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Live updates: Follow the latest on Israel-Gaza
At least 72 people were killed and dozens more wounded by an Israeli air strike on a residential building hosting displaced families in the city of Beit Lahia in northern Gaza on Sunday, local authorities said. The attack took place just hours after separate Israeli air strikes killed 14 people in the nearby Bureij and Nuseirat refugee camps.
A five-storey building housing at least six families from elsewhere in the enclave collapsed following the strike in Beit Lahia, according to official Palestinian news agency Wafa, which described it as a “bloodbath”. Continuing Israeli attacks and the extent of the damage were preventing rescue teams from reaching the area, said Wafa, which reported that most of the dead were children.
There were conflicting reports on the death toll, with Gaza’s government media office saying 72 were dead, while Wafa reported at least 50 killed. Wafa said 70 people were believed to have been in the building at the time of the attack. The number of casualties was expected to rise, with reports of several people missing.
Images from the site showed civilians on top of an immense mound of rubble where the building once stood, combing through the flattened remains for victims. A lengthy Israeli military siege on northern Gaza has decimated efforts to rescue people caught up in Israeli bombings and left the area with no functioning ambulances, meaning the ability of paramedics and civil defence teams to carry out their work is limited.
More than 2,000 people have been killed and 6,000 wounded in the siege, now in its 44th day, Wafa reported on Sunday. Israel has stepped up its air strikes, deployed ground troops and tanks and prevented aid from entering the north in what it says is a bid to prevent the militant group Hamas from regrouping in the area.
The siege has left trapped civilians “waiting to die”, according to UN officials, and also prevented thousands of children from receiving a second dose of polio vaccinations. The entire northern population is at “imminent risk of death”, the heads of 14 UN agencies warned earlier this month, describing conditions in the area as apocalyptic.
On the other front in Israel’s war, the military launched multiple air strikes on southern areas of the Lebanese capital on Sunday morning, flattening several residential buildings. The Israeli army had issued eviction orders shortly beforehand, saying they were bombing Hezbollah interests. There were no immediate reports of fatalities. Some of the strikes were particularly strong and were felt across Beirut.
For nearly a week the city has been repeatedly attacked throughout the daytime, allowing residents no respite. Despite its senior leadership having been eliminated, Hezbollah continues to launch rockets deep into Israel, while its fighters are engaged in fierce ground battles with invading Israeli soldiers in south Lebanon.