Twenty people were killed, including five journalists, by Israeli strikes on Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis in Gaza this week.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called it a "tragic mishap" and the Israeli Defence Forces said it was not targeting the journalists. However, this claim has been strongly disputed by people on the ground.
RTÉ News takes a look at just what happened during Monday's attack.
The first strike hit the exterior staircase of Nasser Hospital, where Reuters cameraman Hussam al-Masri was filming, at about 10.08am local time in Gaza. Mr al-Masri was killed and his camera feed went black.
Roughly nine minutes later as rescuers and colleagues were carrying Mr al-Masri’s body down an exterior staircase, the staircase was struck.
Hatem Omar, another Reuters contractor, was filming the recovery efforts from above, as can be seen in this clip.
Moments later, Mr Omar’s video feed is filled with dust as he stumbles around following the strike.
The scene was also captured live on Egyptian TV channel, Alghad TV. Mr Omar can be seen filming in the red t-shirt.
We are not showing the moment of the strike, which killed many of the people on screen, but moments later the staircase can be seen enveloped in smoke (watch below).

In a separate social media video filmed from the ground, two separate missiles can be seen (the second one circled in red above) hitting the hospital.
One appears to hit a staircase at the back of the hospital while the other strikes the exact spot on the stairwell where the rescue was taking place.
The following day, the Israeli military defended the assault on the hospital, claiming that six "terrorists" had been killed in the attack, which it said was directed at a "camera that was positioned by Hamas".
The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said it was continuing to investigate. It insisted the IDF does not target journalists, and none of the five journalists killed were the intended targets.
The strike that hit the people on the stairwell appears to strike the exact spot where the people were carrying the body of Mr al-Masri. From looking at the video, it's difficult to believe that they were not targeted.
Also, if the strikes were targeting terrorists, why would they wait nine minutes between strikes, giving any terrorists on site ample time to escape? The stairwell of the hospital was a well known location for journalists to work. The height provided a good shot over the city but the hospital is also one of the few places with strong enough internet signal to allow the journalists to broadcast their pictures.
Following the strike on Monday, journalist Abdelrahman Alkahlout posted a video to his Instagram account, showing journalists working on the stairwell since the beginning of the war.
Under the video he wrote: "Since the beginning of the war, I have relied on this spot at Nasser Medical Complex as the only window to access the internet…Today, this place was deliberately targeted an attempt to silence our voices and stop us from documenting what is happening in Gaza."
His view was one echoed by many other journalists on the ground in Gaza. The Israeli military has said that it was targeting a Hamas camera, but has not provided any evidence.
The five journalists killed were Reuters contractor Hussam al-Masri, freelance visual journalists Mariam Abu Dagga and Moath Abu Taha, who both worked with the Associated Press (AP) and Reuters throughout the war, freelance journalist Ahmed Abu Aziz, and Mohammad Salama, a cameraman for Al Jazeera in Gaza.
Reuters and the Associated Press issued a joint letter to Israeli officials to demand an explanation for the strikes that killed journalists, writing: "These journalists were present in their professional capacity, doing critical work bearing witness. Their work is especially vital in light of Israel's nearly two-year ban on foreign journalists entering Gaza."