Balita.org: Your Premier Source for Comprehensive Philippines News and Insights! We bring you the latest news, stories, and updates on a wide range of topics, including politics, culture, economy, and more. Stay tuned to know everything you wish about your favorite stars 24/7.

Contacts

  • Owner: SNOWLAND s.r.o.
  • Registration certificate 06691200
  • 16200, Na okraji 381/41, Veleslavín, 162 00 Praha 6
  • Czech Republic

Gaza hospitals seemed a safe haven -- then carnage came

PALESTINIAN TERRITORIES — For tens of thousands of families in Gaza, hospitals became a refuge from seemingly endless Israeli shelling.

Then came the strike Tuesday night on Ahli Arab hospital in central Gaza, which the health ministry in the Hamas-ruled territory said killed at least 200 people.

The ministry, which blamed Israel for the strike, said Ahli Arab was sheltering not only hundreds of sick and wounded, but also people "forcibly displaced from their homes" because of other strikes.

Israel's army said a rocket misfired by Islamic Jihad Palestinian militants caused the strike.

Gaza residents, who have been told to flee the north of the Palestinian territory, had packed the courtyards and corridors of the territory's overwhelmed hospitals in the belief they were a safe haven from the Israeli bombardments that followed the October 7 attacks by Hamas on southern Israel.

At Nasser hospital, before the Ahli Arab strike, women made bread and spread out clothes to dry in the courtyard of the facility in the southern district of Khan Yunis, as a stream of ambulances brought casualties and surgeons desperately sought to save lives inside.

Amira, 44, and her children were among hundreds to have taken over the courtyard.

"Our bodies itch all over. It has been a week since we could take a shower," she told AFP as she prepared sandwiches for her children with some loaves she had been given.

"Death might be more merciful," she added.

Makeshift mattresses cover the ground and each night the homeless and displaced try to sleep amid the roar of air attacks and the growing cold.

Ibrahim Teyssir is one of thousands to seek refuge around the Dar al-Shifa hospital, the biggest in Gaza and the heart of the medical system for the 2.4 million population.

"No one has pity on us," said Teyssir. "What have we done to deserve this? What have our children done?

"Most people are not part of any armed group."

"Hospitals are at a breaking point and are overflowing and with people desperately seeking a safe shelter," the World Health Organization added.

"Crowding is getting worse. Over 30,000 people are sheltering at Shifa Hospital alone," the UN agency told AFP, quoting Hamas health

Read more on philstar.com