More than 70 Palestinians in Gaza killed in Israeli airstrikes
發佈日期: 2025-06-29 21:16
TVB News



Israeli strikes killed at least 72 people across Gaza as ceasefire prospects were said to be improving after 21 months of war.
Three children and their parents were killed in an Israeli strike on a tent camp in Muwasi near the southern city of Khan Younis. They were struck while sleeping, relatives said.
The Abu Teima family wiped out. A father, mother and their three children among the six killed after an Israeli airstrike on the tents of the Muwasi camp near Khan Younis in Gaza.
What did these children do to them, asks their grandmother Saud Abu Teima. "God is sufficient for me."
Authorities say more than 70 Palestinians were killed in Israeli strikes across the Gaza Strip overnight and up to Saturday.
In Gaza City in the north, at least a dozen people were killed near the Palestine Stadium, which was sheltering displaced people.
Eight more Palestinians lost their lives after their apartments were hit.
Yusuf Abu Naser says he saw nothing but dust and fire after the strike but managed to pull his injured father and sister from under the rubble.
This as U.S. President Donald Trump says he is close to securing a deal to end the 21-month war in Gaza.
Israeli Minister for Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer is reportedly heading to Washington for talks on a ceasefire.
Negotiations have stuttered since Israel broke the last ceasefire in March, with Hamas saying they are willing to release all hostages if Israel ends the war.
In Tel Aviv, relatives of some 50 hostages still in Gaza -- fewer than half of whom are still alive -- hold their weekly rally, buoyed by Trump's hopes for an imminent ceasefire.
"Everyone knows that Hamas has been defeated," said Yotam Cohen, brother of a hostage. "What more is left to do in Gaza that has not already been done? Who else is left to eliminate? Bringing our hostages back now is the true victory."
Meanwhile, back in Gaza, the struggle for survival continues. And for some, that means trying to earn a living amid chaos and devastation.
Mohammed Najm is among a group of young Palestinians using waste plastic to make a crude form of fuel. He risks death working 12 hours a day, his face blackened by the smoke.
It's completely risky, but I want a source of income, he says. If we do not produce, the vehicles will not work and no generators will work.

