Al Mayadeen English

  • Ar
  • Es
  • x
Al Mayadeen English

Slogan

  • News
    • Politics
    • Economy
    • Sports
    • Arts&Culture
    • Health
    • Miscellaneous
    • Technology
    • Environment
  • Articles
    • Opinion
    • Analysis
    • Blog
    • Features
  • Videos
    • NewsFeed
    • Video Features
    • Explainers
    • TV
    • Digital Series
  • Infographs
  • In Pictures
  • • LIVE
News
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Sports
  • Arts&Culture
  • Health
  • Miscellaneous
  • Technology
  • Environment
Articles
  • Opinion
  • Analysis
  • Blog
  • Features
Videos
  • NewsFeed
  • Video Features
  • Explainers
  • TV
  • Digital Series
Infographs
In Pictures
  • Africa
  • Asia
  • Asia-Pacific
  • Europe
  • Latin America
  • MENA
  • Palestine
  • US & Canada
BREAKING
Israeli media reports injuries in ramming operation in al-Naqab.
Sheikh Daamoush: Zionists must remain worried, as they have committed a grave error.
Sheikh Daamoush: All concessions given by Lebanese government to date bore no fruit.
Sheikh Daamoush: It is the duty of the state to protect its citizens and sovereignty, government must push plans to that effect and refuse external pressures, diktats.
Sheikh Ali Daamoush: We are not concerned with any plans so long as enemy not abiding by ceasefire.
Israeli media says reports incoming of suspected ramming operation in Tal al-Sabe', al-Naqab.
Sheikh Daamoush: Sayyed Abou Ali's martyrdom will not undermine resistance or prevent it from continuing his plans.
Sheikh Daamoush: We announce today that Sayyed Abou Ali was one of the highest leaders who managed "People of Might" battle, bravely and successfully.
Sheikh Daamoush: Sayyed Tabatabai was a man of the field, present in all confrontations, and one of the architects of liberation and victory.
Hezbollah Executive Council head Sheikh Ali Daamoush delivers eulogy of martyred Commander Haitham Tabatabai, fellow martyrs.

'Some cut to many pieces, some burnt alive': Aabasan massacre horrors

  • By Al Mayadeen English
  • Source: The Guardian
  • 15 Jul 2024 10:44
  • 20 Shares
6 Min Read

Expressions of "there was no trace of my child," "blood was the only thing you could hear, see and smell," and "the street was a pool of blood" unravel the horrors of the Aabasan massacre.

Listen
  • x
  • A paramedic carries a child wounded during Israeli bombardment to the emergency ward at Nassr hospital in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, July 9, 2024. (AFP)
    A paramedic carries a Palestinian child wounded during Israeli bombardment to the emergency ward at the Nassr Hospital in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, July 9, 2024. (AFP)

Dozens of residents of Aabasan al-Kabira, located on the southeastern outskirts of Khan Younis in Gaza, were massacred by heavy bombs, which were dropped on civilians by Israeli warplanes. This is just one of thousands of similar massacres in recent months, through which Israeli occupation forces are turning Gaza into a lifeless region. 

"There was no trace of my child," "blood was the only thing you could hear, see and smell," and "The street was a pool of blood" are testimonies The Guardian reported from survivors of one of four harrowing massacres that occurred at or near schools housing forcibly displaced families over the course of four days last week.

I think this child survived.

Israel just bombed a UN school in Nusairat refugee camp and buried more children under rubble.

Gaza is a constant daily massacre. Please don't let the media distract you with propaganda about other events.

Keep focused. Keep sharing. pic.twitter.com/nEaSUns8i3

— Khalissee (@Kahlissee) July 14, 2024

On Saturday, an Israeli strike targeted a UNRWA-run school in the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza, where approximately 2,000 forcibly displaced individuals were taking shelter, resulting in the killing of 16 people.

On Sunday, an Israeli strike on a church-run school in Gaza City resulted in the killing of dozens, as reported by local sources.

Additionally, on Monday night, another UNRWA-run school in the al-Nuseirat camp was bombed by Israeli airstrikes, resulting in several casualties.

'There was no trace of my child'

Last Tuesday evening, at around 6:30 pm, Rita Abu Hammad, an energetic and cheerful eight-year-old, stood in front of the school where her family had been sheltering for weeks amid the ongoing Israeli genocide in Gaza. Nearby, in a tent, were her three brothers, sister, and their mother, Rima Abu Hammad.

“Suddenly, we heard sound of a missile, and then a very strong explosion,” Abu Hammad, 36, told The Guardian. “Then the sound of screaming, ashes, and blood were the only thing you could hear, see and smell. When I pulled myself together, I remembered that my daughter had been standing near the school’s gate. I ran madly, and screaming her name.”

In piercing pain, Abu Hammad began looking for her daughter, searching through the injured, the dead, and the scattered body parts, but she was unable to find her.

