Global condemnation of deadly Israeli strike on Rafah mounts

Palestinians mourn over the bodies of relatives killed in an Israeli airstrike at a morgue in Rafah on Monday.
Palestinians mourn over the bodies of relatives killed in an Israeli airstrike at a morgue in Rafah on Monday. Jehad Alshrafi/AP

Residents of the Tal al-Sultan displacement camp in western Rafah have recounted to CNN the horrifying scenes that followed an Israeli strike Tuesday, which according to Palestinian and UN officials killed eight people.

Video of the aftermath from a CNN stringer shows torn up tents, burnt sheets of metal and a clutter of furniture and clothing thrown on the ground. Walls are pierced with holes and the wooden structures holding up the tents completely damaged.

CNN has reached out to the IDF regarding the strike, but has not received a response.

One resident, Hind Al-Ashqar, told CNN she was asleep with her family when she awoke to the sound of her neighbors screaming.

“Our children were terrified; I have a 5-year-old that was so horrified. We were all scared, children and adults,” she said.

Al-Ashqar’s daughter Ayat said she ran out of their tent to check on their neighbors, some of whom were her relatives, only to find them dead on the ground.

“They kept bleeding until they died,” she said.

“I was so terrified to see the remains of people. We have been displaced and living in nylon tents. We see remains and body parts of martyrs, we see the strikes and shrapnel hitting us. If we were in our homes, we wouldn’t be afraid of shrapnel. But inside tents, any shrapnel can hit us and even burn us,” Ayat continued.

Another resident, Imad, pulled out the remains of a person while rummaging through the torn-up tents, saying “this is the safe place they talk about.”

“All those that were killed were civilians. No one was a fighter,” he said.

Another resident, Mohammed, told CNN people were asleep when they were killed, including his cousin. He said he has been picking up dead bodies of children and body parts since the morning, pointing to his blood-stained shirt.

“Instead of waking up and saying thank God, we woke up and picked up body parts…. every day there is a war. Enough is enough…the whole world is living freely and happily except us. Why? How is the whole world unable to stop Israel and Netanyahu?” he said.

A displaced woman Suhad told a CNN stringer she had been sheltering in a nearby camp when she heard there had been a strike on her brother’s camp.

“I didn’t sleep all night. I was told he was martyred, then he wasn’t. He was martyred, then he wasn’t.

“I think no one wanted to tell me because I’m pregnant. So I came by this morning and saw that my brother and his wife were killed,” she said.

She said her brother’s four daughters, the youngest three months old, survived but were injured.

CNN stringer video from the scene shows dozens of people dismantling the remains of their makeshift tents, gathering what’s left of their belongings and loading them onto trucks and donkey carts. They told a CNN stringer on the ground that they are forced to flee again, some for the sixth time, out of fear of being killed.

“They forced us to move to the south because they said it was safe. Where is the safety? We are leaving, but we don’t know where to go,” one man said.

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