Hamas claimed that dozens of Palestinians were killed and injured after an Israeli rocket attack hit an ambulance convoy.
Hamas-affiliated Al-Aqsa television quoted Gaza’s health ministry as saying that many people were killed on Friday when the vehicles were transporting seriously injured people in Gaza.
Ashraf Al-Qudra, spokesman for the Ministry of Health, said earlier that seriously injured Palestinians in need of urgent treatment are being sent to Egypt from Gaza City and the north south.
Incredibly graphic images circulating online, believed to show the aftermath of the attack near Al-Shifa Hospital, showed a scene of devastation.
Bodies, mostly men and boys, lie scattered among damaged ambulances on a street. Desperate civilians drag limp bodies away, some leaving a trail of blood.
A journalist from the AFP news agency said at the scene that he saw several bodies next to a damaged ambulance. MailOnline has traced the images to Al-Shifa Hospital.
Photos of the blast site appear to match the images.
Israel said it was investigating reports of the attack. Asked by the AFP news agency, the IDF said it could not answer or confirm any specific questions at this time.
Incredibly graphic images circulating online, believed to show the aftermath of the attack near Al-Shifa Hospital, showed a scene of devastation. Photos from the hospital appear to match the footage, which shows desperate civilians carrying away the wounded

Palestinians pull an ambulance at the entrance of Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on November 3 after an ambulance convoy was hit

Palestinians look at damage to an ambulance after an ambulance convoy was hit, at the entrance of Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on November 3

Israel, which has accused Hamas of hiding command centers and tunnel entrances at al-Shifa hospital, last month ordered all civilians to leave the northern Gaza Strip and its army surrounded the area on Thursday. Hamas and Al-Shifa hospital authorities have denied the facility is being used as a base by militants.
Al-Qudra said in a statement: “We notified the Red Cross of the transport of a convoy of injured people in ambulances from Al-Shifa Hospital in accordance with international law.”
“At the hospital gate and then on Ansar Square, the crew targeted the convoy at more than one location outside Al-Shifa Hospital.”
No victims were named in the statement.
Al-Shifa Hospital is located in the northern Gaza Strip, which is surrounded by Israeli forces and near a coastal road, one of the region’s two main roads that run north to south.
The Palestinian Red Crescent released separate images of damaged ambulances. An air strike is said to have hit the hospital at 16:30 local time (14:30 GMT).
It said ambulances had just returned from transporting “injured people to the Rafah border,” where a limited number of people were allowed to leave the Gaza Strip.
The hospital’s director, Muhammad Abu Silmeyeh, described the situation as dire.
“We have run out of medical supplies, we cannot handle the large number of casualties and in a few hours the generators will stop,” he told Al Jazeera. “The hospital mortuary is completely full.
“We keep the dead in our freezer trucks,” he added.
He said thousands of victims have been cared for at the facility and now there is no power.
“If you want to kill what’s left of us, let us know. “If this hospital collapses, the entire healthcare sector will collapse,” he said.
Al-Shifa Hospital is severely overcrowded, with bed occupancy at 164 percent, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).


Incredibly graphic images circulating online, believed to show the aftermath of the attack near Al-Shifa Hospital, showed a scene of devastation. The clip shows a man outside the hospital reacting with horror to the scenes outside

Hamas claimed that dozens of Palestinians were killed and injured after an Israeli rocket attack hit an ambulance convoy. In the photo: Smoke rises over Gaza City on November 3
Some 16 hospitals in Gaza are no longer working due to strike damage and fuel shortages, the health ministry said.
The WHO warned on Wednesday that the fuel shortage “puts the lives of the injured and other patients at immediate risk”.
According to the health ministry, more than 23,500 people have been injured in Gaza’s four-week war, while the death toll has exceeded 9,200.
On October 7, attacks by Hamas militants in Israel killed around 1,400 people, sparking the war.
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Elizabeth Cabrera is an author and journalist who writes for The Fashion Vibes. With a talent for staying up-to-date on the latest news and trends, Elizabeth is dedicated to delivering informative and engaging articles that keep readers informed on the latest developments.