At least 17 people including several children have been killed in Israeli bombing of a school turned shelter in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip, medics in the territory have said.
The strike, the latest bombing of a school sheltering displaced people across Gaza, came as the Qatari television network Al Jazeera accused Israel of turning its journalists reporting from north Gaza into targets after the Israeli military claims a day earlier that six reporters were members of Hamas or Palestinian Islamic Jihad.
Rescue efforts are still under way at the camp, said Mahmoud Bassal, a spokesperson for Gaza’s civil defence agency. The Israeli military said the school was being used as a Hamas command and control centre. The Nuseirat attack comes as Israel continues a new offensive on northern Gaza, which Bassal said has killed 770 people since it began on 6 October.
The civil defence agency said on Thursday it has been forced to suspend operations in northern Gaza after what it called threats from the Israeli military to “bomb and kill” rescue crews working in Jabalia camp, the focus of the new Israeli offensive. Three workers have been wounded and another five arrested by the Israeli army, and the crews’ only working fire engine was destroyed by tank fire, he said.
A medic was killed by Israeli fire and another detained on his way to work, according to the Indonesian hospital, one of three struggling medical facilities still operating in the area, on Thursday.
Israel says the operation is necessary to prevent Hamas from regrouping and denies allegations that it intends to expel the remaining 400,000 people still living in the northern third of Gaza. Israel has split the territory in two by building the Netzarim Corridor, which bisects the strip just south of Gaza City.
On Wednesday the Israeli military published documents which it said it had found in Gaza that proved that six Al Jazeera journalists had a military affiliation to Hamas or Palestinian Islamic Jihad; the papers could not be immediately independently verified.
In a statement on Thursday, Al Jazeera said the Israel accusations were “criminal, draconian and irresponsible” and “part of a wider pattern of hostility”. Several of the network’s journalists have been killed by Israeli fire in the Gaza war, deaths the Israeli military denies were deliberate.
Israel outlawed Al Jazeera earlier this year for what it termed “security reasons”, and raided its offices in the occupied West Bank.
The Committee to Protect Journalists’ Middle East programme said on X that the allegations amounted to the smearing of Palestinian journalists “with unsubstantiated terrorist labels”.
Indirect talks aimed at a ceasefire and hostage release deal in the war in Gaza, mediated by the US, Qatar and Egypt, have been deadlocked since the assassination in July ofIsmail Haniyeh, the leader of Hamas and its main negotiator. The attack in the Iranian capital of Tehran is believed to have been carried out by Israel, although the country has not claimed responsibility.
The international community has pushed for a return to negotiations following Israel’s killing this month of the architect of the 7 October attacks, Yahya Sinwar. Sinwar, who had the final word on Hamas’s position in talks, had repeatedly blocked progress towards a deal.
The US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said after meetings in Doha with the Qatari leadership on Thursday that Israeli and US negotiators are expected to reconvene in “the coming days”.
Blinken has made more than a dozen trips to the Middle East over the past year in an effort to end the war in Gaza and calm regional tensions with Iran and its allies but has come away empty-handed almost every time.
Hamas, which has yet to name Sinwar’s successor, said on Thursday that delegations from the group were visiting Turkey, Qatar and Russia and were in contact with officials from the UN, Egypt and Iran.
Separately on Thursday, France hosted an international aid conference for Lebanon, but diplomatic efforts to end the new ground war between Israel and the powerful Lebanese group Hezbollah are yet to bear fruit.