floor, eight of the building’s 10 apartments have become temporary homes for families displaced by the war.
Hadeel Daban – fourth floor
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Twenty-six-year-old Hadeel Daban lives on the fourth floor with her husband and three young children: nine-year-old Judi, six-year-old Murad and two-year-old Mohammad.
The family arrived here two months ago, paying 1,000 shekels ($305; £227) a month to camp in the empty rooms.
“The people who were here before us left because it was dangerous,” Hadeel said. “Shrapnel hits the walls here, but it’s still better than a tent.”
The family’s few belongings are neatly stashed in piles of bags along the walls. Torn sheets cover the gaping holes where the windows used to be. It’s the 12th place the family has moved to.
“When loading our belongings on a cart, I put my children on top of it all and tell them to play with the items, like the kitchen stuff,” Hadeel told me. “I tell them we’re going to live a different life, a bit away from the one we had.”
The family home stands less than a mile away, in Gaza City’s al-Tuffah neighbourhood. They fled in the first week of the war, after a relative’s apartment above theirs was hit.
They returned a few months later. But on 15 March 2024, a strike on the building next door to them killed Hadeel’s mother-in-law, injured the three children and buried Hadeel’s husband alive.
“We spent hours searching for him, and found him under the rubble,” she said.
Her husband, Izz el-Din, was unconscious. They took him to al-Shifa hospital, where Hadeel says she was told her husband had a skull fracture and was in a coma.
Three days later, he was still being treated when Israel sealed the hospital and began a two-week military operation there, to root out Hamas command posts, it said.
It was only when Israeli forces finally withdrew that Hadeel was reunited with her husband, fragile but alive.
Hadeel told us he still needed regular medical checks. “I used to take him to a neurologist [in Gaza City], but six weeks ago all the doctors moved to the south,” she said.
A home is not just shelter or belongings. And all three families we spoke to in the Skeik building had moved multiple times.
“None of my neighbours are my neighbours anymore, because new people come every month,” Hadeel said. “I don’t even know where my original neighbours are – some went south, some were killed or injured. There are no neighbours anymore.”
On the day our colleague met Hadeel, Gaza City was emptying again as hundreds of thousands of people headed for safer areas further south.
The Israeli army, advancing through the city, had issued “a last warning” to leave. But the families we spoke to were planning on staying put.
While Hadeel was talking to our cameraman, a series of explosions echoed through the apartment.
Through the windows, huge grey clouds rose in the middle distance.
Neither of her young sons even flinched.
[BBC]
The Skeik building was built in 2008, on the back of the construction boom that swept Gaza City in the mid-1990s. A prime location right next to the American International School and a block away from the Palestinian parliament – both now in ruins.
It was this central location, off the main Omar al-Mukhtar street, that put the Skeik building in the path of Israeli tanks during the first months of the war.
Al-Shifa hospital lies two blocks to the north. Within weeks of the invasion, Israel’s army moved in to capture the complex, saying it was being used as a Hamas base.
Troops approached from several directions, including the roads around Omar al-Mukhtar street.
Near the back of the Skeik building, a large rectangular hole has been blown in the wall. Inside, Hebrew graffiti reads, “the last Samurai” – a reference to a Hollywood film about a 19th Century Japanese warrior outgunned by modern weapons.
We asked Israel’s army whether its forces had ever used the building or fought there. We received no reply.
But the building’s owner, Suheil Skeik, now living in Turkey, told us the block had been used as an observation post by Israeli troops during operations.
And Israel said it had struck several compounds used by Palestinian snipers in the area in March.
Ground forces remained in Gaza City for months during the first months of the war, launching a second assault on al-Shifa hospital in March 2024, while Hadeel’s husband was being treated inside.
With such a rapid turnover of residents, no one in the building now remembers what happened in those early months of the war.
But the fighting still continues around it.
Muna Shabet – fifth floor
[BBC]
In the apartment above Hadeel’s, 59-year-old Muna Amin Shabet plays with her grandchildren beneath large bullet holes punched in the wall.
“Two days ago, bullets hit here, inside the building,” she explained. “I grabbed the children and ran with them over there, where it’s safer. We sat there praying to God that it would be OK. The children were terrified.”
Muna is also from al-Tuffah neighbourhood. She’s been living here since August with her husband, three of her children, and her grandchildren. They aren’t paying rent. The family lost everything, Muna says, when their home was destroyed weeks into the war.
