ALBAWABA - According to a statement by the Ministry of Health in Gaza, at least 2,750 Palestinians were killed by the Israeli strikes on the 10th day of the Israeli aggression on Gaza, while more than 9,700 people were injured.
In the West Bank, it added, 58 people were killed since October 7 and more than 1,250 injured in Israeli army shooting at protesters throughout the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, WAFA reported.
The interior ministry in Gaza issued a warning that the strip is on the brink of a humanitarian and environmental crisis as there are more than 1,000 bodies trapped under the rubble of the houses Israel destroyed during relentless attacks on civilians across Gaza.
The Ministry of Health reported that over 47 families in Gaza have been completely wiped out from the civil registry meaning that all these families have been killed during Israel's latest aggression on the strip.
The World Health Organization (WHO) reported that its Surveillance System for Attacks on Health Care has recorded 48 health attacks by the Israeli war machine since the beginning of the Israeli aggression on Gaza on October 7, including the deaths of 12 health workers and the injury of 20 others while on duty.
At least 12 staff members of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) were also killed.
WHO has reported 63 attacks on health in the West Bank, including obstruction of healthcare delivery, physical violence against health teams, detention of healthcare professionals and ambulances, and militarized search of health assets.
According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), all humanitarian agencies and personnel in the occupied Palestinian territories have faced major constraints in providing humanitarian assistance due to airstrikes, movement restrictions, and shortages of electricity, fuel, water, medicines, and other essential items.
The current state of insecurity prevents safe access to those in need and critical facilities such as warehouses.