The occupation forces continued to record new violations of the ceasefire agreement in the Gaza Strip, and a child and a young man were killed as a result of attacks carried out by drones, while those forces continued to demolish buildings behind the “yellow line,” amid continued international warnings about the seriousness of the humanitarian situation, due to the tightening of the siege and the lack of aid.
A child was killed and another injured when a drone dropped a bomb on the Old City area east of Gaza City as they were filling water containers behind the Omari Mosque. Loud explosions were heard in Gaza City and northern areas, resulting from the demolition of newly constructed buildings. Local sources reported that a massive explosion rocked the western part of Beit Lahia in the northern Gaza Strip, caused by a demolition operation carried out by the Israeli army. A similar demolition operation was also conducted on the outskirts of the nearby Jabalia refugee camp.
Witnesses from areas in the northern Gaza Strip reported heavy artillery shelling and gunfire targeting areas within the “yellow line.” Occupation forces also carried out demolition operations on new buildings located behind the “yellow line,” east of Gaza City. Occupation vehicles also targeted the outskirts of the Al-Tuffah neighborhood, while warships fired heavily into the sea off the city.
The young man, Uday Al-Louh (27 years old), was killed after being targeted by an Israeli drone east of Deir al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip. In Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, drones flew at low altitudes, coinciding with artillery shelling that targeted the eastern towns. Local sources also reported that artillery shelling also targeted areas northwest of Rafah, which is under full occupation by the occupation army. Occupation forces targeted displaced persons’ tents in the outskirts of Rafah with heavy tank fire.
Israeli violations of the ceasefire agreement declared on October 10, 2025, continue, resulting in the martyrdom of 1,059 Palestinians.
Meanwhile, Israel continues to tighten its blockade measures, which also violate this agreement.
In this context, the Islamic Resistance Movement “Hamas” welcomed the decision issued by the Presbyterian Church in the United States, which considered the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip to be “amounting to genocide,” and called for a ban on supplying weapons to the occupation and boycotting it. The movement considered it “a position consistent with the values of justice and humanity, and expresses a moral responsibility in the face of the ongoing violations against the Palestinian people.”
acute malnutrition
The United Nations has revealed that its partners have warned that aid stocks for the people of Gaza are running low due to disruptions in supply chains and a lack of funding.
The UN Information Centre reported that in the area of nutrition, screening and treatment efforts continued. In the first half of June, partners screened more than 31,000 children, identifying approximately 1,500 suffering from acute malnutrition, including more than 200 severe cases. All of these children were enrolled in treatment programs. Nearly 24,000 pregnant and lactating women were also screened, and those diagnosed with malnutrition are receiving treatment.
The United Nations stressed that the humanitarian response in Gaza is still far below the scale of the needs, and that more efforts are needed to enable humanitarian operations and provide the necessary funding for them.
The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) reported that it continues to implement cleaning campaigns, community awareness activities, and pesticide spraying in the Gaza Strip, along with solid waste disposal and other efforts aimed at improving environmental conditions. It stated that since June 7, it has implemented measures to reduce the spread of disease-carrying animals and pests in more than 370 displacement sites across Gaza, which collectively shelter more than 680,000 people.
It should be noted that the Union of Municipalities of the Gaza Strip warned of the serious and accelerating deterioration in the basic municipal services system, foremost among them water, sanitation and solid waste management services, and said that the work system is threatened with complete collapse as a result of the continuous targeting of the infrastructure and the prevention of the entry of operating supplies.
The Government Media Office revealed shocking figures after 1,000 days of the war of extermination that Israel launched against the Gaza Strip on October 7, 2023. It confirmed that the war left more than 73,000 martyrs, including tens of thousands of children and women, in addition to the destruction of 80% of the Strip, as the destruction affected all sectors. It said that initial estimates indicate that the war caused initial direct losses estimated at about $80 billion.
near-total collapse
The Palestinian Center for Political Studies stated in a new study it issued, after 1000 days of the war of extermination, that the passage of these long days of the ongoing war represents an analytical milestone that reveals the extent of the transformation that has affected the Palestinian reality, and the data shows that the war has gone beyond its military scope to turn into a comprehensive humanitarian crisis that has affected people, infrastructure and the foundations of life.
He pointed out that the war produced profound transformations in the Palestinian social and political structure, most notably the reshaping of lifestyles and the exacerbation of political and geographical fragmentation. He explained that the cumulative data issued by United Nations agencies, most notably the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the United Nations Development Programme, and the World Bank, indicate that the war on the Gaza Strip led to widespread destruction affecting people, infrastructure, and the social and economic system in an unprecedented manner in the modern history of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
He said that according to joint estimates by the United Nations, the European Union and the World Bank, more than 60% of the population have lost their homes or had their homes destroyed or damaged, while 1.9 million people have been repeatedly displaced within the sector, after more than 371,000 housing units were completely or partially destroyed.
The study explained that more than 50% of health facilities are out of service or unable to operate, while most schools and educational infrastructure have been destroyed or severely damaged, noting a sharp economic contraction that has reached about 84% of the size of the economy in Gaza.
She stated that the indicators not only reflect the extent of the physical destruction, but also reveal a near-total collapse in the human development system, as estimates indicate that development levels in Gaza have regressed by the equivalent of decades of human progress (estimates of more than 70 years of decline in human development indicators).
She said that in the immediate humanitarian context, OCHA reports that the vast majority of the population are living in conditions of food, water and health insecurity, with widespread dependence on limited and unstable humanitarian aid. The study also indicated that the future after the thousand-day period remains open to multiple scenarios contingent on regional and international power balances.
Riyad Al-Bitar, Undersecretary of the Ministry of Social Development in Gaza, announced that the Gaza Strip is facing an unprecedented recovery crisis in light of the continued repercussions of the war, which left more than 75,000 orphans who lost one or both of their parents, in addition to more than 68,000 lonely survivors, including minors and adults, as well as 45,000 widows, 28,000 of whom were widowed during the last war, stressing that these numbers are likely to rise.
He stressed that 80% of Palestinian families lost their homes as a result of the war and are living in worsening humanitarian conditions after being displaced to shelters, schools, or tents. He pointed out that the aid that entered the Gaza Strip since the start of the truce does not meet the actual needs of the population. He said that data from the OCHA office shows that international funding allocated to Gaza did not exceed 25% of the total needs, which was reflected in the relief programs.
He stressed that the recovery system in the Gaza Strip is still faltering, as humanitarian organizations have been unable to restore their ability to implement their programs due to the large scale of needs and the continued funding shortfall. He pointed out that the economic conditions, along with political and security considerations, greatly affect the implementation of humanitarian programs, in light of the difficulties that organizations face in coordination and security restrictions.
