The Israel-Ahamas War continues after Trump-Nanyahu meetings, since 15 civilians killed at the Gaza Health Clinic
By
Elizabeth Palmer
Senior foreign correspondent
Elizabeth Palmer is the senior foreign correspondent of News themezone. It has its headquarters in the News themezone London office and reports on important events in Europe and the Middle East. Palmer was based in Tokyo, and before that in Moscow, for News themezone.
Read complete biography
/ News themezone
The family of the Israeli hostages awaits their liberation
Tel Aviv – After five days of negotiations in Qatar and Two meetings in Washington Between the prime minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu and President Trump, there was still no high fire agreement to Loop On Thursday, while Netanyahu prepared to leave Washington to fly back home.
At the beginning of the week, the Trump administration seemed optimistic that an agreement could be made as soon as the weekend. However, on Wednesday night, a senior Israeli official said it could still take 20 more days to reach an agreement.
Meanwhile, Gaza remains a war zone, since the Israeli army continues to pursue its offensive against the terrorist group designated by the United States and Israel Hamas.
Israel has not allowed international journalists to enter Gaza since the war began, but in the last 24 hours, huge columns of smoke by explosions have been visible from the Israel-Gaza border.
The strikes hit goals throughout the Palestinian territory on Wednesday night and Thursday morning. Hospital workers said at least 55 Palestinians were killed.
In an incident in Deir Al-Balah, in the center of Gaza, 15 people were killed while waiting for nutritional supplements in a clinic led by the United States Charity project, the organization said. Most of them were women and children.

The beneficial organization said in a statement that the missile had hit “directly in front of the Altayara Hopet Hope health clinic, killing 15 civilians, including 10 children and two women, and hurting many more. The strike occurred when patients had gathered outside the clinic, waiting for their opening to receive malnutrition treatment, infections, chronic diseases and more.”
“Hope project health clinics are a place of refuge in Gaza, where people bring their young children, women access pregnancy and postpartum care, people receive treatment for malnutrition and more,” said Rabih Torbay, president and CEO of Project Hope, in the statement. “This morning, innocent families were attacked merciless while stopping in the row waiting for the doors to open.”
Torbay described him as “a shameless violation of the international humanitarian law, and a marked reminder that no one and no place is safe in Gaza, even while high fire conversations continue,” adding: “This cannot continue.”
The surveillance video of an adjacent business shows two young people passing the group, since suddenly it is beaten.
Israel’s defense forces said that the goal of the strike was a “terrorist” who had participated in the Orchestrated attack in Hamas on October 7, 2023, which caused the war in Gaza. The IDF added that he regretted any damage to the unwanted people and said he was investigating the incident.

“This is just a tragedy. It is a violation of the humanitarian law. No child who expects food and medicine should face the risk of bombing,” said Dr. Mithqal Colonhaha, manager of the Hope Project project, who had been in another clinic when the attack occurred.
The FDI said that the troops have been operating in Khan Younis, in southern Gaza, to dismantle more Hamas infrastructure this week, which supposedly includes a tunnel, missile launch sites and arms storage facilities.
On Thursday, the FDI announced that a soldier was killed during an attempted kidnapping in Khan Younis. That carries the number of Israeli military personnel killed in Gaza only this week to six.
In the last three weeks, 18 Israeli soldiers have died, which makes it one of the most mortal periods for IDF in months, and probably increase domestic pressure on Netanyahu to accept a high fire.
- War
- Hamas
- Israel
- Donald Trump
- Loop
- Palestinians
- Middle East
- Benjamin Neta Nyahu
Elizabeth Palmer
Elizabeth Palmer is the senior foreign correspondent of News themezone. It has its headquarters in the News themezone London office and reports on important events in Europe and the Middle East. Palmer was based in Tokyo, and before that in Moscow, for News themezone.


