Iranian strikes are 'different ball game' in devastated streets of Tel Aviv
Assi Gregoire, a 57-year-old cleaner, heard an alarm go off at 4am during one strike, with police and rescue teams arriving 'almost immediately' to check the area. His family was put up in a hotel and volunteers helped him to move his belongings.
Since Israel launched a surprise attack on Iran last Friday, its Home Front Command has been on the alert for the retaliation threatened by Tehran. But with the well-drilled response there was shock for Mr Gregoire's family at how badly their home was damaged and how much they had to leave behind.
'We couldn't imagine the damage. It was devastating, truly overwhelming,' said Mr Gregoire, who is from the Ivory Coast. 'And what could we do?
'I think it's better to make peace everywhere in the world. After what I saw yesterday, I believe even more strongly that peace is everything. We should embrace one another. We need a world of justice and peace.'
After the strike on Monday night, a special education school shut down all operations after the ultra-Orthodox neighbourhood of Bnei Brak suffered heavy damage.
An elderly man was killed. One municipal worker at the scene said the man had refused to move into a shelter and lived in a kind of storage cabinet.
Soldiers, rescue workers, police and firefighters were at the scene on Tuesday while residents crawled over debris with shards of glass beneath. Outside the homes, there were rows of cars completely written off, covered in dust.
Uri Schacham, a paramedic with Israeli emergency service Magen David Adom, said Iran's counter-attacks posed a different threat to what Tel Aviv is used to. Tehran says it has fired hypersonic missiles and other weapons in response to Israel's campaign of bombardments and killings.
When 200kg of explosives land 'it doesn't just affect a building but the entire street,' Mr Schacham said. Emergency teams used to responding to a handful of shrapnel injuries now find partially collapsed buildings and raging fires, he said.
On Tuesday morning, they found all the residents of a 10-storey building coming down to the street. 'It's a whole different ball game for those first to arrive,' he said.
'The situation is harder to control. The injuries are different, much more blast injuries, which are harder to assess in the field. Numbers that are way higher than we used to have for the past 20 years.'
The escalation has heavily affected flights in the Middle East, with even Israel's usually resilient Ben Gurion Airport closed. Some people have returned to Israel over a land crossing with Egypt.
Inside abandoned homes in Tel Aviv glass shards were everywhere after windows were blown out. With no electricity, the smell of rotting food escaped from freezers.
Young volunteers from a pre-military training academy were there to help the disadvantaged neighbourhood, with not enough support given by the municipality.
Hebrew religious books were strewn across one ultra-Orthodox home. In another, Ethiopian Christian house, Amharic books lay scattered next to images of the Virgin Mary. In Mr Gregoire's house, a shrine to Pope John Paul II lay untouched in his living room.
'This morning, since we hadn't finished gathering our essentials, we came back to pick up what's most important – some clothes, shoes, kitchen utensils. But honestly, most of our things were left behind,' he said.
'We don't have children. It's just my wife and me. The young girl with us is our niece. She lives with us, and she's with us now.
'We're waiting. We're not working at the moment, and we don't know when or how we'll be able to work again. For now, we're staying at the hotel. They told us it's for a week, but after that – who knows? We're waiting to see what the government or the municipality decides.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Middle East Eye
18 minutes ago
- Middle East Eye
Why Israel wants to kill the children of Gaza
The western-backed Israeli genocide in the Gaza Strip has entered its deadliest phase, and the world continues to slumber on. This summer has marked an uptick in the daily killing of Palestinians - an average of 100 lives massacred each day, most of them already contending with the pangs of hunger amid a man-made mass starvation campaign. The small coastal territory, blockaded by Egypt and Israel with the complicity of the international community, is now the most dangerous place in the world for children, who make up about half the population. As early as 31 October 2023, Unicef described Gaza as "a graveyard for children, a living hell for everyone else". This has been echoed by numerous UN officials, most recently last Friday by the UN refugee agency chief, Philippe Lazzarini, who warned of Israel's "Machiavellian scheme to kill" in Gaza. Missiles and shrapnel rip through the fragile bodies of children in open marketplaces, at water collection points, at aid distribution sites, and while waiting in line for nutritional supplements. