More than a dozen Gaza schools damaged in Israeli bombardment
Thirteen schools were severely damaged by Israeli rockets in the weekend bombing of Gaza which killed 24 Palestinians and injured over a hundred.
The schools suffered damage to glass windows, doors and walls, according to Gaza's ministry of education, with dust and shrapnel entering into classrooms and school grounds.
The schools are located across the Gaza strip. Western Khan Younis, where five schools were destroyed, was the district which suffered the most damage.
A truce appeared to be reached on Monday, despite any official ceasefire announcement from either side. The Israeli army on Monday lifted protective restrictions on residents in southern Israel, while Hamas' Al-Aqsa TV in the Gaza Strip reported a ceasefire, signalling a deal had been reached to end the bloodiest fighting between Palestinians and Israelis since the 2014 war.
The Gaza Strip had been subjected to intense Israeli strikes from the air and the sea since Saturday. The spokesman for the health ministry of the Hamas-led government in Gaza tweeted Monday that 24 Palestinians had been killed in the fighting. They include two pregnant woman and a 14-month old baby, Saba Abu Arar.
On the Israeli side, four civilians were killed by rockets fired by Palestinian resistance groups.
The conflict broke out after four Palestinians were killed and two Israeli soldiers were wounded at a weekly demonstration held by Palestinians on the Gaza-Israel border, known as the Great March of Return.
At least 268 Palestinians have been killed and over 23,000 injured since the first Great Return March protest was held on 30 March 2018. Two Israeli soldiers have been killed in that period.
The results of a UN investigation released at the end of February found that Israel committed crimes against humanity in responding to the border protests, as snipers "intentionally" shot civilians including children, journalists and the disabled.
US Vice President JD Vance claimed that more humanitarian aid is now entering the Gaza Strip than at any time in the past five years. Palestinians, however, rejected this claim, confirming that Israel continues to impose restrictions on the entry of aid despite the ceasefire.
France has rejected a visa to prominent human rights advocate and Director-General of Al-Haq, Shahwan Jabarin, who was scheduled to address the European Parliament’s human rights committee in Strasbourg, a move that “undermining efforts towards accountability and advocacy for Palestinian rights.”
The US Senate blocked on Wednesday two resolutions that would have stopped the sale of some $450 million in bombs and bulldozers to Israel, amid the assaults on Gaza, Lebanon and Iran.