Israeli forces conducted new attacks across the Gaza Strip on Monday, killing five Palestinians and injuring others in strikes that targeted displacement areas, residential zones, and the vicinity of medical facilities, despite the “ceasefire” agreement that took effect on 11 October 2025.

Four Palestinians were killed on Monday evening when Israeli forces bombed a tent sheltering displaced families in the Al‑Mawasi area west of Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.

Earlier in the day, Naji Suleiman Ibrahim Qdeih died from wounds sustained in a previous Israeli strike on the same coastal displacement zone.

A fourteen‑year‑old boy was moderately wounded after being targeted by an Israeli “quadcopter” drone near the Bani Suheila roundabout east of Khan Younis. Witnesses said the drone fired directly at the child while he was in a public area.

In addition, Israeli occupation forces detonated and bombarded multiple residential buildings east of Khan Younis.

In the north, Israeli warplanes launched several airstrikes around the Indonesian Hospital in Beit Lahia, triggering panic among displaced families sheltering nearby and among medical teams working inside the facility.

No casualties were immediately reported, but residents described scenes of fear and chaos as explosions shook the area.

In a separate attack, Israeli soldiers shot a child in the head in Beit Lahia, inflicting life-threatening wounds.

The Gaza Strip remains in a state of near‑total collapse after more than two years of continuous bombardment.

Humanitarian agencies report that over 1.9 million Palestinians—nearly the entire population—remain displaced, many of them multiple times, with thousands sheltering in makeshift tents, schoolyards, and open areas such as Al‑Mawasi.

The World Health Organization and Gaza’s health authorities say that only a small fraction of hospitals remain partially functional, with many facilities operating without adequate electricity, fuel, or medical supplies.

Repeated strikes near hospitals—including Monday’s attack around the Indonesian Hospital—have forced medical teams to work under extreme danger.

Gaza’s civilian infrastructure has disintegrated. Water and sewage systems have failed in many areas, communications networks frequently collapse due to fuel shortages and damage, and UN agencies warn of famine‑level conditions, with food, clean water, and medicine severely limited.

These conditions have intensified even after the “ceasefire agreement,” as Israeli strikes and drone attacks continue to hit civilian areas.

Since the “ceasefire agreement” took effect on October 11, 2025, the Ministry reports that 422 Palestinians have been killed and 1,189 injured, while 684 bodies have been recovered from under rubble or previously inaccessible areas.

These figures confirm that Israeli attacks have continued across the Gaza Strip despite the “ceasefire” framework.

Since October 7, 2023, the cumulative toll has reached 71,388 Palestinians killed and 171,269 injured. The Health Ministry stresses that the real toll is higher, as many victims remain trapped under collapsed buildings or in areas rescue teams cannot access.