AhlulBayt News Agency: Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, the director of Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip, revealed that about 200 Palestinian martyrs are still under the rubble of homes destroyed by Israeli occupation army in the northern Gaza Strip during the past 48 hours.
Abu Safiya said in a recorded video on Sunday evening, “the humanitarian scene in the northern Gaza Strip is approaching an absolute catastrophe due to the ongoing Israeli aggression, as more than 200 Palestinians were martyred in the past 48 hours, and their bodies are still under the rubble.”
“The Israeli occupation army committed massacres against the families of Al-Araj, Albaba, Elian and Warsh Agha, but we received in the hospital only three injuries among those who survived,” Abu Safiya added.
“What breaks our hearts is hearing the voices of the living calling for help from under the rubble, and when the citizens tried to rescue them, they were targeted again by Israeli warplanes, which makes reaching those areas almost impossible,” he said.
Abu Safiya pointed out that targeting the Al-Araj family home was tragic, as there were about 100 people inside the house, noting that only one person survived, an employee at the laundry of Kamal Adwan Hospital, who happened to be at work during the raid.
Abu Safiya explained that the hospital is currently facing major challenges, most notably banning the entry of medical equipment, medicines, and necessary supplies, in addition to blocking the entry of ambulances which arrive with difficulty.
He pointed out that there are 63 hospitalized cases, most of them of the wounded, including nine cases in the intensive care unit, and two newborns.
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Abu Safiya said in a recorded video on Sunday evening, “the humanitarian scene in the northern Gaza Strip is approaching an absolute catastrophe due to the ongoing Israeli aggression, as more than 200 Palestinians were martyred in the past 48 hours, and their bodies are still under the rubble.”
“The Israeli occupation army committed massacres against the families of Al-Araj, Albaba, Elian and Warsh Agha, but we received in the hospital only three injuries among those who survived,” Abu Safiya added.
“What breaks our hearts is hearing the voices of the living calling for help from under the rubble, and when the citizens tried to rescue them, they were targeted again by Israeli warplanes, which makes reaching those areas almost impossible,” he said.
Abu Safiya pointed out that targeting the Al-Araj family home was tragic, as there were about 100 people inside the house, noting that only one person survived, an employee at the laundry of Kamal Adwan Hospital, who happened to be at work during the raid.
Abu Safiya explained that the hospital is currently facing major challenges, most notably banning the entry of medical equipment, medicines, and necessary supplies, in addition to blocking the entry of ambulances which arrive with difficulty.
He pointed out that there are 63 hospitalized cases, most of them of the wounded, including nine cases in the intensive care unit, and two newborns.
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