
Israeli attacks continue on Gaza - World - Al-Ahram Weekly
At least 41 Palestinians were killed in pre-dawn Israeli air attacks across the Gaza Strip on Sunday. Among the dead was Hamas senior leader Salah Al-Bardawil, who was killed along with his wife in a tent shelter in Khan Yunis in southern Gaza.
Since Israel unilaterally terminated a two-month ceasefire last week and renewed its attacks on the Strip, 673 Palestinians have been killed and more than 1,233 wounded, according to the Health Ministry in Gaza.
The Israeli army issued orders for the full evacuation of the Tel Al-Sultan neighbourhood in Rafah in southern Gaza, designating the area as a 'dangerous combat zone' and forcing thousands to flee their homes and face displacement during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
At approximately 2:20am on 18 March, Israel resumed its military offensive in Gaza, shattering hopes for a lasting ceasefire and plunging the besieged enclave into yet another wave of destruction, as the Israeli Army launched sudden aerial attacks on heavily populated parts of the Strip, including Rafah, Khan Yunis, Deir Al-Balah, Nuseirat, Bureij, Al-Zaytoun, Al-Karama, Beit Hanoun and Gaza City, ending a two-month-old ceasefire.
Hostilities erupted after ceasefire negotiations between Israel and Hamas over the second phase of the hostage-swap deal, which took effect on 19 January, collapsed. Before the attack, Israel had tightened its blockade on Gaza, banned the entry of humanitarian aid and cut electricity since 1 March. The initial wave of attacks resulted in the deaths of more than 413 Palestinians, mostly women and children, health officials in Gaza said.
The Israeli offensive has dramatically worsened the already dire humanitarian conditions in Gaza, pushing the besieged enclave into a renewed cycle of violence and devastation. Amid relentless bombardment, severe shortages of food, water, and medical supplies, and the collapse of the healthcare system, civilians are bearing the brunt of the renewed hostilities in what has become an unlivable war zone.
Mohanad Mortaja, a high school student, described the 18 March attacks as the deadliest since the first weeks of the conflict that started in October 2023.
'It felt just like the first day of the war. My mother was preparing Sohour [the Ramadan dawn meal] for us as we sat together under the dim glow of a battery-powered light. It was a bitterly cold night, and we had only a little food to sustain our fast for the next day.'
'Suddenly, a powerful airstrike shook the ground, hitting a building at the end of our street. We screamed in terror, and our bodies trembled. In shock, my mother dropped the plates, while her hands shook with fear,' he added.
Hundreds more people were killed as Israel sent its troops deeper into areas it had already withdrawn from in the central Gaza Strip, and issued evacuation orders for several neighbourhoods in the wake of last week's attack.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported that leaflets were dropped over Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun in the shattered north of the Strip, as well as eastern Khan Younis in the south, ordering residents once again to leave their homes.
As the strikes continue, families are scrambling to find shelter. Hadeel Al-Madhoon, 56, from Beit Hanoun pitched her tent in the Islamic University courtyard in Gaza City. 'Where will we go? I'm staying here, even though it's all rubble,' she said.
'Every place in Gaza has been destroyed. This is the tenth time I've had to move, but it doesn't matter anymore. It's an evil world.'
The sight of tents filling the streets of Gaza is a painful reminder of loss. These are not just pieces of fabric, but stories of homes reduced to rubble, memories torn apart, and dreams cast into uncertainty. Each person in these tents once had a home. Now, the open sky is their only roof, and the streets are their only shelter.
Since 18 March, Gaza has been engulfed in a severe humanitarian crisis. Israeli airstrikes have resulted in substantial civilian casualties. The heaviest of the coffins have been the smallest, since 173 children have been among the over 400 Palestinians killed as Israel resumes its military operations, health officials in Gaza said.
Baby Banan Al-Salut never got to celebrate a single birthday, for example. She was born in the war and killed in the war. Images of her body in her rainbow clothing went viral and were among the first from Gaza after Israel broke the ceasefire.
Mohamed Naim Shaaban, nine months old, was killed alongside his mother, uncles, and cousins. Mohamed, Tareq, Lana, Aya and Wateen Al-Hamaedah were siblings who were killed by an Israeli airstrike while they were sleeping in a tent. Sisters Jannat and Misk were killed alongside their mother Shadha in Deir Al-Balah. Bisan and Ayman were siblings who were killed in Israeli attacks on Khan Younis.
Entire Palestinian families remain trapped under the rubble, while civil-defence teams race to respond to the pleas of others who have lost their loved ones due to the intensifying Israeli airstrikes on Gaza.
