Gaza ceasefire talks continue, Hamas said on Sunday, adding that the group’s military commander is in good health, a day after the Israeli military targeted Mohammed Deif with a massive airstrike that local health officials said killed at least 90 people, including children.
Deif’s condition remained uncertain after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Saturday “there still isn’t absolute certainty” he was killed.
Hamas representatives gave no evidence to back up their claim about the health of a chief architect of the October 7 attack that sparked the war.
The Israeli military on Sunday announced that Rafa Salama, a Hamas commander it described as one of Deif’s closest associates, had been killed in Saturday’s strike.
Hamas rejected the idea that mediated ceasefire discussions had been suspended after the strike.
Spokesman Jihad Taha said “there is no doubt that the horrific massacres will impact any efforts in the negotiations” but added that “efforts and endeavours of the mediators remain ongoing”.
The killing of Deif would mark the highest profile assassination of any Hamas leader by Israel since the war began.
It would be both a huge victory for Israel and a deep psychological blow for the militant group.
Mr Netanyahu said all of Hamas’ leaders are “marked for death” and that killing them would move Hamas closer to accepting a ceasefire deal.
Witnesses said it happened in an area that Israel had designated as safe for hundreds of thousands of displaced Palestinians. Israel’s military would not confirm that.
On Sunday, some survivors were angry that the attack targeting Deif happened without warning in an area they had been told was safe.
“Where are we supposed to go?” asked Mahmoud Abu Yaseen, who said he heard two strikes and clutched his children, then woke up in the hospital to find his son had died. The family had already been displaced five times since the war began, he said.
A United Nations official described utter chaos at Nasser hospital, where victims of Saturday’s strike were taken, many of them treated on bloodstained floors with few supplies available.
“I witnessed some of the most horrific scenes I have seen in my nine months in Gaza,” Scott Anderson said in a statement.
He said restrictions on humanitarian aid to Gaza hamper efforts to provide needed medical and other care.
At least 300 people were wounded in the strike, one of the deadliest in the nine-month war sparked by Hamas’ October 7 assault on southern Israel that killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took more than 200 hostage.
More than 38,400 people in Gaza have been killed in Israeli ground offensives and bombardments since then, according to the territory’s health ministry. The ministry does not distinguish between combatants and civilians in its count.
On Sunday, an Israeli strike in Nuseirat in central Gaza killed at least 13 people at the gate of a school, according to Associated Press journalists at Al-Awda hospital.
Israel’s military in a statement said it struck “terrorists” operating in the area of a school run by the UN agency for Palestinian refugees.
Also on Sunday, police said a Palestinian resident of east Jerusalem carried out a car-ramming attack in central Israel that injured four Israelis, two of them seriously.
Israeli border police at the scene shot dead the attacker after he hit people waiting at two bus stops along a busy road.
Israel commissioner Kobi Shabtai said such attacks were often “triggered” by events like Saturday’s airstrike in Gaza.