‘Shocked, devastated’: Israel’s Gaza assault kills relatives of al-Shifa hospital director

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The director of al-Shifa hospital was on duty Saturday marshalling the facility’s response to Israel’s assault on Gaza City when two victims killed in a strike were delivered to the ward: His brother and his sister-in-law.

“I was shocked and devastated to see the bodies of my brother and his wife,” said Mohammed Abu Salmiya, who was working in the emergency department of the territory’s main hospital at the time.

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“Anything is possible now, as you receive your dearest ones as martyrs or wounded,” he told AFP. “The occupation’s crimes continue, and the number of martyrs keeps rising.”

The Gaza civil defense agency said at least 87 people were killed by Israeli strikes on Saturday, 70 of them in Gaza City.

The agency said 11 were killed when warplanes struck the Dughmush family in the city’s Al-Sabra neighborhood.

Al-Shifa hospital confirmed it had received 34 bodies from Gaza City, while the Baptist hospital said it had received 28.

The Israeli military claimed on Sunday that Abu Salmiya’s brother was a Hamas sniper.

The military said it had killed Majed Abu Salmiya, describing him as a Hamas sharpshooter. “The IDF (Israeli military) struck and eliminated Majed Abu Salmiya, a terrorist in Hamas’ military wing,” it said in a statement.

“As part of his role, Abu Salmiya operated as a sniper for Hamas and was preparing to carry out an imminent terror attack against IDF troops in the Gaza City area.”

Abu Salmiya, however, rejected the military’s accusation as “a lie, slander and an unacceptable justification for targeting civilians with direct missile strikes.”

“My brother is a 57-year-old man who suffers from several illnesses such as high blood pressure and diabetes, and he has severe vision impairment -- and they claim he was a sniper? This is pure fabrication,” he told AFP, noting his brother’s family had been displaced several times since the outbreak of the Gaza war in October 2023.

As Israel presses its new offensive to capture the territory’s largest urban center -- despite widespread fears for the safety of both its residents and the hostages being held by militants -- Abu Salmiya was not the only one dealing with loss.

An AFP journalist saw ambulances pull into the hospital compound early Saturday, bringing more bodies of people killed in Israel’s bombardment.

Medics unloaded four bodies wrapped in white shrouds and laid them beneath a tree, as another ambulance arrived with casualties, who included a boy.

‘Death is more merciful’


Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have fled the city since Israel launched its offensive, but many remain trapped, too exhausted or too poor to leave.

“Death is more merciful,” said 38-year-old Mohammed Nassar of Gaza City’s Tal al-Hawa area, watching a steady stream of neighbors leave.

Families could be seen leaving with their belongings piled on trucks, cars, donkey carts and their own shoulders.

Nassar, tired and caring for three daughters, said he lacked both the strength and the money to evacuate, leaving him trapped in Gaza City.

“As for me, my wife and my three daughters, we will wait until the last moment,” he said.

“The occupation wants to forcibly displace everyone so it can destroy Gaza City and turn it into another Beit Hanoun or Rafah -- unlivable for the next 100 years,” Nassar said, referring to other parts of Gaza left in ruins by nearly two years of war.

Israel has pummeled Gaza City with air strikes and tank fire in its bid to seize what it describes as one of Hamas’s last strongholds.

Foreign governments have urged it to abandon its plans for the sake of civilian residents of the city, where the United Nations has already declared a famine.

‘We’ll stay’


The military launched its ground assault on Tuesday and has told residents to head south, but many Palestinians say the journey is prohibitively expensive and they do not know where to go.

Many who fled say it took them more than 12 hours to reach the southern areas designated by the military.

Evacuation costs have also soared, according to those who left, with truck owners charging as much as $1,500 to $2,000 for the roughly 30-kilometer (20-mile) journey.

The civil defense agency said Friday that 450,000 Palestinians had fled Gaza City.

The military, which has warned Gazans it will use “unprecedented force” in the city, put the number at approximately 480,000.

The United Nations estimated at the end of August that about one million people were living in Gaza City and its surroundings.

The military has urged Palestinians to relocate to a “humanitarian area” in Al-Mawasi on the coast, where it says aid, medical care and humanitarian infrastructure will be provided.

Israel first declared the area a safe zone early in the war, but has carried out repeated strikes on it since, saying it is targeting Hamas.

Raeda al-Amareen said she was awakened before dawn by the sound of explosions.

“We want to evacuate but we have no money,” she told AFP.

“We don’t even have 10 shekels to buy bread. What are we supposed to do? We’ll stay -- either we die or someone finds a solution for us.”

With AFP

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