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GAZA: A man sits amid the destruction following Zionist strikes on Al-Shati camp on Oct 28, 2023. – AFP
GAZA: A man sits amid the destruction following Zionist strikes on Al-Shati camp on Oct 28, 2023. – AFP

‘Worse than earthquake’:Zionist strikes hammer Gaza

Ground shakes as Zionist navy, planes spare no one: Eye witnesses

GAZA: After Zionist air strikes and artillery fire rained down for hours overnight, much of the Gaza Strip has become an indistinguishable wasteland of rubble, with residents likening the devastation to that of a natural disaster. The intense bombardments “changed the landscape”, Mahmud Bassal, a spokesman for the Gaza Civil Defence told AFP of the damage. “Hundreds of buildings and houses were completely destroyed and thousands of other homes were damaged,” he added.

The destruction followed an announcement from the Zionist occupation forces that it had expanded operations in Gaza, following three weeks of intense bombardments. Zionist airstrikes have killed more than 7,700 people, including some 3,500 children, according to the Gaza’s health ministry. They came after the Oct 7 Hamas attack, in which 1,400 people were killed in occupied areas near the Gaza-Zionist heavily fortified border. Hamas has also taken some 229 people to the Gaza Strip as captives, according to the Zionist occupation forces.

Just hours before the Zionist occupation intensified its bombardment on Friday night, army spokesman Daniel Hagari accused Hamas fighters of waging war on Zionists from Gaza’s hospitals and using civilians as “human shields”. Hamas rejected the allegations. Hamas’ political official Ezzat El-Reshiq on Friday denied accusations that the group was using the al-Shifa hospital as a shield for its underground military infrastructure, and said the claims have “no basis in truth”.

In Shati refugee camp on the outskirts of Gaza City, widespread damage was visible. “What happened in Shati is worse than an earthquake,” camp resident Alaa Mahdi, 51, told AFP. “There was bombing from everywhere, the navy, artillery and the planes,” he continued. “Who are they striking, the resistance? No, the poor people.”

Mahdi said the internet and communications blackout in the Gaza Strip since Friday evening had been imposed so that the Zionist occupation “would commit a massacre without anyone hearing about it”. The blackout triggered condemnation from a range of rights groups. “This information blackout risks providing cover for mass atrocities and contributing to impunity for human rights violations,” said Human Rights Watch in a statement.

‘Is anybody there?’

“Last night, the ground in Gaza shook,” Zionist Defense Minister Yoav Gallant declared on Saturday. “We attacked above the ground and below the ground. We attacked terror operatives of all ranks in every location.” Amid the onslaught, taxi driver Jamal Abu Shaqfa, 50, left the Shati camp with his family in a bid to flee south. “We are heading towards Khan Yunis because the indiscriminate bombings in Shati have spared no women, children or old people,” he said. “The situation is very bad.”

Amid a humanitarian situation described by world organizations as “catastrophic”, a food rations distribution center run by the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) was looted. Dozens of Palestinians were seen coming out of the premises in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza, one carrying a sack of flour on his shoulder, another bottles of oil under his arm. “If we weren’t in need, we wouldn’t have gone in. The whole world is against us,” said one as he left the center.

In a street in the camp, dozens of residents picked through the debris of a residential tower that along with several houses nearby was razed by the bombing. “Is anybody there? We are here to save you,” shouted Abdelmajid Abu Hassira, as he waded through the wreckage searching for survivors.

Kamal Abou Fattoum, 47, who fled south from Gaza City last week, returned on Saturday morning to find his house reduced to debris. “I saw destruction worse than that caused by the earthquake in Turkey,” he said, referring to the devastating natural disaster in February that killed more than 50,000 people in southeastern Turkey. “People are under the rubble. Some are dead, others are still alive,” he added. — AFP

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