Israel-Lebanon latest: ‘At least 7’ killed in Israeli airstrike on Gaza school as Al Jazeera office shut down
Israel has accused Al Jazeera of being the ‘mouthpiece’ of Hezbollah and Hamas - allegations it denies
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At least seven people have been killed in an Israeli airstrike on a Gaza school, the Hamas-run health ministry said.
The strike hit Kafr Qasem School in Gaza City at around 11am (8am GMT) local time on Sunday as it was being used to shelter displaced people, the ministry added.
The Israeli military said the strike targeted Hamas fighters and it had used aerial surveillance to limit the risk to civilians.
It come as Israeli forces raided the bureau of Qatar-funded media network Al Jazeera in Palestine’s capital of Ramallah in the West Bank.
Balaclava-clad troops could be seen standing in the network’s newsroom with rifles as a military order was issued to shut down operations for 45 days.
Israel has accused Al Jazeera of being “the mouthpiece” of Gaza’s Hamas and Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah. The network denies these allegations.
Meanwhile, Israel said it struck around 290 targets inside Lebanon after Hezbollah launched just over 100 rockets at northern Israel in the most intense skirmish since the war in Gaza began almost a year ago.
Israel closed schools and in many northern areas of the country and the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights early on Sunday, with reports of rockets hitting Haifa, a port city around 17 miles from the Lebanon border.
Israel's strike on Beirut killed 37, Lebanon says
Rescue workers in Beirut searched on Saturday for people still missing in rubble after an Israeli airstrike targeting Hezbollah commanders the previous day killed at least 37 people in a suburb of the Lebanese capital, according to authorities.
Hezbollah, a powerful Iran-backed group, said that 16 members including senior leader Ibrahim Aqil and another commander, Ahmed Wahbi, were among those killed in the deadliest strike in nearly a year of conflict with Israel.
Israel's army said it hit an underground gathering of Aqil and leaders of Hezbollah's elite Radwan forces, and had almost completely dismantled its military chain of command.
The attack levelled a multi-story residential building in the crowded suburb and damaged a nursery next door, a security source said. Three children and seven women were among those killed, according to Lebanon's health ministry.
Cross-border strikes continued on Saturday: Israeli warplanes carried out the heaviest bombardment in 11 months of fighting across Lebanon's south and Hezbollah claimed rocket attacks on military targets in Israel's north.
The Israeli army said it hit around 180 targets, destroying thousands of rocket launch barrels.
Friday’s strike sharply escalated the conflict and inflicted another blow on Hezbollah after two days of attacks this week in which pagers and walkie-talkies used by its members exploded.
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Iran calls Israeli attacks 'shameless' as it unveils new ballistic missile
Iran’s supreme leader has said that Israel is committing “shamless crimes” against children, not combatants.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was speaking on state TV from Tehran, where he told a group of envoys from Muslim countries that Israel is not “fighting men, but ordinary people”.
“Unable to hurt the real fighters in Palestine, they are venting their malicious anger on small children, on hospital patients, and on schools filled with young children,” he said.
Pictured: School shelter hit in Gaza by Israeli airstrike
School shelter hit in Gaza strike
Palestinians said an Israeli strike killed at least 22 people in a school sheltering displaced people in southern Gaza City on Saturday, while the Israeli military said the attack targeted a command centre of militant group Hamas.
The Gaza health ministry said most of those killed were women and children. The Hamas-run government media office said 13 children and six women were among the dead.
The military said it hit a Hamas command centre embedded in the compound that previously served as a school, repeating an accusation that the group uses civilian facilities for military purposes. Hamas denies that.
Reuters footage from the site showed blasted walls, wrecked and burnt furniture, and holes in the ceiling of one room as people tried to salvage what they could of belongings.
“The women and their children were sitting in the playground of the school, the kids were playing, and suddenly two rockets hit them,” said one witness Said Al-Malahi.
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