60 Bodies Found in Al-Shja’iya After Israeli Pull Out

As Palestinians return to the heavily devastated neighborhood of Al-Shja’iya they discovered bodies of civilians in the streets and under the rubble of their homes, as Israeli occupation forces have systematically detonated thousands of buildings in the area.

Over 60 bodies have been discovered in Al-Shja’iya following the Israeli troop withdrawal from the area. They had been there for nearly two weeks.

“Dozens of bodies are still trapped under the rubble in the neighborhood,” Palestinian Civil Defence Agency spokesman Mahmoud Basal told a press conference.

He said Israeli forces destroyed more than 85% of the residential buildings in the neighborhood. “Shejaiya has become a disaster area that is not suitable for habitation,” he added.

The Israeli airstrikes and ground operations decimated more than 85% of residential buildings in Shujaiya, maakin the area uninhabitable and akin to a devastated wasteland.

A medical clinic that served over 60,000 citizens was also destroyed, exacerbating the humanitarian crisis, the Palestinian news agency, Wafa, reported

Palestinians started returning to their ruined homes in the  devastated Shuja’iyya following an Israeli invasion of the area, during which Israeli forces destroyed most of its buildings and all of its infrastructure, rendering it uninhabitable.

Despite their withdrawal from the Shuja’iyya, Wednesday, Israeli forces continued to bomb the area the following day. Shuja’iyya lies to the east of Gaza City.

The withdrawal of Israeli forces revealed a staggering level of destruction, reducing the neighborhood to rubble. Entire residential blocks have been leveled, streets obliterated, and critical infrastructure targeted throughout the area, Wafa reported.

Eyewitnesses from the neighborhood recounted harrowing tales of Israeli forces firing upon civilians as they attempted to evacuate, despite designated exit routes.

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Israel Attacks 453 UNRWA Schools in Gaza

UNRWA officials report that there has been a total of 453 attacks on its facilities in Gaza since 7 October, 2023. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency said its building throughout the Gaza Strip has been the subject of these attacks by Israeli warplanes and gunfire.

It added this, two thirds of the schools operated by the UN organization have been hit with 524 people sheltering in these facilities were killed.

This piece of news is currently trending on the social media under different hashtags such as @UNRWA, #Gaza, @UN, #CeasefireNow

Four schools in Gaza have been directly hit in the last four days with people continuing to flee from one place to another looking for safety but nowhere is safe in Gaza.

UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini confirms that since the beginning of this war two-thirds of UNRWA schools in Gaza were attacked, some were bombed out and many severely damaged.

“Some have gone from safe places of education and hope for children to ocercrowded shelters and often ending up a place of death and misery,” he wrote.

“Nine months under our watch, the relentless, endless killing, destruction and despair continue. Gaza is no place for children. The blatant disregard of international humanitarian law can’t become the new normal.”

Lazzarini ends by urging for a “ceasefire now before we lose what is left of our common humanity.”

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Gaza Scenes: Evacuation Under Israeli Guns

The United Nations says more than 300,000 Palestinians are estimated to be currently staying in the northern half of the war-torn Gaza Strip.

On Wednesday, Israel ordered all Gaza City residents to evacuate to the central Gaza region, where Israeli attacks continue.

Palestinians are documenting their diaries of the longest war they have ever witnessed. Here are some interesting quotes.

https://twitter.com/search?q=Quds%20News%20Network&src=typed_query

“We have been killed, bombed and starved. There are no crimes left that we haven’t been subjected to.” Palestinians in northern Gaza are refusing to abide by further Israeli military orders warning them to evacuate to the central region of the enclave.

Palestinians fleeing Gaza City report that Israeli snipers shot dead several civilians while they were leaving the city, refuting Israel’s claims that it was providing safe routes for Palestinians evacuating the city to the central region of the Gaza Strip.

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US Moves Ahead With 500-pound Bombs to Israel

The US has decided to move ahead with the shipment of 500-pound bombs to Israel, which was previously paused due to concerns over Israel’s potential ground invasion of the southern Gaza city of Rafah and massive killings of civilians, a report stated Wednesday.

The bombs “are in the process of being shipped” after a two-month pause and are expected to arrive in Israel in the “coming weeks,” The Wall Street Journal reported, citing an administration official and reported in Anadolu.

In May, the Biden administration paused a planned shipment to Israel of 2,000-pound and 500-pound bombs amid concerns about Israel’s plans for a possible ground assault on Rafah, where 1.5 million displaced Palestinians sought refuge on top of the city’s pre-war population of more than 200,000.

