Israeli strike kills 29 in Gazan football match-turned-carnage scene
A Palestinian woman holds her daughter as she walks past the rubble of houses destroyed during the Israeli military offensive, Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Palestine, July 10, 2024. (Reuters Photo)


An Israeli missile struck a tent encampment in southern Gaza on Tuesday, killing at least 29 people, mostly women and children, as displaced people gathered to watch a football match at a school, eyewitnesses said Wednesday.

Palestinian officials reported that the attack occurred in Abassan, east of Khan Younis, where spectators had crowded the school grounds and vendors were selling smoothies and biscuits.

"They were watching a football match. There were injuries and martyrs. I witnessed this ... people thrown around and body parts scattered, blood," a young woman, Ghazzal Nasser, told Reuters in Abassan.

"Everything was normal. People were playing, others were buying and selling food and drinks. There was no sound of planes or anything," she said.

The Israeli military said it was reviewing reports that civilians were harmed.

Israel claimed the massacre occurred when it struck with a "precise munition" a Hamas member who took part in the Oct. 7 raid on Israel.

At the nearby Nasser Hospital, dozens of Palestinians bid farewell to loved ones before funerals and burials.

"The schools were overcrowded with people and the street was full too. Suddenly a missile hit and destroyed the whole place," said Asmaa Qudeih, who lost some relatives in the attack.

"Bodies flew in the wind, body parts flew, I don't know how to describe it," she said.

Israeli forces continued to press their offensive in north and central Gaza on Wednesday and deepened their incursion into two Gaza City districts, carrying out house-to-house searches.

Hamas said the renewed Israeli campaign threatened to derail efforts to secure a cease-fire in the nine-month-old war, with talks to resume in Doha on Wednesday.

In west Jerusalem, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told U.S. Middle East envoy Brett McGurk he was committed to securing a Gaza cease-fire deal provided Israel's red lines were respected, his office said.

Hamas has accepted a key part of a U.S. plan aimed at ending the nine-month-old war, dropping a demand that Israel first commit to a permanent cease-fire before signing the agreement.

Netanyahu has insisted the deal must not prevent Israel from resuming fighting until its war objectives are met. At the outset of the war, he pledged to annihilate Hamas.

Evacuation

Leaflets were dropped on Gaza City on Wednesday, this time with a map marking "safe routes" for the evacuation of the whole city, not just certain districts.

The Israeli leaflets urge civilians to head south to the central Gaza Strip.

The city, home to more than a quarter of Gaza's population before the war, was destroyed by an Israeli assault in the first weeks of fighting last year, but hundreds of thousands of Gazans are believed to have returned to the ruins in recent months.

Israeli forces patrolled the main road to the coast, snipers commandeered rooftops of some high-rise buildings still standing, and tanks were stationed inside the headquarters of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), residents said.

The Israeli military said in a statement its forces were continuing operations in Gaza City against Hamas and its ally Islamic Jihad, who they claimed had operated from inside the UNRWA facilities.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said it had received dozens of desperate calls from residents in Gaza City trapped in their homes but teams were unable to reach them because of the intensity of the Israeli bombing.

"The information coming from Gaza City shows residents are living through tragic conditions. (Israeli) occupation forces continue to hit residential districts and displace people from their homes and refuge shelters," it said in a statement.

In the central Gaza camp of Al-Nuseirat, medics said six Palestinians, including children, were killed in an airstrike on a house, while another airstrike killed two people and wounded several others in Khan Younis.

More than 38,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, have been killed by Israel in Gaza since the start of the war.

Israel's genocidal attacks began when Hamas carried out an incursion on southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people and taking around 250 hostages back to Gaza, claimed Israel.