Stabroek News

Israeli strike kills senior rescue-service official in Gaza

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CAIRO (Reuters) - An Israeli airstrike on a house in Jabalia on Sunday killed Mohammad Morsi, deputy director of the Gaza Civil Emergency Service in the northern areas of the Gaza Strip, and four of his family, health officials said.

The Civil Emergency Service said in a statement that Morsi’s death raised to 83 the number of its members killed by Israeli fire since Oct. 7.

There was no immediate Israeli comment on Morsi’s death.

Residents said Israeli forces had also blown up several houses in the Zeitoun suburb of Gaza City 5 km from Jabalia. Medical teams said they were unable to answer desperate calls by some of the residents who had reported being trapped inside their houses, some wounded.

“We hear constant bombing in Zeitoun, we know they are blowing up houses there, we don’t sleep because of the sounds of explosions, the roaring of tanks sound close and the drones don’t stop circling,” said one resident of Gaza City, who lives around 1 km away.

“The occupation is wiping out Zeitoun, we are afraid about the people trapped in there,” he told Reuters via a chat app, refusing to be named.

Later on Sunday, the Gaza health ministry said Israeli military strikes across the enclave killed at least 15 people.

Residents of central and southern Gaza areas reported interrupti­on in internet and communicat­ion services, which the Palestinia­n Telecommun­ication Company said was because of “the ongoing (Israeli) aggression.”

Video from Israel’s ambulance service showed emergency vehicles at the Allenby Bridge border in the occupied West Bank on Sunday,

Palestinia­ns say internet and communicat­ion outages, the first in months, impact the ability of medical staffers to dispatch ambulances to bombed areas and make it difficult for people to check on their relatives or report attacks.

Israel and Hamas continued to blame one another for the failure of mediators, including Qatar, Egypt and the U.S., to broker a ceasefire. The U.S. is preparing to present a new proposal, but the prospects of a breakthrou­gh appear dim as gaps between the sides’ positions remain large.

Meanwhile on Sunday the United Nations, in collaborat­ion with local health authoritie­s, extended by a day a campaign to vaccinate children in the southern Gaza Strip against polio before it moves on Monday to the north.

The campaign aims to vaccinate 640,000 children in Gaza after its first polio case in around

25 years. Limited pauses in the fighting have allowed the campaign to proceed.

U.N. officials said they were making progress, having reached more than half of the children

needing the drops in the first two stages in the southern and central Gaza Strip. A second round of vaccinatio­n will be required four weeks after the first.

 ?? ?? A Palestinia­n walks past the rubble of houses destroyed by Israeli strikes, amid Israel-Hamas conflict, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 4, 2024.
A Palestinia­n walks past the rubble of houses destroyed by Israeli strikes, amid Israel-Hamas conflict, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, September 4, 2024.

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