Meanwhile, in Khan Younis rescue teams managed to pull a 25-day-old toddler, Ella Osama Abu Dagga, from the rubble of a collapsed apartment building after an Israeli airstrike. Sadly, Ella lost her brother and parents, and she is now in the care of her aunt Soad Abu Dagga.
Gaza's Civil Defence Spokesman Mahmoud Basal warned of the devastating impacts of the massive Israeli campaign on Gaza's infrastructure, pointing out that relief efforts to retrieve bodies from the debris are extremely difficult in the light of the continuous Israeli airstrikes and lack of equipment.
He urged the international community to take urgent action and ensure the swift delivery of humanitarian aid to address the growing needs of those affected.
The resumption of hostilities in Gaza has further strained municipal services, leading to increased displacement and infrastructure damage. According to American Near East Refugee Aid (ANERA), an NGO, as of 24 February Gaza City alone has seen the accumulation of approximately 170,000 tons of waste in streets and temporary landfills.
This crisis has been exacerbated by restricted access to the main landfill east of the city and the destruction of nearly 80 per cent of the municipality's vehicles.
Between 2 and 15 March, the Palestinian Water Authority and the Coastal Municipalities Water Utility reported a daily average production of 127,022 cubic metres of water across the Gaza Strip. Of this, 33 per cent was sourced from operational seawater desalination plants and Israeli supply lines, while 67 per cent came from municipal groundwater wells.
UN Deputy Spokesperson Farhan Haq said in a news briefing that the closure of the crossings into Gaza is severely disrupting relief operations and worsening an already catastrophic situation.
Humanitarian organisations have raised the alarm over severe shortages of essential supplies, including food, potable water, clothing, and blankets. The ongoing war and strict restrictions on humanitarian aid have also dramatically exacerbated hunger.
The people of Gaza are no longer looking for complete meals due to the depletion of stocks such as of flour and sugar and prices that have risen by about 300 per cent. Many families survive on barely any or no food.
Hana Said, 40, told the Al-Ahram Weekly that she can barely cook breakfast for her family. 'We depend on lentils and water, if available. There are no vegetables, no meat, no chicken, and if they were available, I couldn't afford to buy them,' she said.
Around 30 community kitchens that sporadically provided hot meals to displaced Palestinians across the Gaza Strip have been forced to close since 18 March. According to the UN, distributions have been interrupted due to the escalating violence and the location of distribution sites near evacuation zones.
Israel has breached a two-month truce and resumed a ground and aerial campaign in the Gaza Strip, saying it wants to push Hamas to release the remaining hostages in its captivity.
Israel says Hamas holds 59 more Israeli hostages in the enclave, 24 of whom are alive.
It has pushed the Gaza Strip into a new famine, as essential food supplies become scarce and unaffordable.
Palestinian analyst Akram Atallah, based in London, told the Weekly that Israel had already placed Gaza in a dire humanitarian crisis before resuming its military campaign by closing crossings, blocking humanitarian aid, and cutting electricity.
'Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is using food as a weapon against two million people living in war-ravaged Gaza to serve his political interests, both to appease his coalition and to support US President Donald Trump's plan to expel Palestinians from the devastated territory,' Atallah said.
According to Atallah, the key to ending the crisis lies in regional mediators pressuring the US into halting the hostilities in Gaza, resuming the ceasefire negotiations, and forcing Israel to withdraw its forces from the Gaza Strip.
Since the resumption of the Israeli military operations last week, Gaza's healthcare system has been critically compromised. The destruction of Gaza's only specialised cancer hospital by Israeli forces has further diminished healthcare capacity, eliminating essential services for critically ill patients.
The international rights group Human Rights Watch condemned the devastation of infrastructure, severe resource shortages, and relentless hostilities that have left hospitals in Gaza overwhelmed and struggling to provide proper care for the sick and wounded.
According to the Health Ministry, 50,021 Palestinians have been killed and 113,274 wounded by Israeli airstrikes in Gaza since 7 October 2023.
