Israeli attack on a school turned shelter in Gaza kills dozens, health officials say
We are continuing our live coverage of the latest developments in the Middle East, with a particular focus on Israel’s war on Gaza.
An Israeli strike killed dozens early on Monday, including people sleeping in a school turned shelter, according to local health officials. Gaza’s civil defence says the death toll has risen to 33, the Associated Press reports.
The strike targeted Fahmi al-Jarjawi School, where families had been seeking refuge from ongoing Israeli bombardments. More than 55 people were injured in the attack, according to Fahmy Awad, head of the ministry’s emergency service.
Israel’s military said it targeted militants operating from the school. In joint statement with the security agency, Shin Bet, it said the school “was used by the terrorists to plan and gather intelligence in order to execute terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians and [army] troops”.
The UN agency for Palestinian refugees said Gaza’s shelters are “overwhelmed with displaced people desperately seeking safety”, and “no place is safe and no area has been spared from hostilities”.
Key events
Al Jazeera reports that the Hamas-led government media office in Gaza has described an earlier Israeli attack on school being used as a shelter as a “brutal massacre.”
It claimed that 18 children were among the dead, and described the attack as “a direct extension of the crime of ethnic cleansing and genocide.”
The statement added:
Medical staff are under tremendous pressure, face a severe shortage of medical supplies, the closure of crossings to the wounded and sick, and the prevention of the entry of fuel, food, medicine, and treatment, exacerbating the humanitarian catastrophe in the Gaza Strip.
Al Jazeera has been banned from operating inside Israel by Benjamin Netanyahu’s government.
Around 1000 ultra-nationalist Israelis entered the al-Aqsa mosque compound to celebrate Jerusalem Day, Al Jazeera English reports.
The annual Jerusalem Day march is taking place today, which marks Israel’s capture of East Jerusalem.
This morning, far-right Israeli national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir visited the compound – which Palestinians see as a provocation, according to the Associated Press.
In a video from the site, Ben-Gvir said he had “ascended to the Temple Mount for Jerusalem Day, and prayed for victory in the war” in Gaza, triggered by Hamas’s 7 October attack. He also wished for the success of the newly appointed head of the Shin Bet – Maj Gen David Zini.
עליתי להר הבית לרגל יום ירושלים, והתפללתי לניצחון במלחמה, להשבת כל חטופינו ולהצלחת ראש השב”כ החדש המיועד – האלוף דוד זיני. יום ירושלים שמח! pic.twitter.com/Hhz8PVzms7
— איתמר בן גביר (@itamarbengvir) May 26, 2025
Negev and Galilee minister Yitzhak Vaserlauf and Knesset member Yitzhak Kreuzer were among the figures who accompanied Ben-Gvir’s visit.
The site is Islam’s third-holiest and a symbol of Palestinian national identity. Known to Jewish people as the Temple Mount, it is also Judaism’s holiest place, though Jewish people are prohibited from praying there.
Jordan has condemned Ben-Gvir’s visit to the al-Aqsa mosque compound. “The practices of this extremist minister and his continued incursions into the blessed al-Aqsa mosque … do not negate the fact that East Jerusalem is an occupied city over which Israel has no sovereignty,” said a statement from the foreign ministry of Jordan.
The Palestinian delegation has won the right to fly their flag at the World Health Organization. The proposal, brought by China, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and others, at the global agency’s annual assembly in Geneva on Monday passed with 95 in favour and four against – Israel, Hungary, Czech Republic and Germany – and 27 abstentions.
The Palestinian envoy hopes it will lead to greater recognition within the United Nations and beyond. Ibrahim Khraishi, Palestinian ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, told Reuters: “It is symbolic and one act but a sign that we are part of an international community to help on health needs. I hope we will soon have full membership of the WHO and all UN forums.”
This comes as last week, Palestinians won the right to receive notifications under the WHO’s International Health Regulations – a set of global rules for monitoring outbreaks.
The Israeli military has said it has conducted strikes on more than 200 targets over the past 48 hours.
According to the Jersusalem Post, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) as part of Operation “Gideon’s Chariots”, said they have attacked terrorists, weapons depots, sniper posts, tunnel shafts and “other terrorist infrastructure” over the weekend.
This comes as an Israeli strike killed dozens early on Monday, including people sleeping in a school turned shelter. The military said it targeted militants operating from the school, which they claim “was used by the terrorists to plan and gather intelligence in order to execute terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians and [army] troops”.
A US-backed NGO has said it is to distribute aid in Gaza, despite its head walking out after saying that the operation could not fulfil its mission in a way that adhered to “humanitarian principles”.
Yesterday, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation’s (GHF) director Jake Wood announced his resignation, citing concerns of its “neutrality, impartiality, and independence”.
Now, the GHF said in a statement that it is to launch direct aid delivery, with the aim of reaching one million Palestinians by the end of the week.
Al Jazeera reports that the NGO said it then plans to “scale rapidly to serve the full population in the weeks ahead”.
The GHF, which is also backed by Israel, has been brought in to distribute food, medicine and other vital supplies. However, aid has been blocked by Israel for two months, and has only started to be allowed “minimally” last week – with some reports saying few supplies have reached the population.
Commenting on Wood’s resignation, the GHF said it is “disappointed” but will continue to try to get aid into the region.
Here are some of the latest images being sent to us over the newswires from Gaza, where Palestinians are in mourning after an Israeli bomb on a school turned shelter killed 36 people, including children.
Police have been deployed near the walls of Jerusalem’s Old City, according to the Associated Press, ahead of an annual event that is due to take place to mark Israel’s capture of East Jerusalem.
This is the second Jerusalem Day that Israel has marked since the start of the war in Gaza. Jerusalem Day, or “Yom Yerushalayim” in Hebrew, commemorates what Israel considers the reunification of the city under its authority in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.
Annually, thousands of Israeli nationalists march through the streets of Jerusalem and its annexed Old City. The route will ultimately take them to the Western Wall – the last remnant of the sacred Second Temple.
Jerusalem Day celebration events started the night before, with a crowd unfurling a massive Israeli flag on Sunday in the plaza facing the Western Wall.
However, in previous years some attendees have been known to shout inflammatory and racist slogans and break out into fights, and authorities sometimes ask Palestinian businesses within the Old City to close for the march.
Israeli attack on a school turned shelter in Gaza kills dozens, health officials say
We are continuing our live coverage of the latest developments in the Middle East, with a particular focus on Israel’s war on Gaza.
An Israeli strike killed dozens early on Monday, including people sleeping in a school turned shelter, according to local health officials. Gaza’s civil defence says the death toll has risen to 33, the Associated Press reports.
The strike targeted Fahmi al-Jarjawi School, where families had been seeking refuge from ongoing Israeli bombardments. More than 55 people were injured in the attack, according to Fahmy Awad, head of the ministry’s emergency service.
Israel’s military said it targeted militants operating from the school. In joint statement with the security agency, Shin Bet, it said the school “was used by the terrorists to plan and gather intelligence in order to execute terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians and [army] troops”.
The UN agency for Palestinian refugees said Gaza’s shelters are “overwhelmed with displaced people desperately seeking safety”, and “no place is safe and no area has been spared from hostilities”.