The mourners cried for the bodies of their loved ones with drones that come out early on Tuesday, such as .
The Ministry of Health in Gaza said that at least 404 people, including many children, have been killed in the renewed Israeli attacks, and added that the toll is expected to increase since many victims remain under the rubble.
The Australian doctor Mohammed Mustafa described the scenes inside the Al-Ahli hospital in Instagram: “We have worked throughout the night. We have not stopped. The bombing has been without stopping. We have run out of ketamine, we have run out of propofol, we have run out of analgesics.”
“We cannot sedate anyone. We cannot give them any analgesia. When we intubate people, they wake up and drown because we have no sedation. There are seven girls who amputate their legs, there is no anesthesia,” he said.
“It was most women and children burned, from head to toe, missing limbs, missing heads.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that the wave of mortal strikes in Gaza was “only the beginning” of the renewed Israeli action in the Palestinian territory.
“Hamas has already felt the strength of our arm in the last 24 hours. And I want to promise him, and they, this is just the beginning,” he said in a televised direction.
“Military pressure is essential for the release of additional hostages.”
Responding to the strikes, Hamas accused Israel of chasing “defenseless civilians” and annuling the high fire agreement, leaving the fate of 59 hostages that still remain in Gaza uncertain.
‘Bodies and limbs on the ground’
“They opened the fire of hell again in Gaza,” said Ramez Al-Amarin, 25, a displaced Palestinian who lives in a tent in the southeast of the city of Gaza.
“There are bodies and limbs on the ground, and the injured cannot find any doctor to treat them,” he said.
Amarin said he transported several of his neighbors’ children to the hospital, but there were no beds for them.
He said he didn’t “expect the war to return because Trump said he doesn’t want wars.”

Israel has promised to continue fighting until the return of all hostages. Fountain: AP / Jehad Alshrafi
‘Gaza is a real hell’
“There are bombings everywhere today. I felt that Gaza is a true hell,” said Jihan Nahhal, 43, a mother who lives in the city of Northwest of Gaza, and added that some of her relatives were injured or killed in the strikes.
Nahhal said he listened in which they fast during the hours of the day.
“Suddenly, there were great explosions as if it were the first day of war,” he said.
“There were cries and furious fires everywhere, and most of them were children.”
“It’s a true extermination war,” he said, condemning Israel.
The families in Deir Al-Balah inspected the damage to their homes when a woman held a child looking shaken in her arms.
“This is my grandson. He was rescued from under the rubble,” said Um Abdullah Masmah.
Standing in the midst of rubble, her neighbor, Eyad Sabah, said she felt that “I went to the square one, back to zero.”
“Tonight reminded us of the return of the war once again,” he said.
“How long will this situation continue?”
Much of Gaza is now in ruins after the attack of October 7, 2023 of Hamas, in which more than 1,200 people, including about 30 children, were killed and more than 200 hostages, according to the Israeli government.
According to the Ministry of Health in Gaza, more than 48,000 people have been killed in Gaza since October 7, according to the Ministry of Health in Gaza.
In the long -standing conflict between Israel and Hamas.
-With additional reports from the France-Presse agency