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Ban Ki-moon: deadly bombing of third UN school in Gaza is a ‘criminal act’

Children in conflicts


At least 10 people at a United Nations school in Gaza have been killed today in an apparent Israeli air strike.

Around 3000 people were sheltered in the Rafah Preparatory A Boys school this morning, according to a UN official, following a series of air strikes in the area, when the explosion happened at around 10.30 am. 泭 that the explosion centred on the gates to the school compound.泭

Gaza emergency services spokesman Ashraf al-Qudra said another 30 people were wounded in the attack on the United Nations refugee agency (UNRWA) school, a designated UN shelter in Rafah, near the border with Egypt.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has called the strike the third deadly shelling of a school in Gaza since Israel began its military operation on July 8 泭a moral outrage and a criminal act, saying that 'the attack is yet another gross violation of international humanitarian law.

泭The United States also issued , saying: The United States is appalled by todays disgraceful shelling.

A state ment from UNWRA said:泭For this particular installation we notified the Israeli Army on 33 separate occasions that this school in Rafah was being used to accommodate the displaced, the last time only an hour before the incident.

Todays strike follow the in the past weeks, and for countries to implement the Lucens Guidelines to prevent schools being used or targeted in conflicts.

Robert Turner, UNRWA director, has that it is impossible that the strike could be mistaken identity, saying we inform IDF [Israel Defence Forces] daily of all our sites and shelters.

UN officials have also advised that they have no evidence to suggest there was any Hamas activity near the school at the time. The Israeli Defence Forces have declined to comment, according to .

Up to 25 per cent of Gazas population may now be forcibly displaced, of whom 259,000 are hosted in UNRWA shelters alone.泭 Often, these shelters are UNRWA schools.

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However, 138 schools have now been damaged in the conflict, including 49 government schools and 89 UNRWA schools, and are believed to have lost their lives leading to increasing concerns about both the targeting of schools in the conflict, but that the recovery of Gazas education system if and when a ceasefire holds.


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