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9 of the 10 children of a Palestinian doctor who were killed in the latest strikes of Israel in Gaza

The pediatrician Alaa Najjar was on duty in the Nasser Hospital when she learned that her house had been hit by an Israeli air raid.

She ran home to discover the house on fire – and that nine of her ten children had been killed. Her husband was seriously wounded and her only surviving child, an 11-year-old son, was in a critical condition after the strike on Friday in the southern city of Khan Yunis, said Ahmmar al-Farra, head of the pediatric department of the hospital.

The children belonged to 79 people who were killed by Israeli strikes that were brought to hospitals for the last 24 hours, the Gaza Ministry of Health announced on Saturday – a tribute that does not include any hospitals in the proven north that it is now not accessible.

The dead on the last day in the renewed military offensive of Israel were nine of the ten children of the doctor, said disposed colleagues and the Ministry of Health.

Najjars dead children were at the age of 7 months to 12 years. Khalil al-Docran, a spokesman for the Gaza Ministry of Health, told the AP that two of the children had remained under the rubble.

In an explanation, Israel's military said that it had hit suspects from a structure alongside its armed forces and described the area of ​​Khan Yunis as a “dangerous war zone”. It said it evacuated civilians from the region and “the claim for unnecessary civilians is examined”.

In an explanation on Saturday it was an explanation that the Air Force of Israel made more than 100 destinations in the entire Gaza Strip last day.

The Ministry of Health said the new deaths brought the tribute of war to 53.901 since October 7, 2023, the attack on Israel led by Hamas, which triggered the 19 months of the fight. The Ministry said that 3,747 people were killed in Gaza since Israel resumed the war on March 18 to put Hamas under pressure to accept different ceasefire conditions. The count does not differ between civilians and combatants.

The pressure of Israel on Hamas has been a blockade of Gaza since the beginning of March and more than 2 million people. This week the first small number of auxiliary cars entered the area and has reached the Palestinians since the blockade began. But they were far less than the approximately 600 trucks a day that occurred during the ceasefire.

Warnings of famine by experts in nutritional security and images of desperate Palestinians, which were made up of dining shells in the ever difficult number of charity kitchens, caused the ally of Israel to urge the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to enable help to return.

The Netanyahu government has applied for a new aid and sales system through a newly established US group, but the United Nations and Partners rejected it and explained that Israel starts food as a weapon and violates humanitarian principles.

Israel can now change his approach to leave the auxiliary groups responsible for non-food support, as can be seen from a letter received from AP. Israel accuses Hamas to skim off, but the UN and Auxiliary groups deny that there is a significant distraction.

Hospitals in Gaza again report attacks and other Israeli pressure.

The Ministry of Health said 11 security personnel have been caught in the European hospital in southern Gaza at least Tuesday after heavy shots and air strikes. Dr. Saleh Hams, director of the nursing department, said the patients were evacuated after an Israeli strike on May 13th. Hams said that the security personnel had stayed behind to protect against looting and that it was the only hospital in Gaza that offered neurosurgery, heart supply and cancer treatment.

Israel said that Gaza would continue to beat until Hamas will publish all 58 remaining Israeli hostages and disarmament. It is believed that less than half of the hostages have lived since the attack on October 7, in which militant killed around 1,200 people, mainly civilians, and kidnapped 251 others.

Hamas has explained that it will only return the remaining hostages in exchange for more Palestinian prisoners, a permanent ceasefire and an Israeli retreat from the territory. Netanyahu rejected these terms and sworn to keep control of Gaza and to make it easier for him, which he describes as a voluntary emigration of a large part of his Palestinian population.

Aljoud and Magdy write for the Associated Press. Aljoud reported by Beirut.

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