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Gaza rescuers say Israeli strikes kill at least 29

Civil defense teams and residents carry out a search and rescue operation after Israeli attacks on Khan Younis, Gaza
Civil defense teams and residents carry out a search and rescue operation after Israeli attacks on Khan Younis, Gaza

Gaza's civil defence agency has said that Israeli bombardment killed at least 29 people since midnight in the war-ravaged territory, which has been under Israeli aid blockade for nearly two months.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that while the military's mission was to bring home all the hostages from Gaza, its "supreme goal" was to achieve victory against Hamas.

Israel resumed its campaign on Gaza on 18 March, after a two-month truce collapsed over disagreements between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas whose 2023 attack triggered the conflict.

Civil defence official Mohammed al-Mughayyir said the toll included eight people killed in an air strike on the Abu Sahlul family home in Khan Younis refugee camp in southern Gaza.

Four people were killed in an air strike east of Shaaf in Gaza City's Al-Tuffah neighbourhood, he said.

At least 17 more were killed in other attacks across the Palestinian territory, including one that hit a tent sheltering displaced people near the central city of Deir el-Balah, the agency said.

"We came here and found all these houses destroyed, and children, women and young people all bombed to pieces," said Ahmed Abu Zarqa after a deadly strike in Khan Younis.

"This is no way to live. Enough, we're tired, enough!

"We don't know what to do with our lives any more.

"We'd rather die than live this kind of life."

'Enough is enough'

AFP images showed residents digging through rubble in search of bodies, which were carried away on stretchers under blankets.

At Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, rescuers rushed a screaming wounded child out of an ambulance, as a group of women mourned.

"What have the children done wrong? What have we done wrong? Enough is enough.

"Just drop a nuclear bomb on us," said Ghada Abu Sahlul as she mourned the death of a relative.

Devastation after Israeli strikes on Khan Younis

The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said that at least 2,326 people have been killed since Israel resumed strikes, bringing the overall death toll since the war broke out to 52,418.

The Hamas attack on Israel on 7 October, 2023 resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.

Militants also abducted 251 people, 58 of whom are still being held in Gaza, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.

Israel says its renewed military campaign aims to force Hamas to free the remaining captives.

"We want to bring home both the living and the fallen - this is a very important mission," Mr Netanyahu said at a function in Jerusalem marking Israel's Independence Day.

"But in war there is one supreme goal - and that is victory over our enemies, and we will achieve it."

Days before resuming its military campaign, Israel blocked all aid entering Gaza, and UN rights chief Volker Turk said the territory was witnessing a "humanitarian catastrophe".

"Israel appears to be inflicting on Palestinians in Gaza conditions of life increasingly incompatible with their continued existence as a group in Gaza," he said this week.

Looting of food stores

Meanwhile, increased looting of food stores and community kitchens in Gaza shows growing desperation as hunger spreads two months after Israel cut off supplies to the Palestinian territory, aid officials say.

Palestinian residents and aid officials said at least five incidents of looting took place across the enclave, including at community kitchens, merchants' stores, and the UN Palestinian refugee agency's (UNRWA) main complex in Gaza.

The looting "is a grave signal of how serious things have become in the Gaza Strip - the spread of hunger, the loss of hope and desperation among residents as well as the absence of the authority of the law," said Amjad al-Shawa, director of the Palestinian Non-Governmental Organizations Network (PNGO) in Gaza.

Thousands of displaced people broke into the UNRWA complex in Gaza City, stealing medicines from its pharmacy and damaging vehicles, said Louise Wateridge, a senior official for the agency based in Jordan.

"The looting, while devastating, is not surprising in the face of total systemic collapse. We are witnessing the consequences of a society brought to its knees by prolonged siege and violence," she said in a statement shared with Reuters.

People queue for food in Gaza two months after Israel cut off supplies to the territory

Hamas deployed thousands of police and security forces across Gaza after a ceasefire took effect in January, but its armed presence shrunk sharply since Israel resumed large-scale attacks in March.

Ismail al-Thawabta, director of the Gaza Hamas-run government media office, described the looting incidents as "isolated individual practices that do not reflect the values and ethics of our Palestinian people".

He said that despite being targeted, Gaza authorities were "following up on these incidents and addressing them in a way that ensures the preservation of order and human dignity".