Current:Home > reviewsA Palestinian baby girl, born 17 days ago during Gaza war, is killed with brother in Israeli strike -WorldMoney
A Palestinian baby girl, born 17 days ago during Gaza war, is killed with brother in Israeli strike
View
Date:2025-04-24 12:22:29
RAFAH, Gaza (AP) — She was born amid war, in a hospital with no electricity in a southern Gaza city that has been bombarded daily. Her family named her al-Amira Aisha — “Princess Aisha.” She didn’t complete her third week before she died, killed in an Israeli airstrike that crushed her family home Tuesday.
Her extended family was asleep when the strike leveled their apartment building in Rafah before dawn, said Suzan Zoarab, the infant’s grandmother and survivor of the blast. Hospital officials said 27 people were killed, among them Amira and her 2-year old brother, Ahmed.
“Just 2 weeks old. Her name hadn’t even been registered,” Suzan said, her voice quivering as she spoke from the side of her son’s hospital bed, who was also injured in the blast.
The family tragedy comes as the Palestinian death toll in Gaza nears 20,000, according to the Health Ministry. The vast majority have been killed in Israeli airstrikes which have relentlessly pounded the besieged Gaza enclave for two and a half months, often destroying homes with families inside.
The war was triggered when militants from Hamas, which rules Gaza, and other groups broke into southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing some 1,200 people, mostly Israeli civilians, and abducting 240 others.
The Zoarab family were among the few Palestinians in Gaza who remained in their own homes. Israel’s onslaught, one of the most destructive of the 21st century, has displaced some 1.9 million people — more than 80% of the territory’s population — sending them in search of shelter in U.N. schools, hospitals, tent camps or on the street.
But the Zoarabs stayed in their three-story apartment building. Two of Suzan’s sons had apartments on higher floors, but the extended family had been crowding together on the ground floor, believing it would be safer. When the strike hit, it killed at least 13 members of the Zoarab family, including a journalist, Adel, as well as displaced people sheltering nearby.
“We found the whole house had collapsed over us,” Suzan said. Rescue workers pulled them and other victims, living and dead, from the wreckage.
Israel says it is striking Hamas targets across Gaza and blames the militants for civilian deaths because they operate in residential areas. But it rarely explains its targeting behind specific strikes.
Princess Aisha was only 17 days old. She was born on Dec. 2 at the Emirati Red Crescent Hospital in Rafah while there was no power at the facility, Suzan said — less than 48 hours after bombardment of the town and the rest of Gaza resumed following the collapse of a week-long cease-fire between Israel and Hamas.
“She was born in a very difficult situation,” Suzan said.
As of Monday, 28 of Gaza’s 36 hospitals across the Gaza Strip were reported as out of service, the U.N said, while eight remaining health facilities were only partially operational. Amid the devastation, some 50,000 Palestinian women are pregnant, the WHO said.
Princess Aisha and Ahmed’s parents survived — their mother, Malak, with burns and bruises on her face, their father, Mahmoud, with a fractured pelvis. As Mahmoud lay in his bed at Rafah’s Kuwati Hospital, Suzan brought him the two children for a final goodbye before they were buried.
Mahmoud grimaced with pain as he pulled himself up to cradle Ahmed, wrapped in a white burial shroud, before falling back and weeping. His wife held Princess Aisha, also bundled in white cloth, up to him.
Dozens of mourners held a funeral prayer Tuesday morning outside the hospital in Rafah, before taking Princess Aisha, Ahmed and the others killed in the strike for burial in a nearby cemetery
“I couldn’t protect my grandchildren” Suzan said. “I lost them in the blink of an eye.”
—-
Magdy reported from Cairo.
veryGood! (9565)
Related
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- The vehicle has been found but the suspect still missing in the fatal shooting of a Maryland judge
- Georgetown women's basketball coach Tasha Butts dies after battle with breast cancer
- Football provides a homecoming and hope in Lahaina, where thousands of homes are gone after wildfire
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Don Laughlin, resort-casino owner and architect behind Nevada town, is dead at 92
- Two weeks ago she was thriving. Now, a middle-class mom in Gaza struggles to survive
- Juvenile arrested in California weeks after shooting outside Denver bar injured 5 people
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Norma makes landfall near Mexico's Los Cabos resorts
Ranking
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Counting down the NBA's top 30 players for 2023-24 season: Nos. 30-16
- Lupita Nyong'o Pens Message to Her “Heartbreak” Supporters After Selema Masekela Breakup
- Andy Reid after Travis Kelce's big day: Taylor Swift 'can stay around all she wants'
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Milwaukee comic shop looking to sell copy of first appearance of Spider-Man, book could go for $35K
- 20 years after shocking World Series title, ex-owner Jeffrey Loria reflects on Marlins tenure
- Dwindling fuel supplies for Gaza’s hospital generators put premature babies in incubators at risk
Recommendation
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
Winter forecast: A warmer North, wetter South because of El Nino, climate change
Michigan or Ohio State? Heisman in doubt? Five top college football Week 8 overreactions
Stock market today: Asian stocks fall as concerns rise over Israel-Hamas war and high yields
Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
Clemson coach Dabo Swinney apologizes for mental-health joke after loss at Miami
IAEA officials say Fukushima’s ongoing discharge of treated radioactive wastewater is going well
Georgia man charged with murder after his girlfriend’s dead body is found in a suitcase