(29 Apr 2025)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Khan Younis, Gaza Strip – 29 April 2025
1. Family members and relatives crying next to body of a person killed in in an Israeli airstrike, body brought to the Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis
2. Woman crying
3. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Sabah Fojo, mourner: ++STARTS ON PREVIOUS SHOT++
"What can I say? And who will listen? What is the use of talking? We have been speaking for two years and no one has answered. They don’t feel anything for us — no one feels anything. Let’s just keep our feelings to ourselves. There is no one left in the family; they are all gone."
4. Various of mourners crying next to body, hugging body
5. Mourners performing funeral prayers ++OVERLAID WITH AUDIO IN SHOT 6++
6. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Ahmed al-Kady, relative: ++STARTS ON PREVIOUS SHOT, PARTLY OVERLAID WITH SHOT 7++
"They were sleeping. Children sleep early, they had dinner and went to bed. We woke up to the tragedy around midnight. The area next to them was bombed. All of her brothers suffered severe injuries, and the child, Seba, was killed. This is the bank of child (targets). And in short, we say: enough genocide. Enough! Until when? And for what, and why?"
8. Various of mourners carrying bodies and taking them to burial site
STORYLINE:
At least six Palestinians including three children and one woman were killed in two Israeli overnight strikes in Gaza Strip, medics said.
Mourners gathered around the bodies of their loved ones at the Nasser Hospital ahead of funeral prayers.
The strikes hit a house in Khan Younis and a tent in Mawasi area.
Israel has carried out daily strikes on Gaza since ending its ceasefire with Hamas last month.
It has cut off the territory’s 2 million Palestinians from all imports, including food and medicine, since the beginning of March in what it says is an attempt to pressure the militant group to release hostages.
The daily bombardment and widespread hunger is taking a heavy toll on Gaza’s most vulnerable residents, including pregnant women and children.
The United Nations’ highest court began holding hearings on Monday into Israel’s obligation to facilitate humanitarian aid to the territories it occupies.
Israel says the International Court of Justice is biased against it.
It says enough aid entered during the ceasefire to sustain the population and accuses Hamas of siphoning it off.
Humanitarian workers say supplies are running desperately low, with most people eating one meal or less a day.
They say the U.N. closely monitors aid distribution and deny any significant diversion.
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