Israeli airstrikes, gunfire kill at least 38 in Gaza as Netanyahu ignores ceasefire demands
The attacks came hours after a defiant Israeli PM etanyahu told fellow world leaders at the UN General Assembly Friday that his nation “must finish the job” against Hamas in Gaza.
PTI
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Countries have been lobbying US President Donald Trump to press Israel for a ceasefire. (PTI)
Deir Al-Balah, 27 Sept
Israeli strikes and gunfire killed at least 38 people across
Gaza, health officials said, as international pressure grows for a ceasefire
but Israel's leader remains defiant about continuing the war.
Strikes in central and northern Gaza killed people in their
homes in the early hours of Saturday morning, including nine from the same
family in a house in the Nuseirat refugee camp, according to health staff at
the Al-Awda hospital where the bodies were brought.
The attacks came hours after a defiant Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told fellow world leaders at the UN General
Assembly Friday that his nation “must finish the job” against Hamas in Gaza.
Netanyahu's words, aimed as much at his increasingly divided
domestic audience as the global one, began after dozens of delegates from
multiple nations walked out of the UN General Assembly hall en masse Friday
morning as he began speaking.
International pressure on Israel to end the war is
increasing, as is Israel's isolation, with a growing list of countries deciding
recently to recognize Palestinian statehood — something Israel rejects.
Countries have been lobbying US President Donald Trump to
press Israel for a ceasefire. On Friday, Trump told reporters on the White
House lawn that he believes the US is close to achieving a deal on easing
fighting in Gaza that “will get the hostages back” and “end the war.”
Trump and Netanyahu are scheduled to meet Monday, and Trump
said on social media Friday that “very inspired and productive discussions” and
“intense negotiations” about Gaza are ongoing with countries in the region.
Yet, Israel is pressing ahead with another major ground
operation in Gaza City, which experts say is experiencing famine. More than
300,000 people have fled, but up to 700,000 are still there, many because they
can't afford to relocate.
The strikes Saturday morning demolished a house in Gaza
City's Tufah neighborhood, killing at least 11 people, more than half of them
women and children, according to the Al-Ahly Hospital where the bodies were
brought. Four other people were killed when an airstrike hit their homes in the
Shati refugee camp, according to Shifa hospital.
Six other Palestinians were killed by Israeli gunfire while
seeking aid in southern and central Gaza, according to Nasser and Al Awda
hospitals where the bodies were brought.
Israel's army did not immediately respond about the
airstrikes or the gunfire.
Hospitals and health clinics in Gaza City are on the brink
of collapse. Nearly two weeks into the offensive, two clinics have been
destroyed by airstrikes, two hospitals shut down after being damaged and others
are barely functioning, with medicine, equipment, food and fuel in short
supply.
Many patients and staff have been forced to flee hospitals,
leaving behind only a few doctors and nurses to tend to children in incubators
or other patients too ill to move.
On Friday, aid group Doctors Without Borders said it was
forced to suspend activities in Gaza City amid an intensified Israeli
offensive. The group said Israeli tanks were less than half a mile from its
health care facilities and the escalating attacks have created an “unacceptable
level of risk" for its staff.
Meanwhile, the food situation in the north has also
worsened, as Israel has halted aid deliveries through its crossing into
northern Gaza since September 12 and has increasingly rejected UN requests to
bring supplies from southern Gaza into the north, the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said.
Israel's campaign in Gaza has killed more than 65,000 people and wounded more than 167,000 others, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. It doesn't distinguish between civilians and combatants, but says women and children make up around half the fatalities.
The ministry is part of the Hamas-run government, but UN agencies and many independent experts consider its figures to be the most reliable estimate of wartime casualties.
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