Israel steps up bombardment of Gaza City, kills 16 people around enclave, medics say

Palestinians gather near a cemetery as smoke rises following an explosion during an Israeli operation in Gaza City, August 28, 2025. REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas

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Israeli forces killed at least 16 Palestinians across Gaza
on Thursday and wounded dozens in the south of the enclave, local medics said,
as residents reported that Gaza City suburbs were under intensifying
bombardment.
The Israeli military is preparing to seize Gaza City, the territory's largest urban centre, despite international calls on Israel to desist over fears that a ground offensive would cause significant casualties and displace the roughly one million Palestinians sheltering there.
In Gaza City, residents said families were fleeing their
homes, with most heading towards the coast, as Israeli forces shelled the
eastern suburbs of Shejaia, Zeitoun, and Sabra. Thursday's deaths took to 71
the number of Palestinians killed by Israeli fire in the past 24 hours, Gaza's
health ministry said.
Israeli officials describe Gaza City as the last urban
stronghold of Hamas, which ignited the war with
its deadly October 2023 attack on Israel. The Islamist militant group has since
been decimated by Israel's air and ground war in Gaza.
The Israeli military said in a statement that it was
continuing to operate throughout the enclave, targeting what it described as
"terrorist organizations" and infrastructure.
The military had killed three militants in the past day, it
said, without saying how they had identified the individuals.
A spokesperson for the International Committee of the Red
Cross said 31 patients, most with gunshot wounds, were admitted to the Red
Cross Field Hospital in the southern Gaza city of Rafah. Four of them were
declared dead on arrival.
"Patients said they were injured while trying to reach
food distribution sites," the spokesperson said, adding that since the aid
hubs began operations on May 27, the hospital had treated over 5,000
"weapon-wounded patients".
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told
reporters Israel's expanded military operation in Gaza City would have
"devastating consequences".
Guterres also said U.N.-led humanitarian efforts in the
devastated Palestinian enclave were being blocked or delayed and people were
dying of hunger as a "result of deliberate decisions that defy basic
humanity".
"Starvation of the civilian population must never be
used as a method of warfare. Civilians must be protected. Humanitarian access
must be unimpeded," he said. "No more excuses. No more obstacles. No
more lies."
Israel has denied trying to starve Gaza, accusing Hamas of
stealing aid shipments and blaming foreign aid groups for failures in
delivering supplies where most needed. Both blame Israeli restrictions on aid
access for spreading starvation.
With the enclave in the grips of a humanitarian
crisis, the Gaza health ministry said on Thursday that four more people,
including two children, had died of malnutrition and starvation in the enclave,
raising the number of deaths from such causes to 317 people, including 121
children, since the war started.
Israel disputes the health ministry's fatality figures and
on Wednesday asked a global hunger monitor to retract an
assessment that found that Gaza City and surrounding areas are suffering
from famine.
Dozens of Palestinians were admitted to Nasser Hospital in
nearby Khan Younis with gunshot wounds, according to a doctor there who said
soldiers had fired on a crowd of Palestinians that had gathered near an aid
distribution hub.
Mohammad Saqer, the head of nursing, told Reuters most of
the patients had been admitted with gunshot wounds to the upper parts of the
body and that many were in critical condition.
The patients had reported they were shot as they sought to
collect food from a distribution site in Rafah, he said.
The war broke out when Hamas-led militants launched a
surprise, cross-border attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, killing around
1,200 people and taking another 251 hostage. Most of the hostages have since
been released through diplomatic negotiations, though 50 remain, of whom 20 are
said to be alive.
Israel has not responded publicly to Hamas' acceptance of a
proposal for a ceasefire that would allow for the return of some of the
hostages. Israeli officials have, however, insisted that they would only accept
a deal that sees all of the hostages released and the surrender of Hamas.
More than 62,000 Palestinians, most of them women and
children, have been killed by the Israeli military, according to local health
officials, who have not said how many combatants have been killed in the
fighting.
Israel's military campaign, which it says is directed toward
Gaza's rulers, Hamas, has widely demolished the territory and displaced most of
the roughly two million Palestinians there.
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