Israel steps up deadly bombardment of Gaza, killing at least 90 people, before ceasefire talks

Warships and artillery launch one of the deadliest bombardments of territory for months

A man carries the body of a child at al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City on Thursday. Photograph: Omar Al-Qattaa/Getty
A man carries the body of a child at al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City on Thursday. Photograph: Omar Al-Qattaa/Getty

Israel has escalated its offensive in Gaza before imminent talks about a ceasefire, with warships and artillery launching one of the deadliest and most intense bombardments in the devastated Palestinian territory for many months.

Medics and officials in Gaza reported that about 90 people were killed overnight and on Thursday, including many women and children. On Tuesday night and Wednesday the toll was higher, they said.

Casualties included Marwan al-Sultan, a cardiologist and director of the Indonesian hospital in northern Gaza, who died in an air strike that also killed his wife and five children.

In all, about 300 people may have been killed this week and thousands more injured, officials said.

Despite the new wave of violence in Gaza, hopes of a ceasefire have risen after Donald Trump’s announcement on Tuesday that Israel had accepted the terms of a potential deal with Hamas.

The deal would involve a 60-day initial pause in hostilities, a part withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza and the release of some of the hostages still held by Hamas.

Israel’s security cabinet was scheduled to meet on Thursday night to decide whether to move swiftly towards an agreement with Hamas or order further military escalation.

Children look at smouldering debris at Gaza City's Mustafa Hafez school, which has been sheltering Palestinians displaced by the war. Photograph: Omar Al-Qattaa/Getty
Children look at smouldering debris at Gaza City's Mustafa Hafez school, which has been sheltering Palestinians displaced by the war. Photograph: Omar Al-Qattaa/Getty

Binyamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, is due to fly to Washington on Sunday for talks with Trump and senior US officials.

They are expected to discuss a ceasefire, the recent war between Israel and Iran and possibilities for ambitious regional agreements.

A previous ceasefire between Israel and Hamas collapsed in March when Israel reneged on a promise to move to a second phase of talks.

Since then almost 6,500 people have been killed in Gaza in successive waves of Israeli air strikes, shelling and clashes between Israeli troops and remaining Hamas militants.

Gaza death toll passes 57,000 with little clarity on potential ceasefire ]

Though the total blockade of Gaza imposed by Israel has now been partly lifted, only limited supplies are reaching the most vulnerable in the territory, who are threatened by famine.

The casualties on Thursday included dozens of Palestinians attempting to get humanitarian aid, with five people killed by Israeli fire on their way to sites run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a new and secretive private organisation supported by the US and Israel that began in May to distribute basic food parcels from four hubs protected by Israeli forces.

About 45 Palestinians seeking aid were killed elsewhere in the territory, reportedly by Israeli fire, Palestinian officials said.

Hundreds have been killed in recent weeks while seeking aid.

Israel’s military acknowledged on Monday that Palestinian civilians had been harmed seeking aid and that its forces had been issued with new instructions after what it called “lessons learned”.

Women mourn at al-Shifa hospital, where the victims of an Israeli strike that hit the Mustafa Hafez school were taken. Photograph: Omar Al-Qattaa/Getty
Women mourn at al-Shifa hospital, where the victims of an Israeli strike that hit the Mustafa Hafez school were taken. Photograph: Omar Al-Qattaa/Getty

The wave of intense attacks of recent days appears to be designed to put pressure on Hamas in negotiations.

Israel’s focus has been the north of Gaza, where the militant Islamist organisation remains entrenched, though much weakened.

In Gaza City on Thursday, 12 people were killed and many injured in a strike on the Mustafa Hafez school, which shelters displaced people, in al-Rimal neighbourhood, said Mohammad al-Mughayyir, a civil defence official.

Footage filmed by local journalists showed children wandering through the charred, bombed-out shelter as piles of burnt debris smouldered.

Crowds of mourners gathered at al-Shifa hospital, where men and women wept over the bodies of the dead.

“We have no life left. Let them just annihilate us so we can finally rest,” said one woman who lost relatives in the strike and did not give her name.

“There’s nothing left for us. My two daughters are gone – and now my niece along with her six children and her husband were burned to death.”

The Israeli military said it had targeted a key Hamas militant operating in the school, regretted any harm to “uninvolved individuals” and took steps to minimise such harm.

The war in Gaza was triggered by an attack into southern Israel in October 2023 during which Hamas-led militants killed 1,219 people, mostly civilians, and abducted 251.

Israel’s retaliatory military campaign has killed at least 57,012 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to a count by the territory’s ministry of health that is considered reliable by the UN and many western governments. – Guardian

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