At least 10 civilians, including children and women, were killed and more than 20 others injured after an Israeli airstrike struck a residential building in central Gaza City late Wednesday, according to emergency responders and medical officials in Gaza.
The latest attack adds to the mounting civilian toll in the war-torn enclave, where continuous bombardments, displacement, and collapsing healthcare services have deepened the humanitarian crisis. Medical officials said many of the injured remain in critical condition, raising fears that the death toll could rise further in the coming hours.
Strike Hits Residential Area in Central Gaza City
According to the Palestinian Red Crescent, rescue teams recovered the bodies of 10 people from beneath the rubble after Israeli aircraft targeted a house on Omar al-Mukhtar Street, one of Gaza City’s busiest and most densely populated areas.
Among those killed were four children and two women, emergency officials said. Rescue workers also evacuated more than 20 wounded civilians to nearby hospitals already struggling with severe shortages of medicine, fuel, and medical supplies.
Witnesses described scenes of devastation following the strike, with shattered concrete, twisted metal, and debris covering the street as residents searched frantically for survivors.
Media reports indicated that the apartment was struck by three missiles, causing extensive destruction to the building and surrounding structures.
Families Sheltering Nearby Caught in the Blast

Local residents said the targeted building was located near an area where displaced families had set up temporary tents after fleeing earlier fighting in other parts of Gaza.
The powerful explosions reportedly sent shockwaves through the surrounding neighborhood, damaging nearby shelters and causing panic among civilians already displaced multiple times during the conflict.
Several witnesses said families rushed through the streets carrying injured children and elderly relatives moments after the attack.
“The entire area shook like an earthquake,” one resident said. “People were screaming everywhere. Many families here have nowhere else to go.”
The attack once again highlighted the dangers facing civilians sheltering in crowded urban areas where residential buildings, schools, and temporary camps have repeatedly become sites of violence.
Hospitals Struggle to Treat Growing Number of Casualties
Medical officials in Gaza said hospitals in the city are operating under extreme pressure as casualties continue to rise from ongoing airstrikes and military operations.
Doctors at local facilities reported that many of the wounded suffered severe burns, shrapnel injuries, and head trauma. Some victims required urgent surgery, while others were being treated on hospital floors due to overcrowding.
Healthcare workers have repeatedly warned that Gaza’s medical system is nearing collapse after months of war and blockade conditions that have restricted the entry of essential supplies.
According to medical sources, the latest strike raised the number of people killed across Gaza since Wednesday morning to at least 21.
Aid agencies have previously warned that hospitals in northern Gaza face critical shortages of anesthetics, antibiotics, blood supplies, and electricity needed to operate life-saving equipment.
Intensifying Conflict Continues to Worsen Humanitarian Crisis
The airstrike comes amid continued fighting between Israeli forces and Palestinian armed groups across the Gaza Strip.
Israel says its military operations are aimed at dismantling militant infrastructure and preventing attacks on Israeli territory. Palestinian officials and humanitarian organizations, however, have repeatedly expressed concern over the growing civilian death toll and the destruction of residential neighborhoods.
The war has displaced hundreds of thousands of people, many of whom are now living in overcrowded shelters, schools, or makeshift camps with limited access to food, clean water, and healthcare.
International humanitarian agencies have warned that civilians in Gaza are facing increasingly dire conditions as hostilities continue.
The United Nations and several global aid organizations have repeatedly called for greater protection of civilians and unrestricted humanitarian access into the territory.
Concerns Grow Over Civilian Safety
Human rights groups and humanitarian observers have raised alarm over repeated strikes in densely populated civilian areas, particularly locations where displaced families have sought refuge.
Urban warfare in Gaza has made it difficult for civilians to find safe areas, with many neighborhoods heavily damaged by months of fighting.
Residents say repeated evacuation orders and ongoing bombardments have left many families trapped between frontline areas and overcrowded shelters.
The latest attack on Omar al-Mukhtar Street has renewed concerns over the risks facing civilians in central Gaza City, where thousands of displaced people remain concentrated.
International Pressure for Ceasefire Efforts
The continued escalation has intensified diplomatic pressure on international mediators seeking to secure a ceasefire agreement and expand humanitarian aid deliveries into Gaza.
Regional governments and international organizations have urged all sides to avoid further civilian casualties and resume negotiations aimed at reducing violence.
Despite repeated rounds of talks, however, efforts to reach a lasting truce have so far failed to produce a breakthrough.
As rescue workers continued searching through the rubble overnight, families gathered outside hospitals waiting for news of missing relatives, underscoring the heavy human cost of a conflict that shows little sign of ending soon.















