Israeli Gaza ceasefire violations continue amid new shelling
Israeli warplanes launched fresh airstrikes across Gaza, targeting Rafah, Khan Younis, and Gaza City, as the occupation continues to violate the ceasefire signed in October.
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Palestinians walk through the destruction left by the Israeli air and ground aggression on Gaza City, on November 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)
Israeli occupation warplanes launched a series of airstrikes and opened heavy fire across multiple areas of the Gaza Strip on Sunday, in continued violation of the ceasefire agreement signed in October 2025.
According to local reports, Israeli aircraft carried out intense bombing east of the al-Bureij refugee camp in central Gaza, while six separate raids targeted areas east of Rafah city in the south of the Strip. Meanwhile, artillery units shelled a residential home in Bani Suheila, located east of Khan Younis, also in southern Gaza.
Occupation military vehicles opened heavy fire near the Morag axis, north of Rafah, while simultaneous demolition operations and artillery shelling were conducted east of Khan Younis, inside what is known as the "Yellow Line".
An additional airstrike struck east of the Shuja'iya neighborhood in Gaza City. Three remote-controlled explosive devices, referred to locally as "robots," were also detonated in eastern parts of the city. Loud explosions were reported across Gaza following the attacks. Elsewhere, heavy machine gun fire was reported from Israeli helicopters flying east of Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip.
On Saturday, the Ministry of Health in Gaza confirmed that 354 Palestinians have been martyred and 906 others wounded since the ceasefire took effect on October 11, 2025. In a separate update, the Ministry reported that since the beginning of the genocide on October 7, 2023, the total number of martyrs has reached 70,100, with 170,983 others injured.
Despite the ceasefire agreement, the Israeli occupation continues its violations through ongoing ground, air, and naval assaults across various parts of the Gaza Strip.
Two brothers killed by 'Israel' on their way home
In a related event, Palestinian brothers Fadi and Jomaa Tamer Abu Assi, aged 8 and 11, were killed by an Israeli drone strike on Thursday morning near the so-called "Yellow Line."
The strike targeted the children as they attempted to return to their house, located within a so-called “red zone,” only a short distance from where they had been standing. The arbitrary "yellow line" cited by the Israeli military does not physically exist on the ground and is incomprehensible to civilians, particularly children, who continue to suffer the consequences of its enforcement.
According to local sources, the two brothers had briefly crossed the area either to check on their home, to retrieve warm clothing ahead of the approaching winter, or simply out of longing to revisit the place that once sheltered them.