'Charred body pieces everywhere' after Israeli strike sets tents ablaze in Gaza safe zone
Strike kills some 20 people in designated humanitarian zone in southern Gaza
Palestinians were digging through burnt debris searching for bodies Thursday after some 20 people were killed a day earlier in an Israeli strike that set ablaze tents sheltering displaced families in a designated humanitarian zone in southern Gaza.
Residents carried a body wrapped in carpets out of the charred wreckage of the makeshift shelters in Al-Mawasi, near the beach west of Khan Younis, where tens of thousands of people have sheltered in the crowded tent camp for months.
The tent camp was designated a humanitarian zone by Israeli authorities, who have long told Palestinians to go there for safety.
Mohamed Abu Shahla was sheltering in the tent camp when the strike hit "all of a sudden and without any warning."
"It didn't spare any people or anything," Abu Shahla told CBC News on Thursday.
The strike set several large tents ablaze, and the fire was worsened by the explosion of cooking gas canisters and the burning furniture of the displaced people. On Thursday, the area was strewn with charred clothing, mattresses and other belongings among the twisted frames of scorched shelters.
He said displaced Palestinians were looking for some 15 children missing following the attack.
"You heard the screams of women and children while they burned … there isn't a single body that's whole. All of them are in pieces," he said.
Majority of victims are women, children: Civil defence
Eyewitnesses said the strike on the tent camp caused a fireball to erupt.
"[Al-]Mawasi is not safe … nowhere in the Gaza Strip is safe," Ahmad Al-Siqali said.
Muhammad Abdul Raouf, a night director with the volunteer-run Palestinian Civil Defence group, said the majority of the 20 confirmed killed were women and children.
"The place was scattered with martyrs [when we arrived], charred body pieces everywhere," he told CBC News Wednesday.
Israel said the strike targeted senior Hamas operatives, whom it did not identify.
"We don't see anyone from the whole world standing by us or helping us in this situation. Let them stop this crazy war that's against us. Let them stop the war," said Abu Kamal Al-Assar, a witness at the site.
At a funeral in Khan Younis, where relatives wept over the white-shrouded bodies of people killed the day before, resident Abu Anas Mustafa called the Amnesty report, which accuses Israel of commiting genocide in Gaza, "a victory for Palestinian diplomacy," although he said it "came late."
"It is the 430th day of the war today, and Israel has been carrying out massacres and a genocide from the first 10 days of the war," he said.
House in Gaza City destroyed in attack
The attack was one of several others across the Gaza Strip that killed a total of 39 Palestinians, according to medics.
In Gaza City, medics said an attack destroyed a house where an extended family had taken shelter and damaged two nearby homes, killing at least three people.
The Israeli army says militants frequently use residential buildings, schools and hospitals for operational cover. Hamas denies this, accusing Israeli forces of indiscriminate attacks and ignoring the plight of civilians in harm's way.
In Rafah, near the border with Egypt, an Israeli strike killed three Palestinians on Thursday, medics said. Three others were killed in a separate airstrike in Shejaia, in eastern Gaza City, they added.
On Thursday, Hussam Abu Safiya, director of Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahiya in the north of the enclave, said a 16-year-old boy who used a wheelchair was killed, and several people, including medics, were wounded by Israeli drone fire against the medical facility.
There was no Israeli comment on Abu Safiya's account. The health ministry said the three hospitals that are barely operational on the northern edge of the Gaza Strip have come under repeated attack since Israeli forces sent tanks to Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun towns and the nearby Jabalia camp in October.
Israel launched its assault on Gaza after Hamas-led fighters attacked Israeli communities on Oct. 7, 2023, killing 1,200 people and capturing more than 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.
Since then, it has laid much of the Gaza Strip to waste, forcing nearly the entire population of 2.3 million people from their homes. Authorities in the Hamas-run territory say more than 44,500 Gazans have been killed, with thousands of others feared dead under the rubble.
Corrections
- An earlier version of this story said the attack on the Al-Mawasi displacement camp took place Thursday. In fact, it happened Wednesday.Dec 05, 2024 1:35 PM ET
With files from Mohamed El Saife, Reuters