“There were many bodies, including children, women, and men, some cut to many pieces, some burnt alive. The street was a pool of blood. But there was no trace of my child,” she sorrowfully said.

This is the 500 tone bunker buster the US gave Israel to genocide #Gaza pic.twitter.com/gOW8nmO2qY

— Syrian Girl 🇸🇾 (@Partisangirl) July 14, 2024

Abu Hammad and her relatives spent an hour searching around the site of the school bombing in Aabasan. When they still couldn’t find her daughter, they went to the hospital and separated to continue the search.

“I said to my brother, I will go to the emergency department, and you will go to the mortuary and look for her. After a long search, I found her, she was alive but badly injured with shrapnel in the back and chest,” she said.

"I felt very happy and sad at the same time. I was happy because I did not lose her, she was still alive with me, and I felt sad for her condition and pain, but I still thank God for her presence and that she was not among the children who died there. It is true that the war is nine months old, and every day has been difficult, but I did not have a harder day than that day," she painfully narrated.

'I found all my friends and people around me, cut into pieces, and killed'

On Tuesday, Khaled Abu Anza, 23, was sitting at the gate of the Aabasan school next to his Wi-Fi stall when the Israeli airstrike hit.

“We were going to go and play football but we decided to stay. There was an explosion and when I looked around, I found all my friends and people around me, cut into pieces, and killed. I wanted to help people but when I looked at myself, I found that I had shrapnel in my chest, back and feet, and I was bleeding,” he told The Guardian.

"After about 20 minutes, a truck came and they carried me with it, and it was full of corpses … And I was the only living person in the truck … This is enough, ........................, just to stop the war," he agonizingly said.

'Daily vision of horror'

Over the weekend, the UN and other humanitarian officials reported worsening conditions as temperatures reached 40°C, highlighting shortages of essential supplies, limited water, and increasing disorder.

An official described the situation as a "daily vision of horror" with minimal stocks of medicine,  insufficient supplies of food, and "nowhere near enough water."

“Hospitals keep reopening with fewer doctors, less machines, less medicines each time. They are run by an army of burned-out heroes,” the official stressed, as reported by The Guardian.

Dr. Mohamed Saqr, the head of nursing at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, told The Guardian that the situation there was “catastrophic”. Even before the brutal Israeli attacks last week, the hospital was full.

“We are the only operating major hospital in southern Gaza serving more than 1.2 million residents and displaced people in Khan Younis. There were no single empty beds, even in the emergency department,” Saqr bitterly stated.

When the school was bombed by Israeli airstrikes on Aabasan, the Nasser Hospital received 23 martyrs and 56 injured in less than half an hour.

“The situation was very difficult. We did not have sufficient tools or equipment, not even sterilizers or even gauze to wrap wounds, even gowns for operations. We treated the injured on the floor of the reception area or in corridors,” Saqr stressed.

Read next: 'It’s permissible to shoot everyone' in Gaza: Six IOF soldiers testify

  • Aabasan massacre
  • war on Gaza
  • Israeli massacres
  • Israeli aggression
  • Nuseirat refugee camp
  • Gaza genocide
  • Israeli occupation
  • Khan Younis
  • Gaza

Most Read

Inside the Epstein-Rothschild web behind 'Israel’s' spy tech empire

Inside the Epstein-Rothschild web behind 'Israel’s' spy tech empire

  • Politics
  • 19 Nov 2025
Hamas fighters stand in formation as they prepare for the ceremony of Israeli captive hand over to the Red Cross in Nuseirat, central Gaza Strip, Feb. 22, 2025. (AP)

US plot for Gaza in shambles amid continued popular support for Hamas

  • Politics
  • 17 Nov 2025
Hezbollah announces the martyrdom of Haitham al-Tabatabai

Hezbollah announces the martyrdom of commander Haitham Tabatabai

  • West Asia
  • 23 Nov 2025
Democracy at the civilizational crossroads: Critical analysis of bourgeois Democracy, its alternatives

Democracy at the civilizational crossroads: Critical analysis of bourgeois Democracy, its alternatives

  • Analysis
  • 19 Nov 2025

Coverage

All
In Five

Read Next

All
AP
Politics

Settler attacks intensify as Palestinians face systematic displacement

Beirut demonstration
West Asia

Beirut protest affirms right to resist, condemns Israeli aggression

Israeli military failure
Palestine

IOF dismiss generals, disciplines others after Oct 7 investigation

Pope Leo XIV celebrates a Mass for the Jubilee of the Choirs in St. Peter's Square, at the Vatican, Sunday, Nov. 23, 2025.(AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)
Politics

Pope's Lebanon visit still on track, Church official confirms

Al Mayadeen English

Al Mayadeen is an Arab Independent Media Satellite Channel.

All Rights Reserved

  • x
  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Authors
Android
iOS