RAFAH, Palestinian Territories: The UN Security Council was set to convene an emergency meeting Tuesday over an Israeli strike that killed dozens in a displaced persons camp in Rafah, as three European countries were slated to formally recognize a Palestinian state.
AFP journalists on the ground early Tuesday reported fresh Israeli strikes overnight in the southern Gaza border city, where an Israeli attack targeting two senior Hamas members on Sunday night sparked a fire that ripped through a displacement center, killing 45, according to Gaza health officials.
The attack prompted a wave of international condemnation, with Palestinians and many Arab countries calling it a âmassacre.â Israel said it was looking into the âtragic accident.â
âThere is no safe place in Gaza. This horror must stop,â UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres posted on social media.
UN humanitarian chief Martin Griffiths pointed to the widespread warnings of civilian deaths that circulated ahead of Israelâs incursion into Rafah, saying in a statement: âWeâve seen the consequences in last nightâs utterly unacceptable attack.â
âTo call it âa mistakeâ is a message that means nothing for those killed, those grieving, and those trying to save lives,â he added.
Diplomats said the UN Security Council would convene Tuesday for an emergency session called by Algeria to discuss the attack.
The EUâs foreign policy chief said he was âhorrified by newsâ of the strike, while French President Emmanuel Macron said he was âoutraged,â and a US National Security Council spokesperson said Israel âmust take every precaution possible to protect civilians.â
The Israeli military said it was launching a probe.
Displaced Gazan Khalil Al-Bahtini was preparing to leave the impacted area, saying Monday that âlast night, the tent opposite to ours was targeted.â
âWe have loaded all our belongings, but we donât know where to go.â
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told parliament the deaths occurred âdespite our best effortsâ to protect civilians.
The outcry over the strike came as Spain, Ireland and Norway were set to formally recognize a Palestinian state on Tuesday in a decision slammed by Israel as a ârewardâ for Hamas.
âRecognizing the state of Palestine is about justice for the Palestinian people,â Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Albares said Monday in Brussels.
It was also âthe best guarantee of security for Israel and absolutely essential for reaching peace in the region,â he said alongside his Irish and Norwegian counterparts.
On Monday, Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz said he had told Spainâs consulate in Jerusalem to stop offering consular services to West Bank Palestinians from June 1 as a âpreliminary punitiveâ measure.
Israel launched the deadly strike on Rafah late Sunday, hours after Hamas fired a barrage of rockets at the Tel Aviv area, most of which were intercepted.
Israelâs army said its aircraft âstruck a Hamas compoundâ in the city and killed Yassin Rabia and Khaled Nagar, senior officials for the militant group in the occupied West Bank.
Gazaâs civil defense agency said the strike ignited a fire that tore through a displacement center in northwestern Rafah near a facility of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA.
âWe saw charred bodies and dismembered limbs... We also saw cases of amputations, wounded children, women and the elderly,â said civil defense agency official Mohammad Al-Mughayyir.
One survivor, a woman who declined to be named, said: âWe heard a loud sound and there was fire all around us. The children were screaming.â
Adding to already heightened tensions since Israel launched its Rafah ground operation, the Israeli and Egyptian militaries reported a âshooting incidentâ on Monday that killed one Egyptian guard in the border area between Egypt and the southern Gaza Strip.
Both forces said they were investigating.
Footage from the Palestinian Red Crescent Society showed chaotic nighttime scenes of paramedics racing to the attack site and evacuating the wounded.
Mughayyir said the rescue efforts were hampered by war damage and the impact of Israelâs siege, which has led to severe shortages of fuel and âwater to extinguish fires.â
The Israeli attack sparked strong protests from Egypt and Qatar, both of which have played key roles as mediators in efforts to negotiate a ceasefire and hostage-prisoner exchange.
Egypt deplored what it called the âtargeting of defenseless civilians,â saying it was part of âa systematic policy aimed at widening the scope of death and destruction in the Gaza Strip to make it uninhabitable.â
Qatar condemned a âdangerous violation of international lawâ and voiced âconcern that the bombing will complicate ongoing mediation effortsâ toward a truce.
The top world court, the International Court of Justice, on Friday ordered Israel to halt any offensive in Rafah and elsewhere that could bring about âthe physical destructionâ of the Palestinians.
The war in Gaza started after Hamasâs October 7 attack on southern Israel, which resulted in the deaths of more than 1,170 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures.
Militants also took 252 hostages, 121 of whom remain in Gaza, including 37 the army says are dead.
Israelâs retaliatory offensive has killed at least 36,050 people in Gaza, mostly civilians, according to the Hamas-run territoryâs health ministry.
Philippe Lazzarini, head of UNRWA, which has been central to aid operations in the besieged territory during the war, said on social media platform X that âwith every day passing, providing assistance & protection becomes nearly impossible.â
âThe images from last night are testament to how Rafah has turned into hell on Earth,â he said.