Israel continues to attack Gaza after ceasefire deal

Update: 2025-10-30 18:47 GMT

CAIRO/GAZA: Israeli planes and tanks pounded areas in eastern Gaza on Thursday, Palestinian residents and witnesses said, a day after

Israel said it remained committed to a U.S.-backed ceasefire despite launching more lethal bombardments in the territory.

Witnesses said Israeli planes carried out 10 airstrikes in areas east of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, while tanks shelled areas east of Gaza City in the north. No injuries or deaths were reported.

The Israeli military said it carried out “precise” strikes against “terrorist infrastructure that posed a threat to the troops” in the areas, which Israel still occupies.

The strikes were the latest test of the fragile ceasefire that came into effect on October 10 in the conflict between Israel and Hamas.

“We’re scared that another war will break out, because we don’t want a war. We’ve suffered two years of displacement. We don’t know where to go or where to come,” said a displaced man, Fathi Al-Najjar, in Khan Younis in southern Gaza.

At the tent encampment where Najjar spoke, girls and boys were filling plastic bottles with water from metal containers placed on the side of the street, and women cooked food for their families using clay-made firewood ovens.

Under the ceasefire accord, Hamas released all living hostages in return for nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and wartime detainees, while Israel pulled back its troops and agreed to halt its offensive.

Hamas said on Thursday that Palestinian militants handed over two coffins containing the remains of dead hostages to the Red Cross in Gaza.

The militant group’s armed wing announced on Thursday that it would hand over two more bodies of hostages at 4 p.m. local time (1400 GMT).

The recovery and handover of bodies of hostages in Gaza has been one of the obstacles to U.S. President Donald Trump’s Gaza plan, with Israel claiming that Hamas has been delaying the handover, an accusation Hamas denies.

From Tuesday into Wednesday, Israel retaliated for the death of an Israeli soldier with bombardments that Gaza health authorities said killed 104 people.

Witnesses in Gaza said they did not see strikes on Thursday outside of the area Israel controls.

Israel says the soldier was killed in an attack by gunmen on territory within the so-called “yellow line” to which its troops withdrew under the ceasefire. Hamas has rejected the accusation.

The Israeli military issued a list of 26 militants it said it

had targeted during the bombardment earlier this week, including one it said was a Hamas commander who participated in the October 7, 2023 assault on Israel that ignited the war.

The Hamas-run Gaza government media office said Israel’s list was part of a “systematic campaign of misinformation” to cover up “crimes against civilians in Gaza”.

The Gaza health ministry said 46 children and 20 women were among the 104 people killed in the airstrikes.

Sources close to international efforts to sustain

the ceasefire said U.S. and regional mediators swiftly intervened to restore calm as Israel and Hamas traded

blame. People in the Gaza Strip, most of which had

been reduced to wasteland, feared the tenuous truce would fall apart, saying that the last two days, in which they were deprived of sleep, felt like a revival of the

two-year war.

Similar News

World Briefs