Workers of help killed in Israeli air strike in Gaza, a charity organization says BBC
A team of charity workers was killed in Israeli strikes in N
The charity organization said that eight workers – including volunteers and journalists who documented their activities – were killed when their vehicles were targeted in what Hamas described as a “sharp violation” of the Promotion on Promination with Israel on Saturday.
The Israeli army announced that he had hit “two terrorists identified that they were managing unmanned spacecraft representing the threat of Israeli troops,” adding that he was then aiming for “additional terrorists” who arrived at the scene.
The charity organization rejects the claim that members of his team are terrorists.
Qasim Rashid Ahmad, the founder and chairman of the charity organization, told the BBC that the team was in the area to set tents and document it for his own efforts in charitable organizations.
He said his two cinematographers returned to the car and were affected, while the other team members who rushed to the scene then hit the Israeli unmanned aircraft that followed them when they went to another car of a charity organization.
Several others were injured and rushed to an Indonesian hospital in the northern Gaza bar, the Hamas Ministry said.
The group spokesman, Hazem Qassem, said Israel “committed a horrific massacre in the north gauze’s belt, targeting a group of journalists and humanitarian workers.”
The cessation between Israel and Hamas has existed since January, but his future is uncertain because the procedure has reached a delay in fear of returning to fighting.
The war began after Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, killing about 1,200 people and taking 251 back to Gaza as hostage.
Israel responded to a massive military offensive, which killed more than 48,300 Palestinians, says the Hamas Ministry of Health at Gaza.