Wednesday, October 29, 2025 - Israeli strikes in Gaza have killed at least 20 people after Israel accused Hamas of violating the US-brokered ceasefire deal and staging the discovery of a deceased hostage.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered the military to
carry out “immediate, powerful strikes in the Gaza Strip,” his office
announced, a decision that was communicated to the US
The Israeli military claimed that Hamas attacked Israeli
troops with RPG and sniper fire east of the "yellow line" in the
Rafah area of southern Gaza. Defense Minister Israel Katz stated that Hamas
would pay a “heavy price” for the attack on Israel Defense Forces (IDF)
soldiers and vowed a response “with great force.”
Soon after the order, Israeli strikes began across the
territory. An Israeli strike in the Al-Sabra neighborhood of Gaza City killed
at least three women and a man, while in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip
at least five people were killed, including two children and a woman.
The director of Al Shifa hospital also reported multiple
strikes near the facility in northern Gaza.
Hamas denounced the “criminal bombardment” by Israel, which
it claimed violated the ceasefire agreement, and denied attacking IDF soldiers,
though it maintained its commitment to the truce.
Earlier on Tuesday, October 28, Netanyahu’s office said Hamas
was in “clear violation” of the ceasefire after returning remains to Israel
that did not belong to any of the 13 hostages still unaccounted for.
Adding to the controversy, the IDF released a drone video
that it claims shows Hamas operatives burying a body wrapped in a white cloth
in Gaza City and then staging its discovery in front of the Red Cross.
The nearly 15-minute clip appears to show three men dragging
the shroud, covering it with dirt, and then uncovering it moments later as Red
Cross officials arrive on the scene. The military asserted this was an attempt
by Hamas to “create a false impression of efforts to locate the bodies” of the
remaining deceased hostages.
The Red Cross responded by saying its team was “not aware
that a deceased person had been placed there prior to their arrival,” calling
the staged recovery “unacceptable” when so many families are anxiously waiting
for news. The organization stated it agreed to operate as an intermediary “in
good faith” despite the challenging situation in Gaza.
Following Israel’s decision to carry out new strikes, the
armed wing of Hamas announced it would postpone the handover of a hostage’s
body recovered in southern Gaza, citing Israel’s “violations.”
The militant group warned that any Israeli escalation would
“hinder search and excavation operations and the retrieval of bodies” of the
deceased Israeli hostages.
Hamas had been scheduled to transfer the remains of a
deceased hostage pulled from a tunnel in Khan Younis.
The recovery of a second body in Nuseirat, found in the
rubble of a building from an Israeli rescue operation in June 2024, has also
raised fresh questions, as the location has been geolocated to the same
building, despite Israel and the US denying that hostages were killed during
that mission.

0 Comments