Gaza City, Palestinian Territories — White body bags littered the floor and mourning filled the air after a school housing displaced Palestinians was struck with Israeli missiles Saturday — a horrific and increasingly common sight in the Gaza war.
Dawn prayers were shattered by the early morning triple air strike from Israeli warplanes, which gutted Al-Tabieen religious school and mosque in Gaza City.
In the hellish aftermath, body parts were strewn around the rubble and charred, bloodied bodies slumped in the wreckage of the two-story complex.
Grim-faced volunteers piled corpses in blood-stained blankets into an ambulance, as seriously wounded men lay groaning on the ground.
Gaza’s civil defense agency said at least 93 people were killed, 17 of them women and children, making it one of the war’s deadliest strikes.
Israel’s military disputed the death toll, saying the school was targeted with “precision munitions” because it “served as an active Hamas and Islamic Jihad military facility”.
Such incidents have become a pattern in recent weeks. According to an AFP tally, at least 14 schools sheltering Gaza’s displaced have been hit since July 6, killing more than 280 people.
“Peaceful people — women, children, and youths — were performing the Fajr prayer as usual when suddenly a missile hit them,” said Abu Wassim, who lives nearby and came to survey the scene.
“They were reduced to remains. Children were torn apart, and women were burned. What can we say or do? What is in our power?”
– ‘They were just praying’ –
As the sun climbed and mourners gathered, one man stroked the face of a dead child shrouded in a plastic body bag.
“They dropped a missile on them while they were just praying. Fear God, people! Fear God, Arabs!” a woman wailed over the body.
Another man looked lost as he held a small corpse wrapped in a blanket. Nearby, six body bags lay on the ground, three of them children. Tattered Korans were piled on a window ledge.
“We woke up before dawn to the sound of a strike,” said Sakr, a resident from the neighborhood who gave just one name.
“We headed to the site and found body remains of civilians who were peacefully performing prayers. We found bodies of children scattered in the street.”
Another man said: “You can’t even recognize the bodies, there were scattered remains.
“The ones who were struck are displaced people taking shelter in a school. What’s their fault? What have they done wrong?”
Mohammad Al-Mughayyir, director of the supply and equipment department of Gaza’s civil defense service, told AFP that six schools in Gaza City had been targeted in the past week alone.
Israeli military spokesperson Lieutenant-Colonel Nadav Shoshani said that about 20 Hamas and Islamic militants were operating from the Al-Tabieen complex.
“The compound, and the mosque that was struck within it, served as an active Hamas and Islamic Jihad military facility,” he posted on X.
Later on Saturday, Gaza civil defense agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal told journalists that the strike “directly targeted” two floors of the school.
The strike hit “the upper floor housing women and children and the ground floor that was used for prayers by the displaced people,” he said.
Genocide, one neighborhood at the time
An independent, UN-appointed rights expert accused Israel of committing “genocide” in its Gaza war after an Israeli strike targeting a school on Saturday killed 93 people, according to local rescuers.
“Israel is genociding the Palestinians one neighborhood at the time, one hospital at the time, one school at the time, one refugee camp at the time, one safe zone at the time,” Francesca Albanese, the United Nations special rapporteur on the rights situation in the Palestinian territories, said on social media platform X.
Israel was carrying out such strikes against Palestinians using “US and European weapons”, Albanese said.
“May the Palestinians forgive us for our collective inability to protect them,” she added.
In a report issued in March, Albanese said there were “reasonable grounds” to determine that Israel had committed several acts of “genocide” in its war in Gaza.
Israel, which has long been highly critical of Albanese and her mandate, denounced her report as an “obscene inversion of reality”.
She has said that “of course” she also condemned Hamas for its attack on Israel which triggered 10 months of war in the Gaza Strip.
Special rapporteurs are appointed by the United Nations Human Rights Council but do not speak on behalf of the UN.