September 10,
2024
For three hours
under the darkness of Gaza’s night sky, search-and-rescue teams dug bodies and
survivors out of piles of sand. Eventually, they paused, exhausted, to wait for
daybreak and see what else was left.
The teams
arrived minutes after Israeli aircraft pounded the area, a place in southern
Gaza’s al-Mawasi that Israel had designated a “humanitarian zone”.
Around midnight
on Tuesday, bombs dropped on tents housing displaced Palestinians, gouging vast
craters into the earth and killing 40 people, according to local authorities.
Eyewitnesses
told Middle East Eye that the explosions felt like an “earthquake that rocked
the area”. When they stepped outside, they found victims “with amputated limbs”
lying on the ground.
"It was
around 12.30am or 1am, I was sleeping in the pergola outside my house when
suddenly, I saw missiles falling and sand raining down on us. They bombed the
area with about four or five missiles," Alaa Shahda Mahmoud al-Shaer, an
elderly resident of al-Mawasi, told MEE.
Shaer’s sisters,
in-laws and daughters were all staying with him. The Israeli army told
Palestinians to move to these so-called “safe” areas, he noted, “so everyone
came here. We were shocked by what they did.”
Shaer joined the
dozens of residents and displaced who began removing the piles of sand and
rescuing those buried alive before the civil defence search-and-rescue teams
arrived.
“Only God knows
how we saved people. We removed the sand and tents off them with our bare
hands. It was a struggle to pull out the victims. We tried to rescue the women
and children but the sand had covered the tents and people,” he said.
“Some tents, we
couldn’t even find them - they were completely buried. The civil defence tried
to retrieve them during the night but couldn’t, and we are still waiting for
them to be recovered.”
According to
Gaza’s civil defence, at least 40 people were killed and 60 others wounded in
the attack, which struck without any prior evacuation orders.
“I didn’t see
the martyrs, but the young men said there was a woman with her head cut off,
children and members of the al-Shaer and Foujo families killed. Everyone who
died were ordinary people. We never heard that any of them worked with the
resistance before,” Shaer said.
The Israeli army
said it targeted a Hamas command centre "disguised in the humanitarian
area in Khan Younis”, adding that "many steps were taken to reduce the
chance of harming civilians, including the use of precision weaponry, aerial
surveillance, and additional intelligence information".
It did not share
evidence to back up any of its claims and Hamas denied the allegations.
Speaking
alongside US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, UK Foreign Secretary David
Lammy called the strike “shocking” and said it demonstrated the need for an
immediate ceasefire.
‘Like an
earthquake’
Aisha Nayef
al-Shaer, an elderly woman living in al-Mawasi, described seeing amputated
limbs being pulled from beneath the sand.
"We were
asleep when the bombing suddenly started. We began to run and found people
lying on the ground. Some had their legs severed, others had their heads cut
off, and people were carrying them,” she told MEE.
“There are still
people missing under the sand. Just a while ago, they pulled out a head, a hand
and a leg. People are still buried, and their families are searching for them.
They were asleep and they bombed them with aircraft. The area is overcrowded with
people and tents.”
Witnesses said
at least 20 makeshift tents housing families were targeted. They had pitched on
the sandy, coastal area near the city of Khan Younis, a place with little
infrastructure to support them.
Hundreds of
thousands of displaced Palestinians have taken shelter in al-Mawasi after
Israel ordered them to leave northern and eastern Gaza soon after the war broke
out in October.
Since Israel
began military operations in the southern city of Rafah in May, the number of
displaced in al-Mawasi has doubled, a situation exacerbated by offensives waged
in Khan Younis and parts of central Gaza.
Al-Mawasi
witnessed a similar attack on 13 July, when Israeli air strikes on displaced
Palestinians killed at least 88 and wounded 289 others, according to Gaza's
health ministry.
Umm Mahmoud, a
displaced Palestinian who has been taking shelter in Mawasi for nine months,
called the attack “horrific”.
“We heard about
five explosions that felt like an earthquake in the area. It was dark, we were
all sleeping, and the children came out crying. The people were torn into
pieces, most of them women and children,” she told MEE.
“We felt safe
here, and there were no resistance fighters among us. I’ve been here for nine
months and haven’t seen any fighters in this area. Everyone here are women,
children, the elderly and ordinary people."
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