Israeli strike in Gaza kills Al Jazeera cameraman and members of family in Gaza City
An Israeli airstrike in central Gaza has killed Al Jazeera cameraman Ahmed Wishah, according to the broadcaster and Gaza health officials. The strike hit a house in the Bureij refugee camp, while separate overnight strikes in Gaza City killed four members of the al-Safadi family. The latest deaths come despite a ceasefire and amid continuing accusations between Israel and Hamas that the truce is being violated.
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Al Jazeera said Wishah was killed in an Israeli strike on a house in Bureij refugee camp. The Israeli military said it had struck Wishah and described him as a Hamas terrorist, but did not immediately provide evidence to support that claim. A military spokesman said a further statement would be issued with more details.
The incident adds to the risks faced by journalists covering the conflict in Gaza, where media workers have repeatedly been caught up in the violence. Gaza health officials said five people were killed in the latest violence, including four members of the same family. The civil defence agency said an overnight strike on an apartment building in the Sabra neighbourhood of Gaza City killed the husband, wife and their two daughters from the al-Safadi family.
Al-Shifa hospital confirmed receiving the bodies of four family members, including two children. A relative said the cousins were asleep when the missile struck, while a survivor said he was a civilian and had no connection to armed groups. The deaths underline how fragile the situation remains even with a ceasefire in place.
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Israel and Hamas have traded near-daily accusations of truce violations, and progress on a permanent end to the war has stalled. The continued strikes also highlight the humanitarian toll in Gaza, where civilian casualties and damage to homes remain central concerns for aid agencies, hospitals and rescue services operating under severe strain. The killing of a journalist is likely to draw further international attention because of the role of media workers in documenting the conflict.
Al Jazeera has said one of its cameramen was among those killed, while the Israeli military has framed the strike as part of its campaign against Hamas. The separate deaths in Gaza City also point to the wider impact on families living in densely populated neighbourhoods, where airstrikes can destroy entire households in a single attack. What remains unclear is whether the Israeli military will publish the additional details it said were forthcoming, and whether any evidence will be provided to support its claim about Wishah.
It is also not clear whether the latest strikes will affect the already stalled ceasefire process. For now, the confirmed toll stands at five dead in the latest violence, with further scrutiny likely over the circumstances of the strikes and the status of those killed.
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