Connect with us

Published

on

“I lost everyone I love,” Marwa Jarada says, reflecting on the airstrike that killed her parents and 14 other family members. 

Last October, Israel bombed her family’s apartment in Gaza City, reportedly killing at least 101 people. Two days later, on 27 October 2023, the Israeli military (IDF) posted aerial footage of the strike, claiming they were targeting a “Hamas terror tunnel”.

The video is one of hundreds posted online by the Israeli military since the conflict erupted a year ago, following Hamas’s October 7 attack on southern Israel. The Gaza-based militant group killed approximately 1,200 Israelis, mostly civilians, and took a further 251 as hostages.

Israel has responded with a ground invasion and an extensive aerial bombing campaign, which it says have killed thousands of Hamas fighters and are intended to eliminate Hamas and free the remaining hostages.

Gaza’s Hamas-led health ministry says the war has killed almost 42,000 people, mostly women and children. Volker Turk, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, has said the scale of civilian death in Gaza is “overwhelmingly due to recurring failures by the Israeli Defence Forces to comply with the rules of war”.

Working with investigative war monitor, Airwars, Sky News has analysed the IDF’s use of aerial footage over the past year.

Experts say these videos are intended to show Israel’s military success against Hamas, but they only provide a limited account of the strikes. Contrasting them with on-the-ground footage and interviews with survivors and their families, we document what these deadly attacks were like for Gaza’s civilians.

Grid for Airwars piece
Image:
IDF military footage of strikes on Gaza

In response to a detailed list of findings and questions sent by Sky News, an IDF spokesperson said that “many of the accusations and claims presented in the investigation are baseless and constitute speculation”.

They added: “The segments published by the IDF have shown tens of millions of viewers how terrorist infrastructures are embedded within the civilian population. The IDF regards every loss of civilian life as a profound tragedy and approaches it with the utmost seriousness.”

The IDF has posted hundreds of airstrike videos

Airwars analysis of IDF social media accounts shows they posted footage of 1,219 Israeli strikes in Gaza between 7 October 2023 and 31 August – including 531 in the month after the war began.

The IDF videos have striking visual similarities – they are often in black and white, grainy and with no sound. Taken from a distance, you can rarely make out the people on the ground.

“A number of researchers have long raised concerns about the video game-isation of war,” says drone warfare expert Zachary Kallenborn.

“I think these videos highlight that a little bit, where you don’t necessarily engage with the people… they’re little dots on the screen.”

The attack on Al Taj

Marwa’s family moved into the seven-storey apartment building of Al Taj, in an upmarket part of Gaza City, three years ago.

After Israel ordered the evacuation of northern Gaza on 13 October, her uncle and his family joined them, resulting in 19 family members living together.

On 25 October, an Israeli airstrike destroyed al Taj in what the IDF later said was an attack on a Hamas tunnel in the area.

In the hours after the strike, Marwa, who lives in the US, began getting messages from other relatives saying they had not heard from those living in al Taj. She began to panic. Scrolling through Telegram news channels, she saw a mention of a strike on the building.

At first, the 25-year-old hoped a warning had been issued or her family had somehow escaped, but a call from her brother Tamer confirmed her worst fears: her father’s body had been found.

The IDF posted aerial footage of the strike two days later. Geolocated by Airwars and confirmed by Sky News, it begins with an explosion just south of the Al Taj building.

Immediately after, 10 plumes of fire shoot up around Al Taj, before the building disappears behind a cloud of smoke.

Sky News military analyst Sean Bell says the plumes and their timing are best explained by a missile exploding in an underground facility, with the explosion then escaping through air ducts and entrances.

At least 101 people were killed in the strike, including 44 children and 37 women, and “hundreds” of others injured, according to Airwars analysis.

Among the dead were Marwa’s parents. “I really love them,” she says, tearfully. “I would do anything to have them back.”

Her sisters, Haneen and Nisreen, were also killed. Marwa describes Nisreen as her “soulmate”, and says the 29-year-old psychologist was due to get married in December.

Marwa (centre) with her sisters Haneen (L) and Nisreen (R). Pic: Marwa Jarada
Image:
Marwa (centre) with her sisters Haneen (L) and Nisreen (R). Pic: Marwa Jarada

Marwa’s nephew Abdullah had earned a scholarship to a school in Qatar before he was killed alongside his little brother Naser, a budding athlete.

