ALBAWABA - Following a horrifying night in Gaza's Rafah, the Israeli Occupation forces investigate the strikes on a camp near an UNRWA facility, which killed at least 40 people and injured hundreds.
The Military Advocate General, Maj.-Gen. Yifat Tomer Yerushalmi said the IDF strike on Rafah on Monday was under investigation, the Jerusalem Post reported.
In what is known as the "Tents Massacre", a tent camp, housing thousands of Gazans, was targeted via several Israeli bombs causing the vast majority of the area to go up in flames.
Gaza Ministry of Health announced Sunday that the Israeli army forces committed a new "massacre" in the camp, which is located in a supposedly safe area and where there are tens of thousands of displaced people, Al Jazeera reported.
Posts of photos and videos shared on social media showed charred bodies and beheaded babies and dismembered bodies due to the severity of the Israeli attack.
The latest Israeli crime sparked global outcry as humanitarian groups called for putting an end to the months-long catastrophe in Gaza that killed more than 36,050 and injured 81,026 people.
Earlier today, AMNESTY International called for the International Criminal Court (ICC) to investigate the tragedy in Rafah.
"Even if Israeli forces had intended to target legitimate military objectives in the vicinity of the three attacks, the evidence indicates that the attacks did not distinguish between military objectives and civilian objects and as such would be indiscriminate. Indiscriminate attacks that kill or injure civilians, or destroy or damage civilian objects, are war crimes," AMNESTY stated.