Israel Intensifies Gaza Bombing After Netanyahu Vows to Expand Offensive

Six journalists killed in Israeli strike on Al Shifa Hospital compound; international condemnation mounts

Mon Aug 11 2025
icon-facebook icon-twitter icon-whatsapp

GAZA CITY, Palestine: Palestinians reported the heaviest bombardments in weeks on Monday in areas east of Gaza City, hours after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he expected to complete a newly expanded offensive in the Palestinian territory “fairly quickly”.

An air strike at the Al Shifa Hospital compound killed six journalists, including Al Jazeera correspondent Anas Al Sharif, according to Gaza’s health authorities.

Witnesses, cited by Reuters, said Israeli tanks and aircraft pounded the eastern suburbs of Sabra, Zeitoun and Shejaia, forcing families to flee westwards.

Hamas said Gaza City is now sheltering about one million people displaced from northern Gaza.

The Israeli military said its forces had fired artillery at Hamas positions in the area and said they dismantled a rocket launch site east of the city on Sunday.

Netanyahu announced on Sunday that he had ordered the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) to accelerate plans for the new operation, focusing on Gaza City, which he described as Hamas’s “capital of terrorism”.

The Israeli Prime Minister also indicated that parts of central Gaza may be targeted next.

International reaction

The planned Israeli escalation has drawn worldwide criticism.

Germany on Friday announced it would halt exports of military equipment to Israel that could be used in Gaza.

Britain and other European allies urged Israel to reconsider the plan to takeover Gaza.

French President Emmanuel Macron warned the plan was a “disaster waiting to happen” and proposed an international coalition under a United Nations mandate to stabilise Gaza.

Italy’s Defence Minister Guido Crosetto said Israel had “lost its reason and humanity” over Gaza and suggested possible sanctions, telling La Stampa that the situation was “not a military operation with collateral damage, but the pure denial of the law”.

Killing of journalists

The UN human rights office condemned the killing of the six journalists as a “grave breach of international humanitarian law” and called on Israel to protect civilians, including members of the press.

Gaza’s media office said at least 242 Palestinian journalists have been killed since the conflict began in October 2023.

Qatar’s Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani described the strike as “crimes beyond imagination”.

Iran’s foreign ministry urged the world to hold Israel to account. Reporters Without Borders accused the Israeli army of “acknowledged murder” after it labelled Al Sharif a Hamas “terrorist”.

Former UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn called the killings “sickening beyond words” and “a desperate attempt to silence the truth”.

Hunger crisis

Gaza’s Health Ministry reported that five more people, including a child, died of malnutrition in the past 24 hours, bringing the total to 222 deaths from hunger-related causes during the war, 101 of them children.

Most of these deaths have occurred in the past three weeks.

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) warned that children in Gaza are “dying from starvation and bombardments” and called for an immediate ceasefire.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) condemned Israel- and US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation food sites as an “orchestrated killing” and demanded the restoration of UN-led aid coordination.

Recognition of Palestinian state

New Zealand is considering recognising a Palestinian state, with a formal decision expected in September, Foreign Minister Winston Peters said.

He stressed that the move was a matter of “when, not if”, but would be weighed against whether the Palestinian territories could become a viable and legitimate state.

On Sunday, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said that Australia will recognise a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly in September.

“A two-state solution is humanity’s best hope to break the cycle of violence in the Middle East and to bring an end to the conflict, suffering and starvation in Gaza,” he said on Monday.

icon-facebook icon-twitter icon-whatsapp