Only three members of Marwa’s family who were staying at al Taj – Amro, Yahya and Yosef – survived the strike.

Marwa's family tree - full
Image:
Marwa’s family tree. Those outlined in red were killed in the strike on Al Taj

Marwa said her family did not receive any warning of the strike, a claim echoed by a relative from her uncle’s side of the family, Hisham.

Legal experts told Sky News that militaries are obliged under international law to issue warnings to civilians where feasible.

Sky News asked the IDF whether an evacuation warning had been issued and whether there was anything about the strike that made it time-sensitive but did not receive a response to these questions.

“A tunnel is not going anywhere,” says Dearbhla Minogue, a senior lawyer with the Global Legal Action Network. “There’s absolutely no reason you would not evacuate that building before you launch that attack.”

Rescuers search for survivors in the rubble of al Taj building. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Rescuers search for survivors in the rubble of the Al Taj building. Pic: Reuters

IDF spokesman Daniel Hagari has previously said the Israeli military seeks “no harm to innocent civilians”, but is simply trying to retrieve its hostages and root out Hamas. The militant group has a vast network of tunnels in Gaza and has been accused of operating in civilian areas.

“If you attack us, this is what will happen to you”

Dr Craig Jones, a lecturer at Newcastle University and an expert in conflict law, says posting footage like this “nearly always serves a purpose” for the side that publishes it, as they have “no legal obligation” to do so.

Experts say the videos are intended to send different messages to different audiences.

Dr Andreas Krieg, a war expert at King’s College London, said: “The first narrative they want to push out, towards the domestic audience, is ‘We’re winning’.

“The number two message is one of deterrence, which is aimed at Hamas, Iran [and] Hezbollah… to say, if you attack us, this is what will happen to you.”

Federico Borsari, an expert in security and defence at the Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA), says the videos also aim to demonstrate to the international community Israel’s use of precision-guided munitions.

“Israel wants to show that it cares about striking the target using as much accuracy as possible and avoiding collateral damage.”

He adds that the Gaza Strip is one of the most densely populated areas in the world, making it a particularly challenging environment in which to conduct precision strikes. But Dr Krieg says the volume of footage sends a message of its own.

“They might be targeted strikes,” he says. “But the cumulative effect… is the near complete destruction of the entire physical infrastructure of Gaza.”

Site of Israeli airstrike in Gaza. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Pic: Reuters

One of the deadliest strikes took place on 26 May, close to Kuwaiti Al-Salam Camp 1, an area housing displaced Palestinians near Rafah.

It came days after the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ordered Israel to halt its operation in Rafah, amid international condemnation of the offensive in the south of Gaza. Israel has argued the wording of the ICJ’s ruling did not prohibit its invasion of Rafah.

The IDF said the strikes targeted rocket launchers and two “senior Hamas” militants using two munitions, each with 17kg of explosives. Hamas has repeatedly launched rockets at Israel over the course of the past year.

Videos of a large fire emerged on the night of the attack. One video, too graphic to publish, shows a man carrying the remains of his daughter in a plastic bag.

Fourteen-year-old Aya was decapitated in the explosion. Her father, Abu Mohammed, told Sky News at the time he saw “lots of people” killed in the streets: “Civilians, not people who have carried out any actions or anything.”

Gaza health authorities said at least 45 people were killed in the airstrike and subsequent fire. The IDF claimed the fire was “not caused” by their strike.

Aftermath of strike near Kuwaiti Al-Salam Camp 1, Rafah. Pic: Reuters
Image:
A fire burns after a strike near Kuwaiti Al-Salam Camp 1. Pic: Reuters

In response to questions posed by Sky News, the IDF says the strike targeted senior Hamas operatives who had directed attacks against Israeli civilians in the West Bank, and “numerous measures were taken to mitigate the harm to civilians”.

The IDF’s footage of the strike shows at least three figures moving but cuts off just after the blast and does not show when or where the fire began.

“It is certainly incomplete”

IDF footage is often blurry, making some details difficult to verify, according to conflict law expert Craig Jones.

“You can’t tell whether these are civilians or combatants, what the objects are, who’s in the frame – you can’t objectively tell from the footage alone,” he says.

He says the IDF often “overlays” footage with captions “that tell the viewer what to see”.

Another expert says the limited view also tells us little about the experience on the ground.

Drone warfare expert, Zachary Kallenborn, says: “You don’t get the heat, the pressure, the sounds, the explosions, the buildings around you crumbling. So, it is certainly incomplete,” he says.

However, he adds, having a complete picture of reality on the ground could also cause viewers to oppose reasonable military actions, because “any type of war is atrocious and horrible”.

IDF strikes - updated version

In August, the Israeli military confirmed an airstrike in al Mawasi on 13 July killed the head of Hamas’s military wing, Mohammed Deif.

Deif was deemed a high-priority target for Israel due to his status in Hamas. But the attack killed many civilians, left hundreds injured, and took place in an area the IDF had previously marked as a humanitarian zone.

More than two weeks after the strike, the IDF posted its footage and said its fighter jets were involved in the operation.

It begins with a blast in a field near residential buildings, before a second later another explosion is seen. The video stops before the clouds of smoke disappear.

Aftermath footage filmed on the ground provides a contrasting view of the strike. One video shows a large crater in the ground as groups of people dig for survivors.

A man in the video said: “We were sitting, displaced in our tents, when suddenly all we saw was a belt of fire without prior warning”.

Airwars’ assessment says on 13 July, at least 57 civilians were killed in a series of declared Israeli airstrikes near the al Nas Junction in the al Mawasi area near Khan Younis, and 300 more were injured.

Hamas neither confirmed nor denied the killing of Deif.

The IDF described the incident as a “precise, targeted strike” on a compound housing Deif and another senior Hamas commander, Rafa’a Salameh, and that its intelligence confirms that both were killed.

Dr Jones says that militaries are not required to issue evacuation warnings where this is not feasible.

He adds targets such as Deif would “reasonably” command a greater tolerance for civilian casualties, but that militaries are still bound by rules of proportionality.

FILE - Palestinians mourn over the bodies of relatives killed in an Israeli airstrike, outside the morgue in Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in Deir al Balah, the Gaza Strip, on June 10, 2024. A proposed cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas is the latest serious attempt to wind down the war, and while it still faces significant hurdles, negotiations meant to bring it to fruition are ongoing. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi, File)
Image:
Pic: AP

He says the highest number of civilian casualties he has ever seen a Western military willing to tolerate in a single strike is 50, during the fight against Islamic State in Mosul.

An IDF spokesman said that, in accordance with international law, Israel takes “all feasible precautions” to mitigate civilian harm, including issuing evacuation warnings via SMS, leaflets and phone calls, and that civilians are put at risk by the “unprecedented embedding of Hamas within civilian areas”.

Israel’s prime minister has said the war in Gaza will not end until Hamas is defeated and all hostages are returned.

As the conflict spills over Israel’s border with Lebanon, international pressure is mounting for all sides to agree to a ceasefire.


The Data and Forensics team is a multi-skilled unit dedicated to providing transparent journalism from Sky News. We gather, analyse and visualise data to tell data-driven stories. We combine traditional reporting skills with advanced analysis of satellite images, social media and other open source information. Through multimedia storytelling we aim to better explain the world while also showing how our journalism is done.

Continue Reading

World

Ukraine is turning warfare into a sci-fi battle of machines – and the West has work to do

Published

on

By

Ukraine is turning warfare into a sci-fi battle of machines - and the West has work to do

Ukrainians say they are in danger of losing the drone arms race with Russia and need more help.

And that is worrying not just for Ukraine, because the drone is becoming the likely weapon of choice in other future conflicts.

Sky News has been given exclusive access to a Ukrainian drone factory to watch its start up ingenuity at work. Ukrainians have turned the drone into their most effective weapon against the invaders.

But they are now, we are told, losing the upper hand in the skies over Ukraine.

General Cherry Drones was started by volunteers at the beginning of the war, making a 100 a month, but is now producing 1,000 times that. The company’s Andriy Lavrenovych said it is never enough.

Andriy Lavrenovych
Image:
Andriy Lavrenovych

“The Russians have a lot of troops, a lot of vehicles and our soldiers every day tell us we need more, we need more weapons, we need better, we need faster, we need higher.”

The comments echo the words of Ukraine’s leader, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who told reporters this week “the Russians have increased the number of drones, while due to a lack of funding, we have not yet been able to scale up.”

