Medical sources confirmed Tuesday evening that Bakr Abu Mour was killed and another civilian wounded following an Israeli drone strike targeting the town of Al-Fukhari, east of Khan Younis in southern Gaza.

Emergency teams at Nasser Medical Complex transported both the fatality and the injured to the hospital, noting that an Israeli military drone had bombed the area.

The complex also reported that several civilians were wounded by Israeli drone fire in the Ma’an area, east of Khan Younis, with some injuries described as critical.

It is worth mentioning that Nasser Medical Complex received the remains of 45 Palestinians released by Israeli authorities as part of the latest exchange deal.

|Nine Palestinians Confirmed Dead In Gaza; 250 bodies recovered|

The remains were received in the presence of medical staff and relevant officials, who will begin the process of identification and necessary procedures.

The ceasefire, brokered by international mediators, was intended to facilitate a phased Israeli withdrawal and allow displaced families to return. Yet violations persist. Israeli forces continue to shell parts of Khan Younis and maintain control over large sections of Gaza City and Rafah—effectively nullifying the promise of safe return.

|Army Kills Three Palestinians, Two Die from Wounds, in Gaza|

Humanitarian conditions remain dire. Aid convoys are routinely blocked, and civilians risk death simply trying to reach food or medical care.

Since May 2025 alone, more than 2,600 Palestinians have reportedly been killed while attempting to access basic necessities.

The situation on the ground reveals a grim reality: the ceasefire seems to exist on paper, but not in practice. Without international enforcement and accountability, Gaza remains under siege—its people caught between rubble and sniper fire, ceasefire declarations, and drone strikes.

Since October 7, 2023, Israeli attacks have killed at least 67,869 Palestinians and wounded more than 170,000. Thousands remain trapped under rubble or stranded in inaccessible areas, as rescue teams face ongoing obstruction and bombardment.