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Children are bombed inside displacement tents, burned alive in school shelters and buried beneath the rubble of their homes. Even before they are born, foetuses are blown from their mothers' wombs by the force of bombs. Last week, the decapitated body of eight-month-old foetus Saeed Samer al-Laqqa - documented in footage widely shared on social media - failed to register even a mention in mainstream media. His absence from the headlines is part of the institutional silence that has sustained Israel's genocidal project for more than 21 months. Even when their deaths are acknowledged, the children of Gaza are reduced to little more than casualty figures. But their killing has never been collateral damage: it is a deliberate effort to extinguish a future Israel fears: a generation of Palestinians born under siege, whose survival, memory, and innate human desire for freedom and dignity threaten the foundations of a settler-colonial state built on their erasure. Prison to martyrdom On 12 July, Youssef al-Zaq, barely 17 years old, was killed alongside his niece and nephew, Maria and Tamim, in an Israeli attack on their building in Gaza City. Youssef, once known as the youngest Palestinian hostage, was born in an Israeli prison in 2008. 'Youssef's birth and story exposed the occupation. That's why they didn't want him to stay alive' - Ahmed Sahmoud, Youssef's cousin His mother, Fatema al-Zaq, was arrested in 2007 while attempting to cross into the occupied West Bank and, during the early stages of her captivity, learned she was two months pregnant. "The Israeli occupation tortured his mother so that she would miscarry," Youssef's cousin Ahmed Sahmoud told me. Fatema gave birth to a healthy baby boy, but her arms and legs were shackled during labour, and she received minimal medical care from Israeli prison guards. Youssef spent the first 20 months of his life behind bars. In 2009, he and his mother, along with 19 other Palestinian female detainees, were released in exchange for a video showing Israeli hostage Gilad Shalit alive. "There was a lot of attention on Youssef after he came home," said Sahmoud, a journalist who escaped Gaza last year and now lives in Egypt. Follow Middle East Eye's live coverage of the Israel-Palestine war "The al-Zaq family called him the flower of the family. He was a quiet boy, and very much loved in his neighbourhood," he added. The youngest of eight siblings, Youssef was determined to live a full life and longed to travel. But Sahmoud said the family believes Youssef was deliberately targeted by Israel: "Youssef's birth and story exposed the occupation. That's why they didn't want him to stay alive," his cousin said, citing Israel's history of targeting and killing former Palestinian detainees. "The Israelis resented the fact that Youssef, who was born in their prison, was released. He represented a victory over them, a new lease of life. "I can't explain to you the special place Youssef held in the family," Sahmoud said. "His martyrdom left a massive hole. The Zionist occupation army snuffed out the family's source of light." Dehumanising children Youssef's story should not be the quintessential tale of childhood in Gaza. He was born in a prison and lived the rest of his life in an open-air cage. He witnessed multiple Israeli assaults. He lived through nearly two years of genocide. He died hungry, sharing a single piece of bread with his niece and nephew. He was pulled from the rubble of his home. Death has become a grim constant over the past 21 months. More than 17,000 children have been killed, according to the Gaza health ministry - a severe undercount that excludes the missing and the untold thousands still buried under rubble. Even so, that number means an average of 30 children have been killed by Israel every day since 7 October 2023 - equivalent to one classroom, or one child every 45 minutes. How does one begin to explain, let alone comprehend, Israel's disproportionate and deliberate targeting of children? With its advanced weaponry, surveillance and control over the population registry, these killings are not accidental - they are codified into policy. From the earliest days of this genocide, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu invoked the biblical story of Amalek to justify mass killing in Gaza, including children. In Gaza, children are learning the alphabet through grief and hunger Ghada Abu Muaileq Read More » The killing and maiming of children - still a war crime under international law - has been given full legitimacy, and even encouragement, through the rulings of Zionist rabbis and the rhetoric of Israeli government ministers. With such dehumanising language and fear of the other, these figures openly call for the extermination of Palestinian children and "the women who produce terrorists". They proclaim that "there are no innocents in Gaza", that every Palestinian child is "already a terrorist from the moment of his birth". To that end, Israel has been consistent. Since the settler colony's founding in 1948, the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians has never stopped. Genocide is no longer just an intention; it is official strategy. "Thinning out" Gaza's population is now formal government policy. Social collapse Why the children of Gaza? One million children in Gaza represent a growing youth population - a demographic challenge to an Israeli society that knows, deep down, it does not belong to a land it has drenched in Palestinian blood. Otherwise, why would it persist in violent subjugation and state murder? What kind of twisted psyche boasts of killing children and sees it as a divine right? Who celebrates the murder of innocents and sees their existence as a threat? Targeting children serves another nefarious purpose: a calculated assault on the social reproduction of an indigenous society. Why Israel is waging war on Palestinian children Read More » The goal is to collapse communal bonds and societal structures. There