The factory’s location is a closely-guarded secret, moved often. Russia strikes weapons factories when it can.

In a nondescript office building we watched drones being assembled and stacked in their thousands. Put together like toys, they are hand assembled and customised.

The quadcopters vary in size, some carry explosives to attack the enemy. Others fly as high as six kilometres to ambush Russian surveillance drones.

A combat drone is prepared by a Ukrainian soldier in the frontline town of Chasiv Yar. Pic:24th King Danylo Separate Brigade/Reuters
Image:
A combat drone is prepared by a Ukrainian soldier in the frontline town of Chasiv Yar. Pic:24th King Danylo Separate Brigade/Reuters

A $1,000 (£743) Ukrainian drone can bring down an enemy aircraft worth 300 times as much.

Downstairs each drone is tested before it’s sent to the front. Nineteen-year-old Dima – not his real name – used to play with drones at home before it was occupied in Kherson Oblast.

Now he works here using his skills to check the drones are fit for battle.

But Russia is catching up. Sinister propaganda released this week filmed at one of its vast new drone factories shows hundreds of Geranium delta wing attack drones lined up ready to be launched at Ukraine.

Russia has refined the technology provided by Iranians to produce faster, more lethal versions of their Shahed drones. They have wreaked havoc and carnage, coming in their hundreds every night and killing scores of civilians. Ukraine expects 1,000 a night in the months ahead.

Russia is using scale and quantity to turn the tables on Ukrainians. And it is mastering drones controlled by fibre optic thread, trailing in their wake, that cannot be jammed.

Read more:
Trump sets red line on Ukraine peace deal support
What would US-backed security guarantees look like?

Oleksandr "Drakar", head of new product development
Image:
Oleksandr “Drakar”, head of new product development

Oleksandr “Drakar”, head of new product development, showed us his company’s prototype fibre optic model. It is more effective than the Russians, he told us, but added: “The Russians began using the technology earlier and have scaled up production.

“They’ve had considerable help from the Chinese – entire factories there are under contract to supply fibre exclusively to Russia, producing it in vast quantities.”

Russia’s Chinese allies, who claim to be neutral in this conflict, are also throttling the supply of microchips and other parts vital to drone production. The West is not doing enough, say Ukrainians, to counterbalance the threat.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Is NATO ready for drone war?

It is a constant race to beat the other side, innovation met by more innovation. This conflict is revolutionising warfare into a sci-fi battle of machines.

Ukrainians say 80% of battlefield strikes are now carried out by drones.

Whoever has the upper hand with them in this conflict is likely to have the edge in future wars. If the West wants to be on the winning side, it will need to give Zelenskyy and his drone start-up companies more help to maintain their edge.

Continue Reading

World

Israel may not be targeting journalists but it is certainly killing a lot of them

Published

on

By

Israel may not be targeting journalists but it is certainly killing a lot of them

It is an innocuous term for a horrible tactic. A “double tap” sounds so innocent and unthreatening. In fact, it is a term saved for a particularly brutal kind of attack.

And so it seems was the fate of those who died in the Nasser hospital in Khan Younis, Gaza. First one strike hit the building, ripping away a chunk of the wall and injuring the people inside.

Fifteen minutes later, as rescuers and journalists rushed in, and as the scene was being broadcast live, a second explosion ripped through the courtyard, killing those who had come to help.

Nasser hospital in Gaza was damaged by an Israeli strike. Pic: AP
Image:
Nasser hospital in Gaza was damaged by an Israeli strike. Pic: AP

Latest updates: Israel strikes Nasser hospital

So the first tap causes harm and brings people to the scene; the second inflicts yet more devastation upon the people who came to help.

It’s a tactic that’s been used by a variety of countries over the years, most recently by Russia in Ukraine and, enthusiastically, by Bashar al Assad while he was president of Syria.

This time, it left more than 20 people dead, among them medics, patients, and five journalists. The scenes of carnage were horrendous – we saw images of death and destruction. One man, a journalist who survived the explosions, was filmed sitting in the hospital, his head and body soaked in blood, utterly dazed.

Nasser is the last fully functioning hospital in southern Gaza. To see it struck again was, in the words of British surgeon Professor Nick Maynard, “barbarism in the extreme”.

He told Sky News: “This hospital has been bombed several times over the last 22 months. It is murder. These are war crimes killing innocent civilians. As barbaric as anything I have seen in Gaza.”

