Israel strikes Gaza, killing 19 including women and children, after
saying Hamas violated deal
[February 04, 2026]
By WAFAA SHURAFA and SAMY MAGDY
DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israeli strikes in Gaza killed at least
19 Palestinians, most of them women and children, by midday Wednesday,
according to hospital officials. Israel pledged to continue strikes,
saying that it was responding to a militant attack on Israeli soldiers
that seriously wounded one.
Among the Palestinians killed were five children, including a
5-month-old and a baby just 10 days old; seven women; and a paramedic,
said hospital officials. They are the latest Palestinians in Gaza to die
since a ceasefire deal, which has been punctuated by deadly Israeli
strikes, came into effect on Oct. 10, 2025.
The escalating Palestinian death toll has rocked the U.S.-backed truce
and caused Palestinians in the strip to say it does not feel like the
war has ended.
“The genocidal war against our people in the Gaza Strip continues,” said
Dr. Mohamed Abu Selmiya, director of Gaza City’s Shifa Hospital, in a
Facebook post. “Where is the ceasefire? Where are the mediators?”
Deadly strikes have continued despite ceasefire deal
The deal attempted to halt a more than two-year war between Israel and
Hamas. While the heaviest fighting has subsided, it has been marred by
repeated flareups of violence.
More than 530 Palestinians have been killed by Israel since the
ceasefire went into effect, according to Gaza health officials, while
Israel's military says four Israeli soldiers have been killed.

Israel’s military has said its continuing strikes are responses to Hamas
violations or militant attacks on its soldiers, but dozens of civilians
have been killed. Eight Arab and Muslim countries, including mediators
Egypt and Qatar, recently condemned what they called Israel’s “repeated
violations” of the deal.
An Israeli military official, speaking on the condition of anonymity in
line with military policy, told The Associated Press that Israel was
striking the strip in response to militant gunfire that badly wounded a
reservist soldier Wednesday morning.
Early morning strike kills 11, including two children
Israeli troops fired on a building in the Tuffah neighborhood in north
Gaza, killing at least 11 people, most from the same family, said Shifa
Hospital, which received the bodies. The dead included two parents,
their 10-day-old girl, her 5-month-old cousin and their grandmother.
Mourners gathered in the courtyard of Shifa hospital Wednesday morning
for funeral prayers.
“What did this child do? Was she (affiliated with) Hamas or Fatah? ….
Why are they killing the children?,” asked a relative of the family
killed in Tuffah, Mohammad Jaser.
“We don’t understand why this is happening to us. What do we do? Where
do we go? This isn’t life,” he said.
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A Palestinian man mourns over Ahmed Haboush, who was killed in an
Israeli military strike, at Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, Wednesday,
Feb. 4, 2026. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi)

Two young children were seen kneeling at the body of their father,
as a woman told them to bid him farewell.
“Kiss him,” the woman told a young girl, who kneeled and kissed his
father’s cheeks.
Strikes on Gaza continue into Wednesday afternoon
Meanwhile, the strikes continued.
An Israeli strike on a family’s tent in the southern city of Khan
Younis killed three people including a 12-year-old boy, said Nasser
hospital, which received the bodies.
Tank shelling in Gaza City’s eastern neighborhood of Zaytoun killed
another three Palestinians, according to Shifa Hospital, including a
husband and his wife.
A strike on a tent in the Muwasi area of Khan Younis killed at least
two people and wounded five others, according to a field hospital
run by the Palestinian Red Crescent in the area.
The dead included Hussein Hassan Hussein al-Semieri, a paramedic for
the Palestinian Red Crescent who was on duty at the time, said the
hospital.
Ceasefire deal plods forward
While fighting has not stopped, other parts of the ceasefire deal
have moved forward.
Hamas has released all of the hostages it was holding, and in return
Israel has released several thousand Palestinians. Increased amounts
of humanitarian aid have flowed into Gaza, the Rafah border crossing
has opened for a trickle of people to cross, and a new technocratic
committee has been appointed to administer Gaza’s daily affairs.
But other key elements of the ceasefire appear to have stalled,
including the deployment of an international security force, the
disarmament of Hamas and reconstruction of Gaza. The U.S. has given
no timeline on when these parts of the deal will wrap up.

Over 71,800 Palestinians have been killed since the start of the
war, according to the Gaza health ministry, which does not say how
many were fighters or civilians. The ministry, which is part of the
Hamas-led government, maintains detailed casualty records that are
seen as generally reliable by U.N. agencies and independent experts.
___
Magdy reported from Cairo. AP reporter Julia Frankel contributed
from Jerusalem.
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