The death toll from Israeli strikes on Gaza City and its environs in one day has reached 52, Al Jazeera reported, citing sources from the Palestinian enclave's Health Ministry. According to them, dozens of residents were taken to hospitals with injuries.
It is noted that on September 6, 74 Palestinians were killed in Israeli attacks in Gaza.
A representative of the local civil defense service informed the TV channel that at least 50 houses were completely destroyed in the city in 48 hours, and another 100 buildings were damaged. According to him, camps for displaced persons established in Gaza were also shelled, where at least 200 tents were destroyed.
Palestinians receiving food at humanitarian aid distribution centers were under fire. According to Al Jazeera, 85 people were injured, 8 died from their injuries.
As reported by the Maan news agency, over 90 thousand residents have left Gaza in recent days, heading to the humanitarian zone in the El-Mawasi area, which was established in the southern part of the enclave.
According to it, on September 7, the Israeli Air Force destroyed the third multi-storey building in the center of Gaza. The official representative of the Israel Defense Forces, Avihai Edri, requested the urgent evacuation of its residents before airstrikes on the high-rise building. According to the Israeli military, radicals from the Palestinian Hamas movement have turned the high-rise buildings into “terrorist infrastructure sites”, equipping them with surveillance cameras, command posts and sniper and anti-tank firing positions.
Israel's Supreme Court ruled that Palestinian prisoners must receive enough food and ordered an end to the policy of reducing rations implemented by National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, DPA reported, quoted by BTA, citing local media.
The court accepted a petition filed by the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which had stated that conditions for Palestinian prisoners in Israeli prisons had deteriorated significantly since the attacks of October 7, 2023, and the subsequent conflict in Gaza.
According to the organization, many Palestinian prisoners, including fighters who participated in the October 7 attacks, are severely malnourished.
Far-right National Security Minister Ben-Gvir criticized the decision, accusing the court of protecting "heinous murderers, kidnappers and rapists."
The hostages still being held by the Palestinian extremist group Hamas in Gaza have no such protection, he argued in an article in "Ex"
"We will continue to provide the prisoners with the minimum conditions required by law," Ben-Gvir said.
Justice Minister Yariv Levin also criticized the decision, comparing the Supreme Court judges to the jury members on the popular cooking show "MasterChef." (MasterChef).
Levin is a driving force in the government's efforts to weaken Israel's Supreme Court, DPA notes.