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The Guardian Reveals Details of Israeli Massacre at Gaza's Al-Baqa Café

The Guardian Reveals Details of Israeli Massacre at Gaza's Al-Baqa Café

Days of Palestine10 hours ago
DaysofPal — New field evidence obtained by The Guardian has confirmed that the Israeli airstrike on Al-Baqa Café—a family gathering spot on Gaza's seashore—was carried out using a U.S.-made 230-kilogram MK-82 bomb. The attack killed at least 24 civilians, including women and children, and left dozens more seriously wounded.
Based on analysis of bomb fragments and the size of the crater, munitions experts have verified that the MK-82, a high-explosive bomb known for its devastating blast radius and shrapnel spread, was used in the densely populated civilian area. Its deployment in such a setting, experts say, constitutes a grave breach of international humanitarian law.
A Haven Turned into a Mass Grave
The Al-Baqa Café, located along Gaza City's beach, was one of the few public spaces where families could seek a brief escape from war. It featured two floors—an upper open-air terrace and a ground-level area with windows overlooking the sea. Survivors and medical teams confirmed that the café was filled with civilians—children, mothers, students, and artists—at the time of the strike.
Among the dead were a 4-year-old child, a well-known film director, a mother in her thirties, and several young students. More than 36 are feared killed, with dozens more injured, including a 12-year-old girl and a teenage boy. No military activity was reported near the area, and it was not within an evacuation zone.
Legal Experts: This Is a War Crime
Legal experts warn that using such a bomb in a populated area shows clear disregard for civilian lives.
'Targeting a crowded café with a bomb of this magnitude means the attacker knowingly accepted the mass killing of civilians,' said Jerry Simpson of Human Rights Watch. 'That's not just unlawful—it's a war crime.'
Dr. Andrew Ford, a legal scholar at Dublin City University, added that even precision-guided munitions like the MK-82 violate the laws of war when used without strict proportionality:
'There's no justification—none—for this level of civilian harm.'
Mark Schack, professor of international law in Copenhagen, noted that the MK-82 is usually reserved for hardened military targets:
'If over 30 civilians were killed, the burden of proof is immense. Otherwise, this is an indefensible breach.'
Gaza's Collapse—and a Message of Terror
The café strike occurred in the context of Gaza's near-total collapse: starvation, medical shortages, power cuts, and daily airstrikes. Al-Baqa Café had remained one of the last spots of semblance and community life. Its destruction sends a clear message: nowhere is safe—not hospitals, not schools, not even places of leisure.
Images captured by The Guardian show a large crater, twisted metal, shattered glass, and personal items soaked in blood. Munitions analysts identified debris from a Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) guidance system and thermal batteries—evidence of a guided precision strike.
Calls for Accountability Mount
The International Justice Center in The Hague has urged for the incident to be added to ongoing investigations into Israeli war crimes.
Trevor Paul, a former U.S. munitions expert, emphasized that even precision strikes can be criminal:
'When you know civilians are there and bomb anyway, it's not precision—it's premeditated.'
Human rights groups have condemned the strike as another chapter in a broader policy of systematic targeting of civilian infrastructure, a pattern already documented since October 7, 2023.
Conclusion: Not an Exception, but a Pattern
What happened at Al-Baqa Café is not a tragic error—it is part of an established pattern. In a territory sealed off from the world, where food and aid are denied and movement is strangled, even cafés become execution grounds.
This was not 'collateral damage.' It was a calculated strike using a high-yield explosive in a known civilian area, at a known civilian hour. The evidence is overwhelming. The silence of the international community is damning.
Until there is justice, Gaza's parks, schools, and cafés will remain targets. And the world will continue watching a slow-motion genocide, bomb by bomb, strike by strike.
Shortlink for this post: https://daysofpalestine.ps/?p=65425
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