How israel kill the babies in gaza
Seven members of the same family, including three children, died there overnight, residents said. Following weeks of intense violence in Jerusalem, Hamas, the Islamist group that holds power inside Gaza, fired a barrage of rockets towards Jerusalem on Monday evening. Since then, it has launched hundreds more at Israeli towns nearby, and Israel has conducted dozens of airstrikes, including hits on residential buildings.
In the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon, an empty school was bombed. Local media reported four members of the same family, including an 8-year-old and an year-old, were wounded by shrapnel. Holon, just south of Tel Aviv, was also hit, set alight a bus and several cars, and injuring at least three people. The Government of Israel and all parties must allow aid workers to reach children with life-saving support, as well as the unimpeded entry of essential supplies and fuel.
Members of the UN Security Council and the rest of the international community should work with all parties to facilitate an immediate ceasefire. It is critical to seek a just solution that addresses the underlying causes of this violence, that upholds equal rights for both Palestinian and Israeli children, and that will end the decades-long occupation as the only sustainable resolution to the conflict.
This will ensure that all children in the region can live in peace. For the third successive day, about , people from Gaza city and Khan Younis have limited access to piped water, due to increasing power cuts and damaged networks. Up to 10, people have been displaced, the majority are children.
Children are bearing the brunt of this escalation. All sides need to step back and end the violence. All sides have an obligation to protect civilians — especially children — and facilitate humanitarian access. The underlying triggers for this violence will not be resolved through further violence. May their memories be a blessing. Nadine Awad, a year-old Arab-Israeli schoolgirl, was with her year-old father in the early hours of last Wednesday, when a rocket struck their car and home, killing them both.
Her mother, who was also in the car, was seriously injured, medics said. Nadine's cousin, Ahmad Ismail, says he heard the sound of a rocket hitting from inside the family home, in the city of Lod, close to Tel Aviv, where Arab and Jewish Israelis live together.
Nadine was a "very special girl" in her first year of high school, who dreamed of becoming a doctor, those who knew her said. Her school principal said she "had dreams of changing the world".
Nadine had been involved in a number of science-related and social projects with Jewish schools in the area, and she had planned to participate in a biomedical studies programme, Ms Hafi said. On Friday, Muhammad al-Hadidi's four children - Suhayb, 13, Yahya, 11, Abderrahman, eight, and Osama, six - put on their finest clothes and went to visit their cousins nearby, in the Shati refugee camp outside Gaza City, to celebrate Eid, which marks the end of Ramadan. The next day, the building where they had been staying was hit.
Only their five-month-old baby brother, Omar, survived, after being dragged from the rubble where he lay next to his dead mother. We're civilians. Amid the wreckage were children's toys, a Monopoly board game and, sitting on the kitchen counter, unfinished plates of food from the holiday gathering. But they are gone now. I have only their memory, and the scent of them in my home," Mr Hadidi told The Times newspaper in London.
Ibrahim al-Masry was playing with his siblings in the front yard of their home in a northern neighbourhood of Gaza last week, when a strike hit, according to reports. Ibrahim and his brother Marwan, and several other relatives, were instantly killed. Everyone was running in the street, children were bleeding, mothers were crying, blood was everywhere. Their brother, also called Ibrahim, said they had been filling sacks of straw to sell at a local market.
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