Relatives and friends pray over the body of journalist Mariam Dagga. Pic: AP
Image:
Relatives and friends pray over the body of journalist Mariam Dagga. Pic: AP

Among the dead was photographer Mariam Daqqa. Hours before her death, her name appeared on the front page of a leading Israeli newspaper, a credit for a haunting photo she had taken of an emaciated child.

Her press vest, recovered from the rubble, was later laid across her coffin while her camera, still marked by her own blood, was held aloft.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Who were the journalists killed by Israel?

Amanda Nasser, an American emergency nurse who had been working inside the hospital, survived by chance. “We were told to leave for [a] training session,” she said. “Thirty minutes later, the hospital was hit twice. Mariam was a dear friend. Getting that news broke me down.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has described the attack as “a tragic mishap” and an investigation has been opened. The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) insists it does not deliberately target civilians; Mr Netanyahu says that Israel values the work of “journalists, health workers and all citizens”.

But it’s also a fact that Nasser hospital is a popular place for media workers to gather, to use the internet and to chase and trade stories. And if we know that, so does the Israeli military.

It would be naive to think that the chance of killing journalists, as well as, obviously, health workers, was not obvious to those who launched this attack. “We do not intentionally target civilians,” says the IDF’s spokesperson Effie Defrin. “We regret any harm to uninvolved individuals.”

And yet, somehow, it happened. Not just one explosion, but two.

Read more:
Israel pounds outskirts of Gaza City
Pro-Palestine Australians protest after week of tension with Israel

There are at least five different groups who try to keep track of how many journalists have been killed in Gaza. They all come up with different figures, but they agree that the total is above 200, and may even be more than 300.

And remember – foreign journalists are barred from entering Gaza, so the ability of the world to scrutinise what is actually happening on the ground in Gaza is largely dependent upon the work of these people, hundreds of whom are now dead.

Israel may not be targeting them, but it is certainly killing a lot of journalists along the way.

Follow the World
Follow the World

Listen to The World with Richard Engel and Yalda Hakim every Wednesday

Tap to follow

This is a crucial moment in this conflict. Parts of Gaza have been designated as suffering from famine, just as Israel’s military might is readied for a huge operation to encircle and overwhelm Gaza City.

A ceasefire proposal is on the table, but Netanyahu seems reluctant to negotiate. On Tuesday, once again, Israel will face protests and strikes from those, including the families of hostages, demanding that their prime minister stop the war.

It is a volatile time, and Israel is a volatile country.

Continue Reading

World

Five journalists among 20 killed in Israeli strikes on hospital, Gaza health ministry says

Published

on

By

Five journalists among 20 killed in Israeli strikes on hospital, Gaza health ministry says

Israeli strikes on a hospital in southern Gaza have killed at least 20 people, including five journalists, according to the Gaza health ministry and the media organisations the journalists worked for.

Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis was struck twice on Monday in what has been described as a “double-tap” attack.

The initial strike hit the top floor of a building at Nasser Hospital. Minutes later, as journalists and rescue workers rushed to the scene, a second missile struck the same location, according to Dr Ahmed al Farra, head of the hospital’s paediatrics department.

Al Jazeera, the Associated Press (AP), and Reuters said their journalists were among those killed.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he “deeply regrets” the incident, calling it a “tragic mishap”.

“Israel values the work of journalists, medical staff, and all civilians,” he added. “The military authorities are conducting a thorough investigation.”

A man holds the equipment used by Palestinian cameraman Hussam al Masri. Pic: Reuters
Image:
A man holds the equipment used by Palestinian cameraman Hussam al Masri. Pic: Reuters

Rescuers work to recover the body of Palestinian cameraman Hussam al Masri. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Rescuers work to recover the body of Palestinian cameraman Hussam al Masri. Pic: Reuters

A British consultant surgeon, who worked at the Nasser Hospital earlier this summer, described the attack on Monday morning as “barbarism in the extreme”.

More on Gaza

Consultant surgeon Professor Nick Maynard told Sky News it was a “typical double strike that the Israelis use frequently”. It targets an area, then hits it shortly afterwards, often when emergency services respond, he explained.

The Israeli military said its troops carried out a strike in the area of Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis and that it would conduct an investigation into the incident. The military said it “regrets any harm to uninvolved individuals and does not target journalists as such”.