is the fast genocide of bombs and missiles, and the slow genocide of starvation, mass internment, and the decimation of healthcare - creating a petri dish of disease where children are the most vulnerable. From this chaos - designed to break the spirit of liberation and justice - colonial powers exploit the vacuum to expand illegal settlements and plunder natural resources. During the Mau Mau uprising in Kenya, the British confined 1.5 million Kenyans in detention camps and tightly controlled villages rife with disease, starvation, torture, rape and murder. "Only by detaining nearly the entire Kikuyu population of 1.5 million people and physically and psychologically atomising its men, women and children could colonial authority be restored and the civilising mission reinstated," Harvard historian Caroline Elkins wrote. In Algeria, too, in response to anti-colonial resistance from the FLN, the French forcibly rounded up thousands of peasants at gunpoint and relocated them to guarded settlements known as camps de regroupement. The aim was to drain public support from the FLN by isolating the rural population, controlling their movements, and restricting access to resources. By the end of the Algerian War in 1962, some two million Algerians were confined to these camps, suffering from disease and malnutrition. Future freedom fighters From the British to the French to the Israelis, settler-colonial tactics have followed the same brutal logic - even as their scale and cruelty have evolved. Across time and geography, the settler-colonial project has relied not only on physical conquest but also on the erasure of identity, the fragmentation of community, and the suppression of future resistance. To a violent colonising power, a child with a book, a dream, or a memory is more dangerous than any weapon Again I ask: why the children of Gaza? They represent exactly that future - one rooted in knowledge and historical memory. In a society with one of the highest literacy rates in the region, despite decades of siege and bombardment, educated youth are not only symbols of survival; they are agents of liberation. To a violent colonising power, a child with a book, a dream, or a memory is more dangerous than any weapon. Targeting children, then, is not collateral damage. It is strategy. It is part of a broader campaign to destroy hope, overwrite the future, and maintain the machinery of occupation through fear and erasure. The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.


Middle East Eye
an hour ago
- Middle East Eye
Rights groups condemn arrest of LGBTQ+ people in Tunisia
Rights group have denounced the mass arrest of LGBTQ+ people in Tunisia, saying they were subjected to degrading treatment by police officers. At least 14 people have been arrested over the past week, nine in the capital Tunis and five on the southern island of Djerba, according to the Tunisian Association for Justice and Equality (Damj). Many of those arrested were detained after cell phone and body searches, which can often involve intrusive anal examinations. According to Damj, six of those arrested had already been sentenced to prison terms ranging from one to two years. Saif Ayadi, programme officer at Damj, told AFP his group condemned the state's "practices... against gender identities and sexual orientations". New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters "We are forced to stay at home, in our private spaces, without displaying our identities," he explained. Over the past year, the North African country has seen an escalating crackdown on LGBTQ+ people. Hate speech targeting LGBTQ+ people has spread across hundreds of social media pages, with popular TV and radio hosts calling for the banning of LGBTQ+ organisations and arrests of activists. Influencers arrested More than 80 people were arrested under Tunisia's anti-homosexuality laws between September 2024 and the end of January 2025. Arrestees were detained and prosecuted under Article 230, which criminalises same-sex relations and carries a sentence of up to three years imprisonment, as well as articles in the penal code that criminalise 'public indecency' or acts deemed to be offensive to 'public morals'. Tunisia: 'Moral values', the new pretext to repress freedoms Read More » Last autumn, at least 10 influencers and content creators, including some residing abroad, were convicted and sentenced to prison terms of up to four-and-a-half years following a statement from the Ministry of Justice announcing prosecutions against anyone 'producing, distributing or publishing images or videos with content that undermines moral values'. The defendants included Instagrammer Lady Samara, known for her frequent outbursts and angry insults at advertising companies, who was arrested for swearing. Choumoukh, a 24-year-old Tiktok star with 200,000 followers, was jailed because of her openness in discussing sexuality during live shows. Khoubaib, a queer content creator who is non-gender conforming, was prosecuted for defying gender norms and wearing make-up. Morality laws have usually been used against members of the LGBTQ+ community, but also couples kissing in public, people eating or smoking during Ramadan, and blasphemous or 'inappropriate' content. However, since President Kais Saied's power grab on 25 July 2021, when he froze parliament and started dismantling the democratic advances made after the revolution, arrests based on these laws have increased and the sentences delivered are much harsher.


