Gaza: Family of 30 Retrieved From The Rubble

Civil defense teams retrieved the bodies of 30 victims from the same family on Tuesday from the rubble of their house in western Gaza City.

The victims were members of the Salem family, who were killed Dec. 19, 2023, in an Israeli airstrike on their house in the al-Rimal neighborhood in Gaza City, the Civil Defense said in a statement.

Sixty family members are believed to have been killed in the attack.

The house was the first site included in an organized campaign launched by the Civil Defense to search for thousands of Palestinians believed to be trapped under the rubble of destroyed buildings in the Gaza Strip according to Anadolu.

Search operations will continue using limited equipment, including an excavator, to recover the bodies from the rubble, said the agency.

Israel occupies more than half of Gaza and continues to target Palestinians in other areas outside its control, according to Palestinian authorities.

Israel has killed nearly 70,700 victims, mostly women and children, and injured more than 171,000 in Gaza since October 2023, and reduced the enclave to rubble.

  • CrossFireArabia

    CrossFireArabia

    Dr. Marwan Asmar holds a PhD from Leeds University and is a freelance writer specializing on the Middle East. He has worked as a journalist since the early 1990s in Jordan and the Gulf countries, and been widely published, including at Albawaba, Gulf News, Al Ghad, World Press Review and others.

    Related Posts

    Crisis in Yemen: I in 3 Women Die in Childbirth

    Yemen remains gripped by one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, with 22 million – out of a population of 35 million – requiring assistance. Women and girls account for half of those in need, and two-thirds of them are of childbearing age, placing reproductive health at the heart of the emergency.

    The UN agency supporting women and girls in the field (UNFPA) is working across the country to meet urgent reproductive needs. It warns that a combination of malnutrition, limited healthcare and rising protection risks is putting lives in jeopardy.

    ‘Malnutrition is on the rise’

    One of the most immediate concerns is food insecurity. “Unfortunately, malnutrition is on the rise,” says Francesco Galtieri, the agency’s senior official in Yemen. 

    The consequences are particularly severe for pregnant women – when they lack adequate nutrition during pregnancy, the risks to their babies’ development and health increase significantly.

    Healthcare access, especially in rural and remote areas, is another critical challenge. 

    The country has the highest maternal mortality rate in the Arab region, and three women die every day due to pregnancy complications or during childbirth. Around two-thirds of these deaths could be prevented if they had access to a midwife or doctor.

    Beyond health, protection from violence is a pressing concern. Conflict and economic hardship have heightened risks for women and girls, who often bear the brunt. 

    Funding cuts result in death

    Safe spaces supported by UNFPA offer women refuge and a path to recovery, providing psychosocial support, vocational training and economic empowerment initiatives designed to help survivors rebuild their lives. 

    The agency also provides legal assistance to those seeking justice through Yemen’s legal system.

    Despite these achievements, funding cuts are putting the programmes under severe strain. Mr. Galtieri told UN News that around 40 per cent of UNFPA’s humanitarian funding was cut last year, forcing the agency to suspend or halt support for roughly one third of its services.

    In a country with high maternal mortality, reduced services mean that a woman experiencing complications may be unable to access lifesaving care, often resulting in the death of both mother and child.

    Protection services have also been affected. This year, UNFPA-supported shelters have been unable to accept new survivors of gender-based violence, and the cuts can lead to lasting effects on children affected by malnutrition and trauma.

    A truck loaded with WHO-branded boxes unloads supplies at the Al-Thawra Hospital in Yemen, with a crowd of people gathered nearby.
    Photo: WHO/ Abdullah Al-Halabi The World Health Organization (WHO) has provided the Al-Thawra Hospital in Hudaydah, Yemen, with 30 medical beds, 5 infant radiant warmers and 1 trauma kit.

    Healthy debate?

    Mr Galtieri is currently in New York attending meetings of UNFPA’s Executive Board, where representatives from conflict-affected areas are engaging with Member States. 

    Discussions have highlighted renewed debate around sexual and reproductive health and rights, an issue he says has not been under such scrutiny in decades.

    “I always wonder why, when a society enters into a phase of tension and confrontation, women and girls become the focus of that political confrontation,” he says.

    Appealing directly to decision-makers, Mr. Galtieri urges greater investment in essential services such as midwifery, arguing that prioritising lifesaving care over other expenditures should not be controversial. 

    Funding decisions often favour other priorities, despite the clear human cost. In Yemen, he warns, that cost is measured in the lives of women and girls who might otherwise have survived. UN News

    Continue reading
    984 Palestinians Killed Since The Ceasefire

    A young man and a child were killed in two separate incidents, and another was seriously wounded, by Israeli occupation forces, Sunday morning in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip.

    Medical sources reported that Zaki Muhammad al-Qara, 30, was killed by Israeli fire near the Bani Suheila roundabout, east of Khan Younis.

    The same sources added that another young man was seriously wounded in an Israeli drone strike near the Austrian area, west of Khan Younis.

    Earlier that morning, a child was killed by Israeli fire in the Batn al-Samin area, south of Khan Younis.

    A medical source at Nasser Hospital said that the child, Amir al-Bashiti, 13, arrived with critical injuries and later died from his wounds.

    The Gaza Ministry of Health announced yesterday that the total number of Palestinians killed since the ceasefire on October 11 has reached 984, with approximately 3,122 wounded, and 783 bodies recovered.

    Continue reading

    You Missed

    Limited Iran Strike: Concept and International Dimensions

    Limited Iran Strike: Concept and International Dimensions

    Arabism From The Skies?

    Arabism From The Skies?

    Crisis in Yemen: I in 3 Women Die in Childbirth

    Crisis in Yemen: I in 3 Women Die in Childbirth

    984 Palestinians Killed Since The Ceasefire

    984 Palestinians Killed Since The Ceasefire

    US-Iran: Deal Today, Deal Tomorrow!

    US-Iran: Deal Today, Deal Tomorrow!

    Hassan Al Karmi: The Dictionary-Maker

    Hassan Al Karmi: The Dictionary-Maker