“They levelled the entire al-Tuffah area – all of it, not one house was left,” she said. “We are starting life again, collecting spoon by spoon, plate by plate. Famine came, and we ground pigeon-feed to eat, and lived on wild greens,” she told us. “After two years of war, I say I am not alive, I am one of the dead.”
Another resident, from the northern town of Beit Lahia, told us his area was now a “wasteland”, after Israel’s army razed it to the ground. “There are no houses, or even any signposts left, to tell you there was once a neighbourhood here,” he said.
The UN says 90% of Gaza’s residential buildings have been damaged or destroyed. Whole neighbourhoods – with their shared history, family ties, and social support – demolished.
But the idea of home is harder to destroy than bricks and mortar.
When our cameraman visits Muna’s apartment, two of her granddaughters are drawing a picture. It’s an idyllic story-book image of a house – small and neat, with a sloping red tile roof. The sun is perched on the horizon, the sky is pink and blue, there are trees and plants.
It looks nothing like where they live.
And the widespread destruction of housing and communities has often meant families splintering to survive.
Of Muna’s five sons, two have moved to the south, another has gone to stay with his in-laws. The others, she says, have come and gone. Even she and her husband spent months apart before moving to the Skeik building, while Muna sheltered with relatives.
The extended family that once surrounded her and anchored her world is fraying.
“We are scattered. The separation is the hardest thing,” she said. “Life has been stripped away. My health is gone. Our home is gone, and the dearest people to our hearts are gone – nothing is left for us.”
Shawkat al-Ansari – first floor
[BBC]
It’s a feeling Shawkat al-Ansari knows well.
Originally from Beit Lahia, now razed to the ground, he told us his mother and sister were sleeping on the street in southern Gaza, while Shawkat lived with his wife and seven children on the first floor of the Skeik building.
Four months ago, his brother went missing.
“He went to get flour from the house of one of our in-laws in Shejaiya [on the northern edge of Gaza City]. We still don’t know what happened to him. We searched everywhere but couldn’t find him.”
The constant churn of people moving in search of food, safety or shelter has made it hard to keep families together.
“We were living OK before,” Shawkat said. “Now my brother is missing, and we’re all stranded in different places.”
One by one, the anchors holding people in place – home, community, family – have been loosened by the constant uprooting of Gaza’s population and the razing of its neighbourhoods and streets.
Now, sitting in the empty concrete rooms of the Skeik building, Shawkat is also watching the future slip away. His children were doing well at school before the war, he says, but now they’re forgetting how to read and count.
The constant movement is freezing their lives.
Days later, we received a call from Hadeel. She and several other families in the Skeik building were on the move again.
Israeli forces had dropped smoke bombs across the area, she told us, to signal that they were about to enter.
“We didn’t see the tanks last night,” she said, “but if we don’t leave now, we’ll wake up to them tomorrow.”
Hadeel was packing up when we spoke, planning to join her brother nearby before trying to head south together.
“We’ll stay on the streets and live in a tent,” she said. “No matter what we do, nothing will rebuild what’s inside us. My children aren’t my children anymore. There’s more suffering than innocence in their eyes now.”
All across Gaza, the buildings left standing have become transit hubs for families, brought together then separated by the war.
If negotiations succeed, peace could end their journeys, and reconstruction could bring them a different kind of future.
But their old lives are behind them.
This war has wiped out the road to the past.
Additional reporting by Aamir Peerzada and Gaza colleagues. Design by the BBC’s Visual Journalism team.
Hamas has warned that not a single hostage would leave the territory “alive” unless the group’s demands were met.
“Neither the fascist enemy and its arrogant leadership… nor its supporters… can take their prisoners alive without an exchange and negotiation and meeting the demands of the resistance,” Abu Obeida, spokesman for Hamas’s armed wing, said in a televised broadcast, referring to the release of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.
A one-week truce in the war that collapsed on December 1 saw 105 hostages held by the group freed, including 80 Israelis released in exchange for 240 Palestinian prisoners. Israel on Saturday said 137 captives remained in the Palestinian territory.
He said that the “temporary truce proved our credibility”, and said that its fighters had partially or fully destroyed 180 Israeli personnel carriers, tanks and bulldozers in 10 days since fighting resumed in Gaza.
05:02 PM GMT
That’s all for today
Thank you for following our live coverage of the Israel-Hamas conflict. The key developments from the day were the following:
Hamas has warned that not a single hostage would leave the territory “alive” unless the group’s demands were met.
Israeli tanks reached the centre of Khan Younis in a major new push into the heart of the main city in the southern Gaza Strip.
