Dozens of Palestinians, including women and children, were martyred, and others were injured in Israeli occupation airstrikes across the Gaza Strip.Palestinian medical sources reported that the overnight shelling that went through early Thursday claimed three displaced civilians in Ma'an area, east of Khan Younis in southern Gaza.Another Palestinian woman was martyred and several others were injured following an Israeli airstrike on a home in the town of Abasan Al-Kabira, east of the city.In a separate attack, an Israeli strike on a residential house in Qizan Raswan area in southern Gaza claimed the life of a woman and left multiple people injured. Another woman was also martyred when Israeli forces bombed her home in Qizan al-Najjar, south of the city.A further airstrike targeted a residential building in Customs Authority area, east of Khan Younis, resulting in the martyrdom of six civilians, including women and children.In Gaza City, an Israeli strike on a home in Al-Yarmouk neighborhood in the city center led to the martyrdom of a doctor and several of his children.Meanwhile, three Palestinians were martyred, and more than 15 others were injured, with several still missing, after an Israeli strike hit a residential house in Al-Shujaiya neighborhood, east of the city.Israeli occupation forces continue artillery shelling, accompanied by heavy machine gun fire from Israeli tanks, targeting Tel al-Sultan neighborhood in western Rafah, southern Gaza.According to Ministry of Health, the death toll from Israel's aggression on Gaza has risen to 50,423 martyrs, with 114,638 injuries recorded since October 7, 2023.Israel resumed its assault on Gaza on March 18, following a two-month ceasefire that had taken effect on January 19. However, throughout that period, Israel repeatedly violated the ceasefire agreement, continuing to bomb various locations in Gaza, causing further casualties. It also refused to implement humanitarian protocols and tightened its already suffocating siege on the Strip, exacerbating an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe.