CAIRO: The Zionist entity’s military launched one of the biggest waves of strikes in Gaza for weeks on Tuesday, residents said, and health officials issued a new warning that healthcare faced total collapse from the Zionist entity’s blockade of all supplies. Gaza’s health ministry said a UN-backed polio vaccination campaign meant to target over 600,000 children had been suspended, putting the enclave at risk of the revival of a crippling disease that once had been all-but eradicated. In diplomacy to end the conflict, a Hamas delegation was expected to arrive in Cairo for talks. Two sources familiar with the mediation effort said the delegation would discuss a new offer which would include a truce for five to seven years following the release of all hostages and an end to fighting.
The sources said the Zionist entity, which rejected a recent Hamas offer to release all hostages for an end of the war, had yet to respond to a revamped long-term truce proposal. The entity demands Hamas be disarmed, which the group rejects. A Hamas source later denied knowledge of an imminent visit, telling Reuters the group stood by its demand any agreement must end the war.
Bulldozers destroyed
On Tuesday, Gaza’s civil defense agency said Zionist entity’s air strikes killed at least 26 people across the territory. Nine people died when a house was struck in Khan Yunis, in southern Gaza, civil defense official Mohammad Mughayyir told AFP, adding that others were trapped. “We found people torn apart,” said Ahmad Shourab who witnessed the strike. “They were all women and children. What do they want from us?” Gaza residents said the Zionist entity’s forces bombed several areas across the enclave from tanks, planes, and naval boats.
The attacks hit houses, tent encampments and roads, they added. The airstrikes destroyed bulldozers and vehicles being used to lift rubble and help recover bodies trapped under the ruins, officials and residents said. Hamas said the vehicles that were destroyed included nine that had been received from Egypt, adding that the move aimed to “deepen the suffering of our people in Gaza.”
The Zionist military said they hit 40 “engineering vehicles” that were used for “terrorist actions”. The vehicles were “considered a key component in Hamas’ ability to carry out terrorist operations against the Defense Forces and the (the Zionist entity),” said the military.
The entity has imposed a total blockade on all supplies to Gaza since the start of March and relaunched its military offensive on March 18 after the collapse of a ceasefire. Since then, Zionist strikes have killed more than 1,600 Palestinians according to the Gaza health authorities, and hundreds of thousands have been forced from their homes as the entity seized what it calls a buffer zone of Gaza land. Over 51,000 Palestinians have been killed by the Zionist offensive.
The entity’s 18-month rampage has rendered nearly all buildings in the Gaza Strip uninhabitable, and Gaza’s 2.3 million people now mostly live in the open under makeshift tents. Since the total blockade was imposed last month, all 25 UN-supplied bakeries making bread have been shut. Aid agencies say they fear the population is on the precipice of starvation and mass disease. If polio vaccines don’t arrive immediately, “we anticipate a real catastrophe. Children and patients must not be used as cards of political blackmail,” said Gaza health ministry spokesperson Khalil Deqran. He said 60,000 children were now showing symptoms of malnutrition.
The entity says its blockade is aimed at pressuring the Hamas militants to release 59 remaining hostages. Hamas says it is prepared to free them but only as part of a deal that ends the war. “(The Zionist entity) is acting in full accordance with international law,” Defence Minister Israel Katz wrote on X, in response to US Senator Bernie Sanders, who called the blockade a war crime. “The humanitarian condition in Gaza is constantly monitored and large quantities of aid were delivered. Whenever it becomes necessary to allow additional aid, it must be ensured that it does not pass through Hamas, which exploits humanitarian aid to maintain control over the civilian population and to profit at their expense,” Katz wrote.
Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the United Nations Palestinian relief agency UNRWA, described the blockade as collective punishment of Gaza’s people. “The siege must be lifted, supplies must flow in, the hostages must be released, the ceasefire must resume,” Lazzarini said on Tuesday in a post on X. — Agencies