Casualties rise as new blasts target Gaza cities and surrounding areas

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In the early hours of Tuesday, the casualty toll from fresh Israeli air and ground operations in the Gaza Strip climbed, with reports indicating that at least 110 Palestinians lost their lives as a result of ongoing bombardments in Khan Younis, Rafah, and additional locations across southern and central Gaza. Eyewitness accounts and local authorities describe a scene of intensified bombardment that has devastated neighborhoods and disrupted daily life for tens of thousands of residents who remain in the crossfire of a prolonged and deeply contested conflict.

According to the Palestinian news agency Wafa, the latest strikes on residences and a fuel station in Khan Younis left 23 people dead and 80 injured, underscoring the targeting of civilian infrastructure during these operations. Medical workers and rescue teams in Khan Younis have been working through the night to locate survivors and to transport the wounded to nearby hospitals, where staff report that medical facilities are stretched thin by the volume of casualties and the growing need for urgent care.

Rafah has also borne a heavy burden, with figures showing 30 fatalities and numerous injuries after Israeli forces attacked residential blocks in the area. Rescue operations continue amid a dense emergency landscape that includes damaged roads, collapsed structures, and a pressing need for aid deliveries to reach residents cut off by ongoing security measures and the disruption of basic services such as electricity and water.

Within Gaza City, a Palestinian journalist identified as Mohammed Imad Labad was killed in an explosion near his home in the Sheikh Radwan district. The death raises the already grave impact on media professionals reporting from front lines, a reminder of the risks journalists face while documenting a conflict that continues to unfold. The broader tally of journalists killed since the war began stood at seven as of early October, reflecting concerns about safety and freedom of information in conflict zones.

The remaining reported fatalities occurred around the Al-Aqsa Mosque area, in Jabaliyah to the north, and at the Al Bureij refugee camp in the central region. Across these locales, residents describe a shockwave of destruction that has left dozens of families homeless and prompted grave concerns about the long-term humanitarian implications, including access to shelter, food, medical care, and clean water. International observers have called for rapid humanitarian pauses and unimpeded aid corridors to alleviate the suffering of civilians who bear the brunt of this ongoing confrontation, even as fighting lines shift and ceasefire talks struggle to gain traction.

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