Israeli drone attack kills another Palestinian journalist in Gaza
An Israeli drone attack has killed another journalist in Gaza, Wafa news agency reports. Local sources told the agency that Mohammed Saleh al-Sharif was wounded by a drone in Jabalia refugee camp. He was left “bleeding for more than two hours before succumbing to his injuries”, the report added.
Israeli forces have been preventing civil defence and emergency medical teams from operating in northern Gaza for more than 25 days.
According to the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate, 174 journalists have been killed in Gaza since the start of Israel’s war on the Strip on October 7, 2023.
What it means to be hungry in Gaza
https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2024/11/16/stripped-of-our-human-dignity-what-it-means-to-be-hungry-in-gaza
What does it mean to be hungry for months?
In Gaza, where more than 43,000 of us have been killed by Israel’s bombardment and ground invasions – and many more thousands are lost, feared dead, under the rubble – we have been punished with hunger now for more than a year.
In war, survival becomes the only focus, and hunger is a constant reminder of that. We have been forced to be hungry – we did not choose this. We’re struggling to survive under Israeli bombardment, but we’re failing.
A three-year-old child who suffers from diabetes, a weakened immune system and malnutrition, rests at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital on June 1
House in central Gaza bombed by Israeli forces
Our colleagues at Al Jazeera Arabic are reporting that Israeli forces have bombed a house in the Bureij refugee camp, resulting in several injuries.
Israeli attacks across Gaza have killed at least 43 Palestinians since dawn.
Israeli settlers target Palestinian village in occupied West Bank
Israeli settlers have carried out another attack on Palestinians in the occupied West Bank.
This time, the attack targeted the village of Beit Furik, outside of Nablus where houses, cars and land were burned to the ground after dozens of masked settlers invaded the village.
“They did not leave anything, the electricity pole, and all our belongings, the sofas, the water tank, they did not leave a thing,” Mahmoud Hananeh, a resident of the village, said.
“There were around 40 to 50 settlers, at that time the army’s presence was clear, the army came when we started resisting them and it was clear the army were by the settlers’ side, protecting them, shooting towards us, and harassing us,” Wael Hananeh, another resident, said.