An Israeli air strike against civilians in eastern Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip killed three civilians Monday evening.

Gaza death toll hits 37,347

More than 37,347 Palestinians have been killed and 85,372 have been injured in the Israeli military offensive on Gaza since Oct. 7, the Gaza health ministry said in a statement on Monday.

Medical sources at the European Hospital in Gaza told WAFA news agency that three bodies and several wounded arrived at the hospital in Khan Yunis in the southern Strip.

Earlier , two civilians were martyred and others were injured in an Israeli drone shelling that targeted the city of Rafah.

Eight Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire as merchants and civil guards waited for commercial trucks along the eastern road of the Gaza Strip, which is designated for commercial trucks to roll on, health officials said.
Since the start of the Israeli occupation aggression on Oct. 7, the death toll in the Gaza Strip has risen to 37,347 while the number of injuried has jumped to 85,372, the majority of whom are children and women.

Hostilities continue in Rafah and southern Gaza despite the Israeli military's announcement on Sunday of tactical pauses in operations to allow humanitarian aid to enter, UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini told reporters in Oslo on Monday.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday criticized plans announced by the military to hold daily pauses in fighting along one of the main roads into the Palestinian enclave.

Lazzarini, commissioner general of UNRWA, the main organisation delivering humanitarian aid to Gaza, said that there had been no pause in the fighting.

"There has been information that such a decision has been taken, but the political level says none of this decision has been taken," Lazzarini told a press conference.

"So for the time being, I can tell you that hostilities continue in Rafah and in the south of Gaza. And that operationally, nothing has changed yet."
The military had announced at the weekend the daily pauses from 0500 GMT until 1600 GMT in the area from the Kerem Shalom Crossing, in southern Israel, to the Salah al-Din Road and then northwards. It later clarified that normal operations would continue in Rafah, the main focus of its operation in southern Gaza.

Meanwhile residents said Israeli forces were advancing deeper into the central and western areas of Rafah under heavy fire from the ground and the air.

Armed groups led by resistance movement Hamas were fighting from close range inside the Al-Shaboura camp in the heart of Rafah, according to militants and residents.

Lazzarini later told Reuters UNRWA received a notification from the Israeli military that there would be a pause.

"For the time being, I see nothing which would qualify to the definition of a pause," he said.
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