Mediation efforts are continuing to secure a new Gaza ceasefire and free more hostages held by Hamas despite ongoing Israeli bombardment that is “narrowing the window” for a successful outcome, Qatar’s prime minister said.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he regrets the Security Council’s failure to demand a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, condemning the divisions that have “paralysed” the world body.
The IDF has reported that 1593 of its soldiers have been wounded since the start of the war on Oct 7, 559 of those in Gaza.
France said that one of its warships in the Red Sea was targeted by two drones coming from Yemen. Both were intercepted and shot down.
Benjamin Netanyahu spoke to Vladimir Putin and voiced displeasure with “anti-Israel positions” taken by Moscow’s envoys at the United Nations.
Some Hamas fighters have surrendered in the northern Gaza Strip, Israel said.
The impact of the conflict on Gaza’s healthcare sector has been “catastrophic”, the World Health Organization chief said on Sunday at an emergency board meeting, saying conditions were ideal for the spread of deadly diseases.
04:25 PM GMT
WHO urges immediate humanitarian aide for Gaza
The World Health Organization’s executive board on Sunday adopted a resolution by consensus for combatting the worsening health situation in the Gaza Strip.
After the UN Security Council declined to demand a ceasefire between Israel and the Hamas militant group, the 34 countries on the WHO’s executive board adopted by consensus a resolution calling for the “immediate, sustained and unimpeded passage of humanitarian relief” into Gaza.
04:13 PM GMT
Israeli tanks reach centre of southern Gaza’s main city
Israeli tanks have reached the centre of Khan Younis in a major new push into the heart of the main city in the southern Gaza Strip.
Residents said tanks had reached the main north-south road through the middle of Khan Younis after intense combat through the night. Warplanes were pounding the area west of the assault, while thick columns of white smoke rose over the city.
Smoke rises in Khan Younis – IBRAHEEM ABU MUSTAFA / Reuters
“It was one of the most dreadful nights, the resistance was very strong, we could hear gunshots and explosions that didn’t stop for hours,” a father of four displaced from Gaza City and sheltering in Khan Younis told Reuters.
Israel launched the storm of Khan Younis this week after a truce collapsed, extending its ground war to Gaza’s southern half in a new, expanded phase of its two-month-old campaign to wipe out Hamas militants.
International aid organisations say this has left the enclave’s 2.3 million people with nowhere to hide.
03:54 PM GMT
In pictures
An Israeli army self-propelled artillery howitzer fires rounds – MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP via Getty Images
Chickens walk on top of rubble, at the site of Israeli strikes on a residential area – REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa
Israel’s Chief of Staff lighting a candle in Nahal – IDF
03:37 PM GMT
White House to intensify push for Ukraine and Israel aid
The White House will step up its engagement with US lawmakers trying to strike a bipartisan deal that would provide military aid for Ukraine and Israel, a Democratic senator said on Sunday.
Republicans have insisted that additional funding for Ukraine must be paired with major US border security changes but a bipartisan group of senators trying to broker a compromise have made little progress with less than a week before the US Congress leaves for a Christmas break.
“The White House is going to get more engaged this week,” said Senator Chris Murphy, the lead Democratic negotiator.
Murphy said the current border security demands by Republicans were “unreasonable” and that they were “playing games with the security of the world” by linking the military aid to US border security measures.
03:24 PM GMT
Israel cannot recover its hostages without negotiations, says Hamas
Hamas’ armed wing said on Sunday Israel will not be able to recover any of its hostages unless it engages in talks over conditional swap deals.
Abu Ubaida, the spokesman for the al-Qassam Brigades, said in an audio speech broadcast by Al Jazeera television that Israel will not be able to recover the captives by force, citing what he described a failed operation to free one of them.
He also claimed that Hamas fighters had partially or fully destroyed 180 Israeli personnel carriers, tanks and bulldozers in 10 days since fighting resumed in Gaza, and that the “temporary truce proved our credibility”.
03:08 PM GMT
Blinken: Palestinian civilian safety imperative
US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said on Sunday it is “imperative” that Israeli military operations in Gaza protect Palestinian civilians, adding that the fighting should be followed by a durable peace leading to a Palestinian state.
03:01 PM GMT
Watch: Israel claims ‘Hamas fighters’ surrender in northern Gaza
02:54 PM GMT
Israel says 1593 soldiers wounded and 425 killed
The IDF has reported that 1593 of its soldiers have been wounded since the start of the war on Oct 7, 559 of those in Gaza.
It added that 425 soldiers have been killed.
