TEHRAN – Since the October 10 cease-fire agreement, Israeli occupation forces have killed around 100 Palestinians across the Gaza Strip.
Regime warships, fighter jets and tanks carried out fresh indiscriminate attacks against Palestinians across the enclave on Monday, shedding more civilian blood in violation of a ceasefire agreement with Hamas.
At least two Palestinians were killed by occupation forces’ fire east of Gaza City on Monday, bringing the total number of deaths since the massacre began to more than 68,000.
Doctors at Baptist Hospital said two men were shot dead with live ammunition in the Al-Tufa area.
At the same time, the Israeli Navy bombed areas off the coast of Gaza City, and ground forces stationed east of Gaza began shelling in several directions.
Occupation forces also shelled areas east of Deir el-Balah in central Gaza.
Gaza’s Ministry of Health said on Monday that 57 bodies had been taken to hospitals across the coastal enclave in the past 24 hours. Since October 2023, the Gaza massacre has left at least 68,216 people dead and 170,361 injured.
Al-Awda Hospital reported receiving 24 bodies and 74 injured Palestinians in the past 24 hours following Israeli airstrikes on refugee camps. Health officials also confirmed Sunday that dozens of Palestinians had been killed or injured in Israeli fires across the enclave.
Gaza’s government media office said the occupation regime had committed “a series of serious and repeated violations” since announcing the end of the war, and had recorded at least 80 ceasefire violations as of Sunday.
The Gaza government media office added that since the start of the ceasefire, regime forces have injured more than 230 Palestinians in further violations of the ceasefire agreement.
The agency said these were blatant violations of the ceasefire agreement, which remains extremely weak and on the verge of collapse.
Two Israeli soldiers were killed on Sunday by an unexploded bomb hit by an Israeli bulldozer in the southern city of Rafah, US media reported, citing White House officials. The regime is accused of using the incident as a pretext to shift responsibility to Hamas and resume its genocidal war against the enclave. Hamas said it had no knowledge of the incident.
Meanwhile, the Rafah border with Egypt, which is under Israeli regime control, remains closed due to another ceasefire violation.
The director of Al Shifa Hospital warned that so far no medical supplies have entered the Gaza Strip.
“At this point, we cannot speak of any breakthroughs in the health system. Tens of thousands of patients have been waiting for surgery for two years. Most areas in the Gaza Strip are suffering from hunger, which is further exacerbating the fragile health status of the population,” explained Dr. Mohammed Abu Salmiya.
