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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Strikes on Rafah raise fear assault could begin

The intensification of air strikes was Israel's way of showing its disdain for a U.N. Security Council resolution last week demanding an immediate ceasefire
This picture shows smoke billowing in the besieged Palestinian territory amid Israeli strikes. — AFP
This picture shows smoke billowing in the besieged Palestinian territory amid Israeli strikes. — AFP
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GAZA: Israel bombed at least three homes in Rafah overnight, raising new fear among the more than a million people sheltering in the last refuge on the southern edge of the Gaza Strip that a long-threatened ground assault could be coming. One of the airstrikes killed 11 people from a family, health officials said.


Mussa Dhaheer, looking on from below as neighbours helped an emergency worker lower a victim in a black body bag from an upper storey, said he had awakened to the blast, kissed his terrified daughter, and rushed outside to find the destruction. His father, 75, and mother, 62, were among the dead.


"I don't know what to do. I don't know what to say. I can't make sense of what happened. My parents. My father with his displaced friends who came from Gaza City," he said. "They were all together, when suddenly they were all gone like dust."


At another bomb site, Jamil Abu Houri said the intensification of air strikes was Israel's way of showing its disdain for a U.N. Security Council resolution last week demanding an immediate ceasefire. Next up, he fears a ground assault on Rafah, which Israel has threatened to carry out despite pleas from its closest ally Washington that this would cause too much harm to civilians.


"The bombing has increased, and they have threatened us with an incursion, and they say that have been given the green light for the Rafah incursion. Where is the Security Council?" Abu Houri said. "Look at our little ones. Look at our children. Where should we go? Where should we go?"


At least 32,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel's offensive into Gaza, according to the health ministry there, with thousands of other dead believed unrecovered under rubble.


Israeli forces just north of Rafah kept the two main hospitals in Khan Younis, Al-Amal and Nasser Hospital, under a blockade imposed late last week. In the north, they were still operating inside Al Shifa, the enclave's largest hospital, which they stormed more than a week ago.


Gaza's health ministry said wounded people and patients were being held inside the human resources department that was not equipped to provide them with healthcare.


Residents living nearby report hearing explosions in and around Al Shifa and lines of smoke coming from buildings inside the medical facility. — Reuters


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