02:44 PM GMT
France says its warships was targeted by drones from direction of Yemen
France said that one of its warships in the Red Sea was targeted by two drones coming from Yemen. Both were intercepted and shot down, according to the Associated Press.
A short statement from the Armies Ministry did not say who fired the drones at the French Navy frigate Languedoc.
France’s Armies Ministry said the drones “came straight at” the Languedoc two hours apart from the direction of Yemen. The warship destroyed them both about 110 kilometers (70 miles) off the Red Sea port of Al Hudaydah on the Yemeni coast, it said.
02:38 PM GMT
Pictured: Palestinian detainees
Israeli soldiers stand by a truck packed with shirtless Palestinian detainees – REUTERS/Yossi Zeliger I
02:26 PM GMT
Artillery Corps now operating inside the Gaza Strip
Since the start of the war, Israel’s Artillery Corps has been operating on the border of the Gaza Strip, assisting the ground forces with fire support for operations and rescue efforts.
In recent days, soldiers from the 282nd Brigade have begun operating in the Gaza Strip, in cooperation with the 188th Brigade in the Shuja’iyya area of the Gaza Strip, according to the IDF.
02:09 PM GMT
Netanyahu: Israel helped Cyprus foil Iranian-ordered attack against Israelis and Jews
Israel helped Cyprus foil an Iranian-ordered attack against Israelis and Jews on the island, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said on Sunday, saying such plots were on the rise since the Gaza war erupted.
Netanyahu’s office gave no details of the planned attack but said in the statement on behalf of the Mossad intelligence service that Israel was “troubled” by what it saw as Iranian use of Turkish-controlled northern Cyprus “both for terrorism objectives and as an operational and transit area”.
The breakaway Turkish Cypriot state in northern Cyprus is recognised only by Turkey, which is sharply critical of Israel’s actions in Gaza since Oct. 7.
The internationally recognised government in the south of Cyprus has close relations with Israel.
01:43 PM GMT
Netanyahu speaks to Putin
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke to Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday and voiced displeasure with “anti-Israel positions” taken by Moscow’s envoys at the United Nations, an Israeli statement said.
Russia backed a UN Security Council resolution for a Gaza truce, which was vetoed by the United States on Friday.
Speaking to Putin, Netanyahu also voiced “robust disapproval” of Russia’s “dangerous” cooperation with Iran, the Israeli statement said
Netanyahu also expressed his appreciation of the Russian effort to release an Israeli citizen with Russian citizenship.
01:31 PM GMT
Pictured: Netanyahu heads the weekly cabinet meeting
Benjamin Netanyahu heads the weekly cabinet meeting – AFP
01:22 PM GMT
North Korea condemns US veto of Gaza ceasefire call at UN
A North Korean senior official criticised the United States for blocking a UN resolution calling for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza, claiming the veto showed Washington’s “double standards”, North Korean state media KCNA said on Sunday.
The United States vetoed a resolution calling for a ceasefire in the war between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza at the United Nations Security Council on Friday.
The ceasefire resolution at the UN failed to pass after the United States vetoed the proposal and Britain abstained.
“The United States’ abuse of its veto power to protect an ally that massacred tens of thousands of civilians is not only a manifestation of illegal and unreasonable double standards, but also the height of inhumane evil,” Kim Son Gyong, North Korea’s vice foreign minister for international organisations, said via KCNA.
Kim argued the United States was contradicting itself by condoning continued fighting in Gaza while condemning North Korea’s recent satellite launch that caused no harm to any other country.
01:10 PM GMT
Hamas fighters surrender in northern Gaza, claims Israel
Some Hamas fighters have surrendered in the northern Gaza Strip, Israel said late on Saturday.
The Israeli military did not specify how many Hamas militants had been captured, but said they had surrendered in and near Gaza city, in the Shajaiya and Jabaliya neighbourhoods.
The claims come two days after Israel said it had detained hundreds of terrorism suspects.
Videos circulated on social media and Israeli news channels this week believed to show Hamas fighters detained by Israeli forces. The men in the videos had been forced to strip to their underwear and were blindfolded. The videos could not be independently verified, and reports emerged that there were civilian Gazans among those described as Hamas fighters.
12:50 PM GMT
Iran accuses jailed Swedish EU diplomat of conspiring with Israel
Iranian authorities have accused a Swedish EU diplomat, held in a Tehran prison for more than 600 days, of conspiring with Iran’s arch-enemy Israel to harm the Islamic republic, the judiciary said Sunday, reported by AFP.