Middle East Eye
3 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
Iranian press review: Outrage as five Kurds handed 12 death sentences
Iran issues death sentences to five Kurds The issuance of 12 death sentences to five Kurdish citizens has sparked widespread condemnation from human rights activists inside Iran. In response, Iranian activists launched a social media campaign to raise international awareness about the urgent threat facing the condemned individuals. According to the Kurdistan Human Rights Network, the five prisoners are Ali (Soran) Ghasemi, Pejman Soltani, Kaveh Salehi, Rezgar Beigzadeh Babamiri, and Teyfour Salimi Babamiri. Soltani had previously been sentenced to death by a Special Juvenile Criminal Court for 'complicity in premeditated murder'. The rights group reported that the latest rulings followed three brief virtual hearings held in recent days. The verdicts were formally delivered to the defendants' attorneys on Monday. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters According to the rulings, Ghasemi, Soltani, and Salehi have each been sentenced to three executions on charges including 'rebellion', moharebeh (waging war against God), and 'forming a rebellious criminal group'. Rezgar Beigzadeh Babamiri was handed two death sentences on similar charges. Teyfour Salimi Babamiri - who had previously been released on bail - received one death sentence for alleged participation in a rebellious group. Iranian opposition complain against German chancellor A group of Iranian dissidents living in Germany has signed an online petition and filed a complaint with the German Federal Court against Chancellor Friedrich Merz over his recent comments about Israel's attack on Iran. The complaint focused on remarks Merz made during the G7 summit in an interview with German broadcaster ZDF, where he praised Israel's actions and described the attack on Iran as 'dirty work' that Israel is doing 'for all of us'. Iranians struggle to rebuild lives and homes in wake of Israel's war Read More » Among the signatories of the petition is artist Parastou Forouhar, a well-known critic of the Iranian establishment. Forouhar's parents, both nationalist activists opposed to the Islamic Republic, were stabbed to death in their home in 1998 by Iranian security agents. Explaining her reason for joining the complaint, Forouhar wrote on Facebook: '[Merz] did not mention the civilian casualties in Iran once during the interview. He didn't express any sympathy for the difficult situation the Iranian people are going through.' She also linked the complaint to the growing xenophobia in Germany, pointing to a broader pattern. 'The collective humiliation and hostility toward refugees and migrants, especially those from war-torn countries like Afghanistan, has been rising at an alarming rate,' she wrote. 'The chancellor's remarks are a warning sign that this attitude may now be extending to the Iranian-German community as well.' IRGC-linked media call for repeat of 1988 mass executions Fars News Agency, which is closely tied to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), has published an article calling for the repeat of the 1988 mass execution of political prisoners. The article, also republished by other pro-IRGC outlets, including the Hamshahri daily, described the mass killings that took place after the Iran-Iraq war as a 'successful experience'. Under the headline, 'Why Repeat the Experience of the Executions of 1988?', the piece read: 'In recent years, efforts have been made to distort and question one of the Islamic Republic's greatest achievements in fighting terrorism. But it now seems the time has come to repeat that successful historical experience. 'Today, certain traitorous elements, both Iranian and foreign, have caused the deaths of hundreds of Iranian civilians, including women and children. "These individuals deserve to be executed, as they were in 1988.' Even before these calls from IRGC-linked media, former political prisoners and human rights organisations had warned that the government might again resort to mass executions in the aftermath of the war with Israel. War's toll on civilian mental health Local media have reported a rise in mental health issues among Iranians following Israel's attack on Iran, with visits to mental health centres increasing by 40 percent. According to a report by Rouydad24, not only have some people seen a return of previous mental health problems, but many are experiencing symptoms such as chronic anxiety, insomnia, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) for the first time. Under fire: Iran between pride and exhaustion Read More » Psychologist Hossein Roozbahani told the outlet, 'What we are seeing is widespread anxiety caused by the shock of the crisis and intense environmental stress.' The report noted that since the start of the Israeli military operation, many people who had previously completed treatment or had their symptoms under control have returned to seek help. Some have reported experiencing panic attacks, insomnia, and sudden outbursts of anger, while others have developed severe anxiety disorders. Another group, particularly those who were directly exposed to attacks or explosions, has been diagnosed with PTSD. The Shargh daily also reported a sharp rise in calls to psychological counselling hotlines, with more than 80,000 calls made in the first 12 days of the conflict. *Iranian press review is a digest of news reports not independently verified as accurate by Middle East Eye.