Israel hits another Gaza target after deadliest night since truce
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Palestinians in the remains of a destroyed building following an Israeli airstrike at the Al-Shati refugee camp in Gaza City, northern Gaza, on Oct 29.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
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GAZA - Israel said it struck an arms dump in Gaza on Oct 29, hours after the deadliest night of bombing
The military announced it had carried out a precision strike on a site in the Beit Lahia area of northern Gaza where it said weapons were being stockpiled for “an imminent terror attack”.
Israeli troops, it said, would remain deployed in “accordance with the ceasefire agreement and will continue to operate to remove any immediate threat”.
Gaza City’s Al-Shifa Hospital said two Palestinians were killed in the latest strike. The Hamas-run territory’s civil defence agency reported that 104 people – including 46 children and 24 women – died in the previous night’s bombardment.
The Israeli military launched a wave of bombing after one of its soldiers was killed in Gaza on Oct 28. By mid-morning on Oct 29 it said it had begun “renewed enforcement of the ceasefire”.
Both US President Donald Trump and regional mediator Qatar said they expected the ceasefire to hold, but inside Gaza displaced families were losing hope.
“We had just started to breathe again, trying to rebuild our lives, when the bombardment came back,” said 31-year-old Khadija al-Husni, a displaced mother living with her children under canvas at a school in Al-Shati refugee camp.
“It’s a crime. Either there is a truce or a war – it can’t be both. The children couldn’t sleep; they thought the war was over.”
‘We’re exhausted’
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres strongly condemned “the killings due to Israeli airstrikes of civilians in Gaza on Oct 29, including many children,” his spokesman Stephane Dujarric said on Oct 29.
UN rights chief Volker Turk said the report of so many dead was appalling and urged all sides not to let peace “slip from our grasp”, echoing calls from Britain, Germany and the European Union for the parties to recommit to the ceasefire.
In the central city of Deir el-Balah, 40-year-old Jalal Abbas was close to despair and accused the Israelis of using false pretexts to resume their campaign.
“The problem is that Trump gives them cover to kill civilians because they mislead him with false information,” he told AFP.
“We want an end to the war and the escalation. We’re exhausted and on the verge of collapse.”
The Israeli military said that its strikes had targeted 30 senior militants, with Defence Minister Israel Katz maintaining “dozens of Hamas commanders were neutralised”.
Israel said it launched the wave of strikes after reservist Master Sergeant Yona Efraim Feldbaum, 37, was killed in Rafah when his engineering vehicle was hit by enemy fire.
Hostage handover delayed
Hamas said its fighters had “no connection to the shooting incident in Rafah” and reaffirmed its commitment to the US-backed ceasefire.
Mourners attend the funeral of Israeli soldier Master Sergeant Yona Efraim Feldbaum at Mount Herzl Military Cemetery, in Jerusalem, on Oct 29.
PHOTO: REUTERS
It also delayed handing over what it said was the remains of a deceased hostage, and that any “escalation will hinder the search, excavation and recovery of the bodies”.
Militants took 251 people hostage during Hamas’s Oct 7, 2023 attack on Israel that triggered the war.
Under the ceasefire deal which came into effect on Oct 10, Hamas returned the 20 surviving captives still in its custody and began the process of returning 28 bodies.
But a row over the slow return of these last remains has threatened to derail the ceasefire plan – agreed between Israel and Hamas and backed by Mr Trump’s US administration and regional mediators Egypt, Turkey and Qatar.
Israel accuses Hamas of reneging on the deal by not returning them fast enough, but the Palestinian group says it will take time to locate remains buried in Gaza’s ruins.
‘Fake recovery’
Hamas came under mounting pressure after it returned the partial remains of a previously recovered captive, which Israel said was a breach of the truce.
Hamas had said the remains were the 16th of 28 bodies it had agreed to return.
But forensic examination determined Hamas had returned remains of a hostage whose body had already been brought back to Israel two years ago, according to Mr Netanyahu’s office.
Israeli government spokeswoman Shosh Bedrosian accused Hamas of staging the discovery of the remains.
“Hamas dug a hole in the ground yesterday, placed the partial remains... inside of it, covered it back up with dirt, and handed it over to the Red Cross,” she told journalists.
The International Committee of the Red Cross, responding to an Israeli military video that appears to show this deception, said it was “unacceptable that a fake recovery was staged”.
Hamas’s October 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,221 people on the Israeli side, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
Israel’s subsequent assault on Gaza has killed at least 68,643 people, according to figures from the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry, which the UN considers reliable. AFP

