-
Curling quietly kicks off sports programme at 2026 Winter Olympics
-
Undav pokes Stuttgart past Kiel into German Cup semis
-
Germany goalkeeper Ter Stegen to undergo surgery
-
Bezos-led Washington Post announces 'painful' job cuts
-
Iran says US talks are on, as Trump warns supreme leader
-
Gaza health officials say strikes kill 24 after Israel says officer wounded
-
Empress's crown dropped in Louvre heist to be fully restored: museum
-
UK PM says Mandelson 'lied' about Epstein relations
-
Shai to miss NBA All-Star Game with abdominal strain
-
Trump suggests 'softer touch' needed on immigration
-
From 'flop' to Super Bowl favorite: Sam Darnold's second act
-
Man sentenced to life in prison for plotting to kill Trump in 2024
-
Native Americans on high alert over Minneapolis crackdown
-
Dallas deals Davis to Wizards in blockbuster NBA deal: report
-
Panama hits back after China warns of 'heavy price' in ports row
-
Strike kills guerrillas as US, Colombia agree to target narco bosses
-
Wildfire smoke kills more than 24,000 Americans a year: study
-
Telegram founder slams Spain PM over under-16s social media ban
-
Curling kicks off sports programme at 2026 Winter Olympics
-
Preventative cholera vaccination resumes as global supply swells: WHO
-
Wales' Macleod ready for 'physical battle' against England in Six Nations
-
Xi calls for 'mutual respect' with Trump, hails ties with Putin
-
'All-time great': Maye's ambitions go beyond record Super Bowl bid
-
Shadow over Vonn as Shiffrin, Odermatt headline Olympic skiing
-
US seeks minerals trade zone in rare Trump move with allies
-
Ukraine says Abu Dhabi talks with Russia 'substantive and productive'
-
Brazil mine disaster victims in London to 'demand what is owed'
-
AI-fuelled tech stock selloff rolls on
-
White says time at Toulon has made him a better Scotland player
-
Washington Post announces 'painful' job cuts
-
All lights are go for Jalibert, says France's Dupont
-
Artist rubs out Meloni church fresco after controversy
-
Palestinians in Egypt torn on return to a Gaza with 'no future'
-
US removing 700 immigration officers from Minnesota
-
Who is behind the killing of late ruler Gaddafi's son, and why now?
-
Coach Thioune tasked with saving battling Bremen
-
Russia vows to act 'responsibly' once nuclear pact with US ends
-
Son of Norway's crown princess admits excesses but denies rape
-
Vowles dismisses Williams 2026 title hopes as 'not realistic'
-
'Dinosaur' Glenn chasing skating gold in first Olympics
-
Gaza health officials say strikes kill 23 after Israel says shots wounded officer
-
Italy foils Russian cyberattacks targeting Olympics
-
Figure skating favourite Malinin feeling 'the pressure' in Milan
-
Netflix film probes conviction of UK baby killer nurse
-
Timber hopes League Cup can be catalyst for Arsenal success
-
China calls EU 'discriminatory' over probe into energy giant Goldwind
-
Sales warning slams Ozempic maker Novo Nordisk's stock
-
Can Vonn defy ACL rupture to win Olympic medal?
-
Breakthrough or prelude to attack? What we know about Iran-US talks
-
German far-right MP detained over alleged Belarus sanctions breach
Chaos in south Gaza hospitals after new Israeli strikes
Patients lie on cold, bloodstained floors in hospitals filled to overflowing. Some scream in pain, but others lie silently, deathly white, too weak even to cry out.
Hospitals in the southern Gaza Strip have descended into chaos since the resumption of the war between the Palestinian militant group Hamas and Israel.
After eight weeks of war, interrupted only by one seven-day pause that ended on Friday, the doctors are exhausted.
Fuel reserves have almost run dry because of Israel's blockade of the territory, so doctors are forced to choose when and where across their hospitals to run generators.
According to the United Nations, not a single hospital in the territory's north can currently operate on patients.
The most seriously wounded are transferred daily to the south by convoys organised by the International Committee of the Red Cross.
But even there, the UN says, the 12 remaining hospitals are only "partially functional".
Abdelkarim Abu Warda and his nine-year-old daughter Huda have just arrived at Deir al-Balah Hospital aboard one of the ICRC convoys.
On Friday, after the truce ended, an Israeli strike hit their house in the vast Jabalia refugee camp in the north.
Huda was wounded in the head. "She had a brain haemorrhage -- she was placed on a ventilator," her father told AFP.
Since then, "she hasn't responded to anything", he says, lifting up the little girl's arms.
"She doesn't answer me any more," he repeats, sobbing.
- No words -
It is daybreak and the first prayers for the dead are being performed.
A few dozen men gather in front of white body bags lined up on the ground.
Between two larger bags lies the small shroud of a child, close to his or her parents even in death.
Women in tears crouch down to touch a face or kiss a loved one for one last time before the bodies are carefully loaded into the back of a pickup.
"It's Adam going... and there is Abdullah," says one woman, weeping.
At the Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis, the largest medical facility in southern Gaza, the story is the same.
World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Sunday he was unable to "find words strong enough" to express his concerns about the conditions there.
Members of a WHO team who visited found it packed with 1,000 patients, three times its capacity.
Patients were being treated on the floor "screaming in pain", with "countless people... seeking shelter, filling every corner", the WHO chief wrote.
Israel unleashed its air and ground campaign in response to Hamas's October 7 attack on southern Israel, which killed around 1,200 people and saw some 240 kidnapped, Israeli officials say.
The Hamas government that runs Gaza says the Israeli campaign has killed more than 15,500 people -- including 280 medical staff -- since it began eight weeks ago.
- 'Saw the bomb fall' -
Israel, which has vowed to eliminate Hamas, says it is now focusing on the southern city of Khan Yunis.
The army drops warning leaflets on neighbourhoods due to be targeted each day, telling residents that a "terrible attack is imminent" and ordering them to leave.
Each day, too, the warnings move closer to the hospital.
With each new explosion that shakes the city, more casualties arrive, often in private cars.
Staff race out with stretchers which are often still stained with blood from the previous patient.
Some bodies arrive unaccompanied, and so cannot even be identified.
In the corridors, families, the wounded and medical staff all jostle together.
Some tend to the patients, sliding a sweater or a T-shirt under the head of an wounded person lying on the hard floor.
Ehab al-Najjar, a man with several family members both alive and dead at the hospital, lets his anger explode.
"I came home and saw the bomb fall on our house. Women, children died. What did they do to deserve this?" he screams.
G.M.Castelo--PC