In a statement, the office called on mediators to intervene urgently to force Israel to end its “aggression.”
It added: “Israeli occupation forces have repeatedly committed a series of serious violations since the announcement of the end of the war in the Gaza Strip, with a total of 47 documented violations as of Saturday.”
The office said the violations, which killed 38 Palestinians, injured 143 others and arrested several civilians, included shelling, deliberate targeting and direct firing at civilians.
The statement called these violations “a clear violation of the cease-fire decision and the principles of international humanitarian law.”
The report further noted that the Israeli military committed these violations using military vehicles, tanks deployed on the outskirts of residential areas, electronic cranes equipped with remote sensors and targeting systems, and quadcopter drones that carried out live fire attacks on civilians.
The office stressed that its team has documented such violations in all governorates of the Gaza Strip and asserted that “occupation forces are not honoring the ceasefire and continue their policy of killing and terrorizing Palestinians.”
The statement held Israel fully responsible for these actions and called on the arbitrators and the United Nations to take urgent steps to force Israel to halt its ongoing aggression and protect civilians in the Gaza Strip.
The Gaza Health Ministry reports daily casualties from direct Israeli attacks, but the Israeli military claims the shelling is in response to “yellow line” violations.
The “Yellow Line” is a term introduced with the ceasefire agreement between Hamas and Israel, and refers to the area in the Gaza Strip from which Israeli forces have withdrawn and redeployed.
Since the ceasefire took effect, Israeli forces have withdrawn from most of Gaza City, except for parts of Shejaya, Al-Tufa and Zeitoun.
In Khan Yunis, troops have withdrawn from the central region and parts of the east, but Palestinians are still prohibited from entering the northern towns of Beit Hanoun and Beit Rahia, the city of Rafah and the Gaza Sea.
Under the cease-fire agreement, Hamas released 20 living Israeli hostages and handed over the remains of 11 more prisoners in exchange for about 2,000 Palestinian prisoners.
An agreement was reached between Israel and Hamas last week based on a plan presented by US President Donald Trump. The first phase involved the release of Israeli hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners. The plan also envisions rebuilding Gaza and establishing a new governing structure without Hamas.
Israel’s genocidal war has killed 68,116 people and injured 170,200 since October 2023, the Gaza Health Ministry said on Saturday.
RHM/