“Johan Floderus is accused of extensive measures against the security of the country, extensive intelligence cooperation with the Zionist regime and corruption on earth,” the judiciary’s Mizan Online news agency said.
Corruption on earth is one of Iran’s most serious offences which carries a maximum penalty of death.
“The defendant has been active against the Islamic Republic of Iran in the field of gathering information for the benefit of the Zionist regime in the form of subversive projects,” Mizan quoted the prosecution as saying.
Earlier Sunday, the European Union’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell called for the immediate release of the Swedish diplomat, arguing “there are absolutely no grounds for keeping Johan Floderus in detention.”
Floderus, 33, works for the European Union diplomatic service. He was arrested on April 17, 2022, at Tehran airport as he was returning from a trip abroad, and is being held in Tehran’s Evin prison.
12:33 PM GMT
Hamas attacks do not justify Israel’s punishment of Palestinians, says Russia’s Lavrov
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Sunday said it was not acceptable for Israel to use Hamas’ terror attack on Oct 7 as justification for the collective punishment of the Palestinian people, and called for international monitoring on the ground in Gaza.
President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly blamed the war between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas on the failure of years of US diplomacy in the Middle East, while aiming to position Russia as an important player with ties to all the major actors in the region.
12:22 PM GMT
Pictured: Fighting on Dec 10
Smoke rises from Israeli artillery shelling on the outskirts of Yaroun, a Lebanese border village with Israel – AP Photo/Hassan Ammar
Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip during an Israeli strike – MAHMUD HAMS/AFP via Getty Images
Photo from the IDF of fighting in the Gaza Strip – IDF
12:03 PM GMT
Iran unveils drones armed with air-to-air missiles
Iran has reinforced its air defence capabilities by adding combat drones equipped with air-to-air missiles to its arsenal, state media reported on Sunday.
“Dozens of Karrar drones armed with air-to-air missiles have been added for air defence in all border areas of the country,” the official IRNA news agency said, reported by AFP.
The drones, with an operational range of up to 1,000 kilometres (620 miles), were exhibited Sunday morning during a televised ceremony organised at a military academy in Tehran.
“The enemies will now have to rethink their strategies” because the Iranian forces have “become more powerful”, IRNA quoted the commander-in-chief of Iran’s army, General Abdolrahim Mousavi, as saying.
The development of Iran’s military arsenal has sparked concern among many countries, particularly the United States and Israel, the sworn enemies of the Islamic republic.
The latter accuse Tehran of providing fleets of drones to its allies in the Middle East, notably to Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah, and to the Huthi rebels in Yemen.
Iran also backs the Palestinian militant group Hamas.
11:43 AM GMT
Watch: Israeli offensive continues as Netanyahu rebuffs calls to end fighting in Gaza
11:27 AM GMT
Jordan says Israel aims to expel Palestinians from Gaza
Jordan’s foreign minister Ayman Safadi said on Sunday Israel was implementing a systematic policy of pushing Palestinians out of Gaza by a war that has killed thousands of civilians.
In remarks at a conference in Doha, Safadi, whose country borders the West Bank and had absorbed the bulk of Palestinians after Israel’s creation in 1948, also said Israel had created an “amount of hatred “ that would “haunt the region” and “define generations to come”.
11:14 AM GMT
Israeli army says five soldiers have died
The Israeli army have said in a statement that five of its soldiers have died in the Gaza War.
Four soldiers were killed in the battle in Southern Gaza, while the fifth succumbed to his wounds after fighting on October 7, according to the Israeli army statement posted on X.
11:00 AM GMT
Two Iranians questioned over suspected plots to attack Israelis in Cyprus
Two Iranians have been detained in Cyprus for questioning over suspected planning of attacks on Israeli citizens living in Cyprus, a Cypriot newspaper reported on Sunday.
The two individuals were believed to be in the early stages of gathering intelligence on potential Israeli targets, the Kathimerini Cyprus newspaper said, without citing sources.
The paper added that the Iranians were political refugees in contact with a person linked to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.
A senior Cyprus official declined to comment, citing policy on issues concerning national security.
Barely a 40-minute flight from Israel, Cyprus is a popular holiday and investment destination for thousands of Israelis.
10:50 AM GMT
Watch: Crowding in Rafah as displaced Palestinians flee after evacuation orders
10:40 AM GMT
Yemen rebels threaten Israel-bound Red Sea ships
Yemen’s Iran-backed Huthi rebels have threatened to attack any vessels heading to Israeli ports unless food and medicine are allowed into the besieged Gaza Strip, according to Reuters.
