A Palestinian student was asleep in his tent at a hospital when an Israeli strike brought an inferno
UNB
Publish: 17 Oct 2024, 02:26 PM
DEIR
AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip, Oct 17(AP/UNB) - Shaban al-Dalu was sleeping in his tent
in a central Gaza hospital's courtyard, still recuperating from wounds from an
Israeli strike on a mosque a week earlier, when a new strike hit, setting off
an inferno.
The 19-year-old
university student and his 38-year-old mother, Alaa al-Dalu, were among five
people killed as the blaze ripped through a tent camp sheltering hundreds of
Palestinian families in the courtyard of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in the
central city of Deir al-Balah. Dozens of others, including children, were
severely burned.
Al-Dalu and his mother
were sleeping in the tent along with his father and three siblings when the
strike hit at around 1:30 a.m. on Monday. Mohammed al-Dalu, his fifth sibling,
was sleeping nearby at his vendor's table when the explosion jolted him awake.
He found his father and uncle, who lived in a neighboring tent, struggling to
pull their families out of the fire.
The father, Ahmed
al-Dalu, said he managed to rescue two of his sons and his daughter, but not
his wife or eldest child, Shaban. "My son was being burned in front of
me," he said, speaking at the hospital with burns on his face. "I
accepted the will of God in every sense of the word."
The Israeli military
said it targeted militants hiding out among the displaced, without providing
evidence to support its claim. It was the seventh Israeli attack on this
hospital compound since March; three of them occurred in September, according
to Doctors without Borders, which supports the hospital.
The war began when Hamas
attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly
civilians, and abducting around 250 hostages. Israel's retaliatory offensive
has killed over 42,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry, which
says women and children make up more than half the fatalities. It has displaced
more than 1.9 million of Gaza's 2.3 million people, often multiple times.
Over the course of the
war, the military has repeatedly raided hospitals and struck crowded shelters
and tent camps, alleging that Hamas fighters were using them as staging grounds
for attacks, without showing evidence.
Monday's strike brought
chaos at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital, as firefighters and displaced people
attempted for hours to put out the blaze, using small fire extinguishers and
buckets of water. Several secondary explosions went off, but their cause was
not known. The courtyard was left covered in burned-out wreckage of shed and
tents, made of wood and plastic sheets, with people's belongings inside.
"It's a scene of
devastation. Tents caught on fire while people were sleeping," said Eliza
Sabatini, a nurse with Doctors Without Borders who was working at the hospital.
More than 60 people,
including 10 children and 8 women, were wounded, most suffering severe burns.
One man sobbed as he carried a toddler with a bandaged head in his arms.
Another small child with a bandaged leg was given a blood transfusion on the
floor of the packed Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza, where many wounded were
rushed.
Shaban al-Dalu, who
would have turned 20 on Wednesday, memorized the Quran when he was young and
cared for his siblings.
A university student
studying computer science, he would post videos on social media telling people
his family's displacement stories and his dream of leaving Gaza. In a video
posted in March, filmed from their tent in the hospital's courtyard, he said
his family fled their home in Gaza City's Rimal neighborhood just after the war
began in October last year. Since then, he said, they had moved five times to
escape fighting.
"We live in a very
hard circumstance," he said in the video. He launched an online fundraiser
hoping to make enough money to get his family to Egypt. By Wednesday, it had
raised more than $24,200 - though no one has been been able to leave Gaza since
Israeli troops seized the crossing with Egypt in May.
"I used to have big
dreams, but the war has ruined them," he wrote on his GoFundMe page.
"Time feels like it's stopped in Gaza, and we're stuck in a never-ending
nightmare."
On Oct. 6, he was
reciting the Quran in a mosque near the hospital when an Israeli airstrike hit
the place of worship, his brother Mohammed said. Shaban suffered a head wound
that required 11 stitches and was still recuperating in the tent when Monday's
strike hit.
Shaban's father and the
three siblings in the tent have all been left severely burned, some up to 70%
of their body, Mohammed said. The body of his 11-year-old brother Adbel-Rahman
is completely covered in bandages, and his sister's back and the left side of
her face were badly burned, he said.
Shaban's uncle,
Abdel-Hayy al-Dalu, recalled how the families had thought they were safe when
they arrived at the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital.
"We built tents -
me and my brother - and sheltered here," he said. "We ruled out that
it will be bombed since it's a hospital."
After rescuing his wife
and two daughters, Abdel-Hayy rushed to his brother's tent, hoping to save his
nephew and sister-in-law.
"We couldn't help
them," he said. "We were helpless."
END/UNB/AP/PR