120 martyrs due to night bombing on Gaza and a power outage in the Indonesian Hospital

120 martyrs due to night bombing on Gaza and a power outage in the Indonesian Hospital

For the 18th day in a row, Israel continues to bomb civilians in various areas of the Gaza Strip. 120 citizens were martyred - including children and women - as a result of Israeli night raids in various areas of the Gaza Strip, most notably Khan Yunis and Rafah.


More than 120 citizens were martyred in a series of violent raids launched by Israeli warplanes last night and Tuesday dawn, targeting populated homes in various areas in the Gaza Strip on the eighteenth day of the aggression.


Local sources reported that Israeli warplanes destroyed a residential building in the city of Rafah belonging to the Al-Aidi family, killing 48 citizens and wounding dozens.


The sources added that Israeli warplanes bombed a house belonging to the Mukhaymar family in the Tal al-Sultan area in Rafah, causing martyrs and wounded among the citizens.


The warplanes bombed an inhabited house in the town of Beit Lahia, north of the Gaza Strip, causing martyrs and wounded among the citizens. They were transferred to the Indonesian hospital in the town.


Our correspondent added that an Israeli warplane bombed a house in the Al-Faluga area in the northern Gaza Strip, causing a number of martyrs and wounded.


Israeli planes also bombed a house in the city of Khan Yunis, south of the Gaza Strip, causing several casualties that were taken to Nasser Hospital in the city. They also bombed another house in the city, causing martyrs and wounded.


An Israeli raid targeted a house in the Bureij refugee camp in the middle of the Gaza Strip, causing deaths and injuries among citizens, including women and children.


Power outage to the Indonesian Hospital in the town of Beit Lahia


Last night, power was cut off from the Indonesian hospital in the town of Beit Lahia, north of the Gaza Strip, as a result of the exhaustion of fuel needed to operate the electric generators inside it.


Doctors inside the hospital warned of the repercussions of stopping electrical generators from working on the lives of patients and injured people, as there are hundreds of people in it, some of whom are connected to respirators.