The latest warning comes amid heightened tensions in the Red Sea and surrounding waters following a series of maritime attacks by Huthi rebels since the start of the Israel-Hamas war on October 7.
In a statement posted on social media, the Huthis said they “will prevent the passage of ships heading to the Zionist entity” if humanitarian aid is not allowed into Hamas-ruled Gaza.
The Huthis have recently attacked ships they claim have direct links to Israel, but their latest threat expands the scope of their targets.
Regardless of which flag ships sail under or the nationality of their owners or operators, Israel-bound vessels “will become a legitimate target for our armed forces”, the statement said.
Hamas welcomed the rebels’ “courageous and bold” decision.
“We call on Arab and Muslim countries to use all their capabilities, based on their historical responsibilities and in the spirit of chivalry, to lift the siege of Gaza,” it added in a statement sent to AFP.
Israel’s national security adviser, Tzachi Hanegbi, said his country would not accept the “naval siege”, noting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had asked US President Joe Biden and European leaders to take measures to address the situation.
10:29 AM GMT
‘Apocalyptic’ situation in southern Gaza
Israel is continuing to push on with its punishing air and ground offensive in southern Gaza, where hundreds of thousands of civilians have fled in search of shelter.
Aid groups have described the situation as “apocalyptic” and warned it is on the brink of being overwhelmed by disease and starvation.
Hamas said on Sunday that Israel had launched a series of “very violent raids” targeting the southern city of Khan Younis and the road from there to Rafah, near the border with Egypt.
At least 17,700 people, mostly women and children, have died in two months of fighting in the narrow strip of territory, according to the latest figures from Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would continue its “just war”, while army chief Herzi Halevi said his forces needed to “press harder” in Gaza.
10:25 AM GMT
Pictured: Damage to homes in Gaza
A Palestinian man inspects the damage at the site of Israeli strikes on houses – REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa
10:13 AM GMT
Netanyahu rebuffs calls to end fighting
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rebuffed on Sunday international calls to end the Gaza war, describing them as inconsistent with supporting the war-aim of eliminating Hamas.
Briefing his cabinet, Netanyahu said he had told the leaders of France, Germany and other countries: “You cannot on the one hand support the elimination of Hamas and on other pressure us to end the war, which would prevent the elimination of Hamas”.
10:00 AM GMT
Gaza health situation is ‘catastrophic’, says WHO chief
The impact of the conflict on Gaza’s healthcare sector has been “catastrophic”, the World Health Organization chief said on Sunday at an emergency board meeting, saying conditions were ideal for the spread of deadly diseases.
“It’s stating the obvious to say that the impact of the conflict on health is catastrophic,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told the 34-member board.
“In summary health needs have increased dramatically and the capacity of the health system has been reduced to one third of what it was,” he said.
09:44 AM GMT
Displaced Palestinians shelter in Rafah
Displaced Palestinians, who fled their houses due to Israeli strikes, shelter in Rafah – REUTERS/Mustafa Thraya
09:31 AM GMT
Qatar says efforts to renew Israel-Hamas truce ‘continuing’
Mediation efforts are continuing to secure a new Gaza ceasefire and free more hostages held by Hamas despite ongoing Israeli bombardment that is “narrowing the window” for a successful outcome, Qatar’s prime minister said Sunday.
“Our efforts as the state of Qatar along with our partners are continuing. We are not going to give up,” Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani told the Doha Forum.
He added that “the continuation of the bombardment is just narrowing this window for us.”
Qatar was a key mediator in negotiations that resulted in a seven-day truce, which saw scores of Israeli hostages exchanged for Palestinians prisoners and humanitarian aid, until it ended at the start of the month.
“We are going to continue, we are committed to have hostages released, but we are also committed to stop the war,” Qatar’s prime minister said.
However, he said, “we are not seeing the same willingness from both parties”.
09:24 AM GMT
UN chief says its credibility is ‘undermined’
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres Sunday said he regrets the Security Council’s failure to demand a ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, condemning the divisions that have “paralysed” the world body.
Addressing Qatar’s Doha Forum, Guterres said the council was “paralysed by geostrategic divisions” that were undermining solutions to the Israel-Hamas war which started on October 7.
The body’s “authority and credibility were severely undermined” by its delayed response to the conflict, he said two days after a US veto prevented a resolution calling for a Gaza ceasefire.
“I reiterated my appeal for a humanitarian ceasefire to be declared,” he told the forum.
“Regrettably, the Security Council failed to do it,” he added. “I can promise, I will not give up.”