An Israeli airstrike killed a man, his wife and their six-year-old daughter in the Gaza Strip yesterday, Palestinian health officials said as talks to advance the US-brokered Gaza ceasefire deal faltered.
The strike on an apartment building in Deir Al-Balah in central Gaza killed Omar Abu Qassem, his wife, Asma, and their daughter, Habeeba, medics said. Their three-year-old son, Sami, survived, but was injured, medics said.
The Israeli military said the strike targeted a Hamas fighter. Friends and relatives arrived at the Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir Al-Balah where they paid farewell to the three white-shrouded bodies before burying them after performing special prayers.
"The child is the lone survivor. How (to live) without a father, without a mother? What kind of cruelty is this that the people of Palestine, the people of Gaza, are enduring?” Abu Anas Shahin, a relative, said to Reuters.
"Where is the mercy? Where is the humanity?” he said. More than 58,000 children in Gaza have lost one or both parents, according to UN figures as of November 2025. In Sheikh Radwan neighbourhood in Gaza City, an Israeli airstrike killed one person, medics said.
The deaths add to a toll of more than 1,100 Palestinians, mostly civilians, killed by Israeli attacks since an October ceasefire between Israel and Hamas to end the war took effect, according to health officials in the enclave.
Hamas doesn’t usually disclose information about its fatalities. The truce halted major fighting, but has failed to stop near-daily Israeli strikes. Four Israeli soldiers have been killed by fighters in Gaza over the same period.
The latest violence comes as Hamas leaders wrapped up another round of truce talks in Cairo on Tuesday. The discussions — mediated by Egypt, Turkiye and Qatar — were aimed at implementing the second phase of US President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace plan.
The talks included the disarmament of Hamas and the Israeli military’s withdrawal from the strip, according to sources close to the talks, who said there had been little progress amid deep distrust between the two sides.
The second phase also includes allowing a US-backed Palestinian technocratic committee to assume power from Hamas, the deployment of an international security force, and the start of the reconstruction of Gaza, which has been devastated by the war.
Five countries — Indonesia, Morocco, Kazakhstan, Kosovo and Albania — have committed to providing troops to the US-backed International Stabilisation Force. However, none have yet been deployed as negotiations between Trump’s Board of Peace and Hamas have stalled for months.
Speaking at an aid donor meeting in Brussels on Monday, Nickolay Mladenov said the October ceasefire was holding but "imperfectly” with violations continuing, adding that Hamas has yet to agree to what he called a "roadmap” for negotiations.
Hamas official Basem Naim accused Mladenov of supporting Israel’s position in negotiations, and failing to hold the country accountable for violating the ceasefire and not upholding the terms of the first phase of the Trump plan.
The plan called for Israel to withdraw its troops to a demarcated "yellow” line, but Israel has been slowly moving its troops forward and now effectively occupies more than 60% of the strip.
Hamas has repeatedly said that it cannot advance to the second phase of the peace plan until the terms of the first phase are fulfilled.