A month-old girl is pulled from rubble in Gaza after an airstrike killed her parents
14 hours ago
Ella Osama Abu Dagga is held by her great-aunt Suad Abu Dagga, after she was pulled from the rubble in Khan Younis on Thursday. AP
As rescuers dug through the remains of a collapsed apartment building in Gaza’s Khan Younis on Thursday, they could hear the cries of a baby from underneath the rubble.
Suddenly, calls of "God is great” rang out. A man sprinted away from the wreckage carrying a living infant swaddled in a blanket and handed her to a waiting ambulance crew. The baby girl stirred fitfully as paramedics checked her over.
Her parents and brother were dead in the overnight Israeli airstrike.
"When we asked people, they said she is a month old and she has been under the rubble, since dawn,” said Hazen Attar, a civil defence first responder. "She had been screaming and then falling silent from time to time until we were able to get her out a short while ago, and thank God she is safe.”
Ella Osama Abu Dagga is held by her great-aunt Suad Abu Dagga after she was pulled from the rubble. AP
The girl was identified as Ella Osama Abu Dagga. She had been born 25 days earlier, in the midst of a tenuous ceasefire that many Palestinians in Gaza had hoped would mark the end of a war that has devastated the enclave, killed tens of thousands and displaced nearly its entire population.
Only the girl's grandparents survived the attack. Killed were her brother, mother and father, along with another family that included a father and his seven children.
Rescuers digging through the rubble could be seen pulling out the small body of a child sprawled on the mattress where he had been sleeping.
A man grieves as he looks at the body of a child killed in an Israeli army airstrike, before the child is prepared for burial in Khan Younis. AP
The girl's grandmother, Fatima Abu Dagga, sat with a group of other women in a relative's house on Thursday, taking turns cradling the infant. Her sons and their wives and eight grandchildren died in the bombing, and only the baby survived. She wept over the loss, and the return to the devastation of war.
"We weren’t really living in a truce," she said. "We knew that at any moment the war might return. We never felt that there was stability, not at all.”
Israel resumed heavy strikes across Gaza on Tuesday, shattering the truce that had facilitated the release of more than two dozen hostages.
Nearly 600 people have been killed in Gaza since then, including more than 400 on Tuesday alone, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry. Health officials said most of the victims were women and children.
The bodies of victims of an Israeli army airstrike are prepared for burial at Indonesia Hospital in Beit Lahia, northern Gaza Strip. AP
The strike that destroyed the infant girl’s home hit Abasan Al Kabira, a village just outside of Khan Younis near the border with Israel, killing at least 16 people, mostly women and children, according to the nearby European Hospital, which received the dead.
It was inside an area the Israeli military ordered evacuated earlier this week, encompassing most of eastern Gaza.
Nabil Abu Dagga, a relative of Ella's family who lives nearby, rushed to the scene of the strike. "People were sitting together and enjoying themselves on a Ramadan night, staying up together as a family,” he said. "... No one was expecting it and no one would imagine that a human could kill another human in this way.”
He and others started pulling out bodies. Then they heard the baby girl's cries.