Emergency service officials say that ten people, including six children, have been killed in the Israeli airstrike, waiting for water containers to fill water containers on Sunday.
His bodies were sent to Al-Awadh Hospital in Nuserat, in which 16 injured people, seven of them were also treated according to a doctor.
Eyewitnesses said that a drone fired a missile on a crowd of queues in a queue in a queue with a vacant Jerry compartment next to a water tanker in the heart of the Al-Nusrat refugee camp.
The Israeli army has been asked to comment.
The online unverterved footage shared after the strike showed blood children and lifeless bodies with screams of nervousness and frustration.
Residents reached the spot and were injured using private vehicles and donkeys.
The strike took place after the Israeli airstrikes in the Gaza Strip.
A spokesman for Gaza’s Civil Defense Agency said 19 other Palestinians were killed in three separate strikes on residential buildings in Central Gaza and Gaza city on Sunday.
Israel launched a military operation in Gaza on 7 October 2023 in response to the Hamas border attack, killing around 1,200 people and 251 others were taken hostage.
According to the Hamas-Interested Health Ministry, at least 57,882 people have been killed in Gaza since then.
Most of Gaza’s population has been displaced several times.
More than 90% of homes are estimated to be damaged or destroyed. Healthcare, water, hygiene and hygiene systems have collapsed, and lack of food, fuel, medicine and shelter.
This week, for the first time in 130 days, 75,000 liters of fuel was allowed in Gaza – “The United Nations said that the daily needs of the population and important civil aid operations”, the United Nations said.
Nine United Nations agencies warned on Saturday that Gaza’s fuel lack had reached “significant levels”, and if the fuel goes out, it would affect hospitals, water systems, hygiene networks and bakers.
The United Nations said, “Hospitals are already failing dark, maternity, newborn and intensive care units, and ambulances can no longer move forward.”