Al-Awda Hospital says 13 children and three women among those killed in Israeli air attack.
At least 17 people have been killed in an Israeli strike on a school sheltering displaced Palestinians in central Gaza, as Israeli forces carried out attacks across the enclave.
Palestinian medical officials said the Israeli attack in the Nuseirat refugee camp killed mostly women and children, including an 11-month-old baby, and wounded 42 others.
The al-Awda Hospital, which received the casualties, said 13 children under the age of 18 and three women were among the dead.
The Israeli military claimed it targeted Hamas fighters inside the school, without providing evidence. Israel has carried out several strikes on schools sheltering displaced Palestinian families in recent months, often killing women and children.
Medical sources told media that at least 34 people have been killed in Israeli attacks across the besieged enclave on Thursday, as Israel bombarded central and southern Gaza and its troops continued a ground offensive and siege in the northern part of the Gaza Strip.
Some 400,000 people remain trapped in the widely ravaged area, mainly in Jabalia, Beit Hanoon, and Beit Lahiya.
Health workers, meanwhile, warned of a catastrophic situation there as scarce supplies are quickly dwindling amid the continuing siege.
Hussam Abu Safia, the director of the Kamal Adwan Hospital in the north, said Israeli army tanks have surrounded the facility and that the hospital was “directly targeted” on Thursday.
He told media Arabic tank shelling on the hospital caused severe damage to its intensive care unit. Israeli soldiers also opened fire towards the facility’s windows, Abu Safia said, as well as the hospital’s main entrance, causing widespread “fear and panic” among children and patients inside.
More than 160 wounded individuals are inside the hospital, he said, including 14 children in intensive care or the neonatal department.
“There is a very large number of wounded people, and we lose at least one person every hour because of the lack of medical supplies and medical staff,” Abu Safia said in a video message on Wednesday.
Siege continues
“Our ambulances can’t transfer wounded people,” he said. “Those who can arrive by themselves to the hospital receive care, but those who don’t just die in the streets.”
Footage shared with The Associated Press news agency shows medical staff tending to premature babies and several older children in hospital beds, some with severe burns. One child is seen attached to a breathing machine, with bandages on her face and flies hovering over her.
Gaza’s civil defence said they had suspended operations in the north, accusing Israeli forces of threatening to kill its crews.
Israeli forces fired on one of their teams in the town of Beit Lahiya after ordering them to relocate to the Indonesian Hospital, where troops are stationed.
Three civil defence members were wounded in the strike, and a firetruck was destroyed, the civil defence said in a statement. It said another five of its personnel were detained by Israeli forces at the hospital.
“As a result, we declare that Civil Defence operations in the northern Gaza Strip have been completely halted, leaving these areas without any firefighting, rescue, or emergency medical services,” it said.
media’s Hind Khoudary, reporting from central Gaza’s Deir el-Balah, said the situation for civilians in the north was “miserable”.
“No food, no water, no civil defence teams, no ambulances, no paramedics,” Khoudary said.
Israeli forces are “forcing people to leave their houses, to leave their shelters, and also separating families from one another,” she said. “They’re putting numbers on men. They’re putting numbers on people and interrogating them.”
Israel’s deadly assault on Gaza that began in October last year has destroyed much of the besieged enclave’s infrastructure and internally displaced approximately 90 percent of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million, often multiple times.
Hundreds of thousands of people are crammed into tent camps along the coast after entire neighbourhoods in many areas were pounded to rubble.