In a further statement, Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesman Effie Defrin said: “We are aware of reports that harm was caused to civilians, including journalists. I would like to be clear from the start – the IDF does not intentionally target civilians.

“The IDF makes every effort to mitigate harm to civilians, while ensuring the safety of our troops.”

He said forces were “operating in an extremely complex reality” and that Hamas “deliberately use civilian infrastructure, including hospitals, as shields”.

He said the findings of Israel’s investigation will be presented “as transparently as possible”.

Who are the journalists?

Mariam Dagga
Image:
Mariam Dagga

Mariam Dagga, 33, a visual journalist who freelanced for AP during the war, as well as other news outlets, was killed in Monday’s strike.

AP said in a statement that it was shocked and saddened by the death of Dagga and the loss of other journalists.

Dagga, a mother of a 12-year-old son who was evacuated from Gaza earlier in the war, frequently based herself at Nasser, the news agency said. Most recently, she reported on the hospital’s doctors struggling to save starving and malnourished children.

“We are doing everything we can to keep our journalists in Gaza safe as they continue to provide crucial eyewitness reporting in difficult and dangerous conditions,” AP said.

Independent Arabia, the Arabic-language edition of The Independent, said it also collaborated with Dagga.

Mohammed Salama
Image:
Mohammed Salama

Al Jazeera confirmed cameraman Mohammed Salama was among those killed.

Mohamed Moawad, managing editor of Al Jazeera, spoke to Sky News from Doha, Qatar, after Mr Salama was killed.

“They were reporting closer to the hospital, knowing that was somehow safer than the frontline,” he said. “We’re talking about a crime against journalism.”

Hussam al Masri
Image:
Hussam al Masri

Reuters said in a statement that it was “devastated” after two of its journalists were killed at the Nasser Hospital, and one was injured.

Moaz Abu Taha
Image:
Moaz Abu Taha

Contractor cameraman Hussam al Masri was also killed in the strikes on Nasser Hospital, Reuters said.

Moaz Abu Taha, a freelance journalist whose work had been occasionally published by Reuters, was also killed. Photographer Hatem Khaled, a Reuters contractor, was wounded.

Ahmed Abu Aziz
Image:
Ahmed Abu Aziz

A fifth journalist, Ahmed Abu Aziz, who worked as a freelance reporter, succumbed to his wounds following the strikes at the Nasser Hospital.

One of the bloodiest conflicts for media workers

The Israel-Hamas war has been among the deadliest conflicts for journalists, with the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) reporting at least 192 media workers killed in Gaza during the 22-month-long conflict.

The CPJ says that 18 journalists have died so far in Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Thibaut Bruttin, director general of Reporters Without Borders, said press freedom advocates have never witnessed such a significant decline in journalist safety. He said journalists had been killed in both indiscriminate bombings and deliberate attacks.

“They are doing everything they can to silence independent voices that are trying to report on Gaza,” said Mr Bruttin.

Israel has accused journalists in Gaza of ties to militant groups, as in the case of Al Jazeera correspondent Anas al Sharif, who was targeted and killed by Israeli forces earlier this month.

The Israeli military claimed Sharif led a Hamas cell, a charge both Al Jazeera and Sharif rejected as unfounded.

In the absence of direct access, news organisations largely depend on Palestinian journalists and local residents in Gaza to document and provide first-hand accounts of the events unfolding on the ground.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Israel faces a decision after it kills at least 20 at hospital

Many journalists reporting from Gaza are enduring the same hardships as those they cover, including the daily struggle to secure food for themselves and their families.

“It is a particular burden that they carry, as well as living in a war zone,” Sky Middle East correspondent Adam Parsons said.

Additional casualties on Monday

In addition to the casualties at Nasser Hospital, medical officials in northern Gaza reported further fatalities resulting from strikes and gunfire along routes leading to aid distribution sites.

According to Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, an airstrike on a neighbourhood claimed the lives of three Palestinians, including a child.

Al Awda Hospital in Deir al Balah reported six people attempting to reach a central Gaza aid distribution point were shot and killed in Israeli gunfire. The hospital said 15 others were wounded in the incident.

The IDF has previously “strongly rejected” accusations it targets civilians – and maintained its forces operate near aid sites to stop supplies from falling into the hands of militants.

Continue Reading

Trending