* A version of this article appears in print in the 27 March, 2025 edition of Al-Ahram Weekly
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Mada
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Source: Al-Azhar grand imam withdrew call to save Gaza at foreign minister's request
Al-Azhar withdrew a Tuesday night statement in which it had called on 'active and influential forces' to stop Israel's genocidal war and mass starvation of Palestinians in Gaza. The following afternoon, it justified the withdrawal in a new statement from its media office in which it said it 'realized' the statement 'could affect the ongoing negotiations.' According to Al-Azhar, the decision to withdraw, which it called brave and responsible, came so the statement 'would not be used as an excuse to retreat from the negotiations or to bargain in them.' A source close to Grand Imam of Al-Azhar Ahmed al-Tayeb told Mada Masr on condition of anonymity that Tayeb withdrew the statement after Foreign Minister Badr Abdel Atty urged him to do so, saying it may obstruct negotiations that are close to reaching a solution that would allow humanitarian aid to enter the besieged Gaza Strip. Palestinians in Gaza have been under an almost total siege since March. The recalled statement came amid increasing global calls to end the war and stop Israel's mass starvation of Palestinians, as the number of people dying from starvation and malnutrition rises. Ten people died from malnutrition-related causes in the last 24 hours, according to Gaza Health Ministry spokesperson Muneer al-Barsh. Tuesday's statement called on 'active and influential forces to do their utmost' to compel Israel to halt its systematic killing of Palestinians, 'immediately allow the entry of humanitarian and relief aid, and open all avenues for treating the sick and injured whose health conditions have deteriorated as a result of the Occupation's targeting of hospitals and medical facilities, in flagrant violation of all divine laws and international conventions.' It was removed from its pages hours later without comment until the following afternoon. The source explained that Tayeb made the decision to remove the statement in case doing so could expedite the entry of 'one bag of flour' to the people of Gaza in light of Abdel Atty's warnings that the ongoing negotiations would be 'ruined' by its publication, which came on behalf of the Egyptian and Qatari mediator according to the source. Last week, Doha was still hosting the first phase of a new round of negotiations that aims to reach an 'agreement of principles' that would serve as a basis for indirect ceasefire talks. At the same time, the United States, Qatar and Egypt presented both Palestinian factions and Israelis with an updated proposal for a ceasefire and prisoner exchange. But negotiations have stalled over Hamas's demands for a guarantee that Israel will not resume its war, and over the extent to which the Israeli military will withdraw from areas its forces are occupying in the Gaza Strip. Even amid talks toward a negotiated ceasefire, Israel has established newly fortified areas while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has declared plans to concentrate most of the Palestinians in Gaza to a confined area, which he dubbed a 'humanitarian city,' near the border with Egypt and resume the war once the truce supported by the US and the mediators ends. The deleted statement said that 'thousands of children and innocent people are being killed in cold blood, while the ones who survive are facing death from hunger, thirst, dehydration, the depletion of medicine and the failure of medical centers to save them from certain death.' It also declared Al-Azhar's 'disavowal before God of this suspicious global silence, the shameful international failure to support these defenseless people, and of any call to displace the people of Gaza from their land, and anyone who accepts or responds to these calls.' The statement, covered widely by domestic press before its withdrawal, which led to some coverage being taken down, was not the first from Tayeb concerning the genocidal war on Gaza. Since October 7, he has expressed solidarity with the people of Gaza, rejection of their displacement, criticism of the Israeli occupation and support for the Palestinian resistance on multiple occasions. This rhetoric does not always align with the official government discourse. Abdel Atty had contacted Tayeb on a previous occasion to change the wording of one of these statements, in parallel with a similar request which came at the time from a 'sovereign body,' according to the source. Al-Azhar's deleted statement comes as humanitarian conditions in the Gaza Strip deteriorate, amid an increase in the number of deaths from hunger and malnutrition as a result of Israel's starvation policies. Israel has been preventing the entry of humanitarian aid for months, blocking the regular aid entry and distribution mechanisms, while Israeli forces open fire on a daily basis at the people who approach the aid distribution centers designated by Israel. Thirty Western countries called for an immediate end to the war in Gaza on Monday, saying that the suffering of Palestinians has 'reached new depths.' The joint statement condemned 'the drip feeding of aid and the inhumane killing of civilians, including children, seeking to meet their most basic needs of water and food,' noting that 'over 800 Palestinians have been killed while seeking aid.' The group also condemned Netanyahu's plans to displace the population to a 'humanitarian city' as a violation of international humanitarian law. 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Hospitals receiving 120 malnutrition patients daily in Gaza, Health Ministry official says
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Ibrahim Ahmed, one of the protesters, told Mada Masr that he joined the demonstration at the Nasr market in northern Gaza City to denounce traders' exploitation. He said profiteering off people's need has peaked in recent days and blamed the dire situation on the closure of border crossings and the tightening of the blockade. On Saturday, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) said it has food supplies in storage that could sustain the entire population of Gaza for more than three months. But the aid remains stuck in warehouses — including in Egypt's Arish City — pending clearance for entry. The agency repeated its call to open the crossings and lift the blockade on the strip. Gaza's population has now entered the most severe conditions of food insecurity, or Phase 5 famine as per the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, the Health Ministry's information unit director said on Monday. 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Al-Ahram Weekly
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- Al-Ahram Weekly
Israeli forces deepening assaults in Gaza City, killing at least 21 in overnight strikes - War on Gaza
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