Israeli strikes across Gaza killed at least 59 people, including women and children, said that hospital officials said ISRAEL were preparing to speed up their campaign against Hamas activists.
The strikes included an attack on Tuesday evening on a school housing hundreds of displaced Palestinians, who killed 27 people, said officials of the Al-Aqsa hospital, including nine women and three children.
It was the fifth time since the start of the war that the school in the Gaza center was struck.
A strike early in the morning on another school became a refuge in Gaza City killed 16 people, according to officials from the Al-Ahli hospital, while strikes on targets in other regions killed at least 16 others.
A large smoke chronicle rosé and fires pierced the sky over the school refuge in Bureij, an urban refugee camp built. Paramedical paramedics and rescuers rushed to remove people from the fire.
The Israeli army (FDI) has made no immediate comments on the strikes.
Israel criticizes Hamas for the number of deaths because it operates from civil infrastructure, including schools.
New blood effusions occur a few days after Israel has approved a plan to intensify military operations in the Palestinian enclave, which would include the seizure of Gaza, the conservation of the captured territories, the displacement of Force Palestinians in the south of Gaza and the takeover of the aid distribution as well as the private security companies.
Israel also calls tens of thousands of reserve soldiers to make the plan.
Israel says that the plan will be progressive and will only be implemented after US President Donald Trump ends his visit to the region later this month.
Any climbing of the fighting would probably lead to the number of deaths in the devastating war which now enters its 20th month.
And with Israel already controlling some 50% of Gaza, increasing its grip on the territory, for an indefinite period, could open the potential of a military occupation, which would raise questions on the way in which Israel plans to make the territory reign, in particular at a time when he reflects on how to implement Trump's vision to take the territory.
Trump surprises the Israelis with hostage remarks
Trump amazed a lot in Israel when he said only 21 of the 59 hostages remaining in Gaza are still alive.
Israel insists that this figure rises at 24, although an Israeli official said that there was “great concern” for the life of three of the captives.
The manager said that there was no sign of life of these three, which the manager had not identified.
He said that until there is evidence proving the opposite, the three are considered alive.
The official, who spoke under the cover of anonymity, said that the families of captives had been updated on these developments.
The Smarting and Families Forum missing, a group representing families of captives, demanded that the Israeli government only if there is “new information that is held to us, give us immediately”.
He also called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to stop the war in Gaza until all the hostages returned.
“It is the most urgent and important national mission,” he said on an article on X.
Since Israel put an end to a ceasefire with Hamas in March, he sparked fierce strikes on Gaza who killed hundreds and captured territory of territory.
Before the end of the truce, Israel interrupted all humanitarian aid on the territory, including food, fuel and water, triggering what is considered the worst humanitarian crisis in 19 months of war.
The war began when Hamas activists attacked southern Israel on October 7, 2023, killing about 1,200 people, most civilians.
Hamas has taken 251 people in hostages and currently has 59, 24 of whom are considered alive.
A subsequent Israeli offensive to date has killed 52,400 Palestinians to date, mainly women and children, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health managed by Hamas whose figures do not distinguish between combatants and civilians.
The Israeli army said that 850 of its soldiers have died since the start of the war.