“Civilians have been killed in Gaza as a consequence of those bombs and other ways in which they go after population centers,” US President Joe Biden acknowledged in an interview with CNN, referring to 2,000-pound bombs, and described Israel’s bombing of Gaza as “indiscriminate.”

“Heavier 2,000-pound bombs that were meant to be part of the same shipment are still on hold,” the official told WSJ.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu criticized the Biden administration in June for “withholding weapons and ammunition to Israel” in recent months, adding that Secretary of State Antony Blinken assured him that restrictions would be lifted on arms transfers to Israel.

“We’ve been clear that our concern has been on the end-use of the 2,000-lb bombs, particularly for Israel’s Rafah campaign, which they have announced they are concluding,” a US official told Anadolu when asked about the shipment of 500-pound bombs.

“Because of how these shipments are put together, other munitions may sometimes be co-mingled. That’s what happened here with the 500-lb bombs, since our main concern had been and remains the potential use of 2,000-lb bombs in Rafah and elsewhere in Gaza,” the official said. “Our concern was not about the 500-lb bombs. Those are moving forward as part of the usual process.”

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said Wednesday that Tel Aviv is willing to open the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt, but without allowing Hamas to return to the area.

In early May, the Israeli army seized control of the Palestinian side of the Rafah crossing on the border with Egypt as part of a wide-scale military operation which resulted in civilian casualties and the suspension of humanitarian aid deliveries according to the Turkish news agency.

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Israel Economy Dives as 46,000 Firms Close

About 46,000 Israeli companies closed down since the war began on 7 October, 2023, with expectations the number will rise to 60,000 firms by the end of 2024 according to the Israeli Hebrew daily Maariv.

It stated 46,000 companies closed down since the beginning of the war on Gaza according to Coface Bdi, a credit risk business information agency for Israeli companies.

“This is a very high number that includes many sectors,” Yoel Amir, CEO of Coface Bdi, was quoted as saying.

He explained 77% of the companies that closed down since the war beginning – that’s about 35000 companies, are small firms and are the most vulnerable in the Israeli economy.

The sectors suffering most are  the building and construction industry, and other related industries such as ceramics, air conditioning, aluminum, and building materials.

Amir added other sectors were also severely affected such as the trade sector, which includes the fashion, shoe, furniture, and household appliances industry, and the service sector, cafes, entertainment and entertainment services, and transportation.

He said this includes the tourism sector which is today non-existent, the tourist areas that have become combat zones, and the agricultural sector, most of which is located in the combat zones in the south and north, and suffers from a shortage in workforce.

Statistics show the abysmal state of the Israeli economy with the building and construction sector down by 27%, services sector by about 19%, while the industrial and agricultural sector by about 17%, and the trade sector by about 12%.

The high-tech and advanced technologies industry was affected by about 11%, and the food and beverage industry was affected by about 6%, according to official statistics.

“The damage in combat zones is more serious, but the damage to businesses is across the country, with almost no sector spared,” Amir noted.

“The damage is very great in all aspects of  the Israeli economy,” the Coface Bdi CEO noted, explaining “in the end, when companies close their doors and do not have the ability to repay debts, there is also peripheral damage to customers, suppliers and companies that are part of Its working system.

He added, “…there has been a sharp decline in corporate activity in various sectors since the beginning of the war.”

Amir confirmed that in a recent opinion poll made by his company, about 56 percent of commercial company managers in Israel said there was a significant decline in the scope of their activities since the beginning of the war.

“We estimate that by the end of 2024, it is expected that about 60,000 companies will close in Israel. For comparison, in 2020, the year of the Corona crisis, about 74,000 companies were closed,” he said.

Today Israeli companies face “very difficult challenges represented by a labor shortage, declining sales, a high interest rate environment and high financing costs, transportation and logistics problems, a shortage of raw materials, and inaccessibility to agricultural lands in combat zones,” as well as “the lack of Availability of customers involved in combat, flow difficulties, and increases in acquisition costs,” he added.

The war left more than 126,000 Palestinian martyrs and wounded, most of them children and women, and more than 10,000 missing amid massive destruction and famine that claimed the lives of dozens of children.

Tel Aviv continues the war, ignoring the UN Security Council resolutions to stop it immediately, and the orders of the International Court of Justice to take measures to prevent acts of genocide and improve the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza.

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