Palestinian medical staff said at least 60 people died in the Gaza Strip as U.S. and Arab mediators pushed for a ceasefire agreement and U.S. President Donald Trump visited the Middle East.
They said most of the victims, including women and children, were killed in Khan Younis, in southern Gaza, where Israeli airstrikes, attacked houses and tents.
Medical staff said the deceased included local journalist Hassan Samour, who worked at AQSA radio station in Hamas-Run and killed with 11 family members during the crash.
The Israeli military did not immediately comment, which has exacerbated the offensive in Gaza as it attempts to eliminate Hamas' deadly attack in retaliation for the deadly attack, a Palestinian militant group in Israel in 2023.
Hamas said in a statement that Israel has conducted indirect ceasefire negotiations between Israel and Hamas, and that Israel is "desperately trying to negotiate", involving Doha's Trump envoy, Qatar, Qatar and Egyptian mediators.
Israel undertook the latest strike as Palestinians commemorated the "Nakba" or disaster, when thousands fled or were forced to flee their hometowns and villages during the 1948 Middle East War, which gave birth to the Israeli state.
Since most of the 2.3 million people inside Gaza are internally displaced, some residents of some small lands say that the suffering is greater now than in the Nakba era.
“What we are going through now is even worse than Nakba in 1948,” said Ahmed Hamad, a Palestinian in Gaza, who has been displaced several times.
"The truth is that we live in a state of violence and displacement. We face attacks wherever we go. Death surrounds us everywhere."
Palestinian health officials said Israeli attacks have escalated since Trump began visiting Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates on Tuesday, and many Palestinians hope he hopes he can get a truce.
Local health officials said the latest strike was a killing of at least 80 people in a Wednesday attack on Gaza.
A new indirect ceasefire negotiation between Israel and Hamas was barely taken, led by Trump’s envoys, Egyptian mediators in Qatar and Doha.
Hamas said it was ready to release all the remaining hostages it held in Gaza in exchange for the war, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu prefers temporary victory, saying the war can only end if Hamas is eliminated.
"The Zionist occupation (Israel) responded to the pressure on innocent civilians as mediators are working to return negotiations to the right track," the group said in a statement.
It said: "Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants an open war and he doesn't care about the fate of the hostages."
According to the Israeli Bureau of Statistics, Israel retaliated against Hamas-led attacks in the southern Israeli community on October 7, 2023, with about 1,200 people killed and 251 considered hostages in Gaza.
According to local health officials, Israel's military campaign killed more than 52,900 Palestinians. Aid organizations and international agencies say it puts Gaza on the verge of extinction.
The U.S.-backed humanitarian group will begin working in Gaza under the aid allocation plan by the end of May, but has asked Israel to allow the United Nations and others to resume delivery to the Palestinians now until its establishment.
No humanitarian aid has been provided to Gaza since March 2, and the Global Hunger Monitor warned that 500,000 people are facing hunger in Gaza.