US News

Horrific video purportedly shows Gaza street strewn with at least a dozen bodies gunned down by Hamas

WARNING: Graphic and distressing content.

A horrifying new video purportedly shows at least a dozen Gaza residents shot dead in the streets by Hamas terrorists as they were attempting to flee from the north to the south of the Hamas-con🌺trolled region.

In the , a man films the carnage as he rides a bicycle down the Al🌳 Rasheed beach road, crying out in anguish the camera focuses on the dead bodies, many of them lying in pools of blood.

, author and journalist Amjad Taha said the victims were among “dozens” killed by Hamas snipers, including women and children, because “they do not want citizens to leave.”

“They want to use them as human shields and will kill anyone who attempts to leave. Hamas terrorists in Gaza will, as usual, blame #Israel because it is easy and there is media that accepts this propaganda,” he wrote.

Unverified video circulating on social media appears to show a group of residents gunned down by Hamas police on the Al Rasheed beach road as they tried to flee south from the Israeli offensive and it triggers outrage among residents.
A horrifying new video purportedly shows at least a dozen Gaza residents shot dead in the streets by Hamas terrorists as they were attempting to flee from the north to the south of the Hamas-controlled region.
Unverified video circulating on social media appears to show a group of residents gunned down by Hamas police on the Al Rasheed beach road as they tried to flee south from the Israeli offensive.
In a separate post, author and journalist Amjad Taha said the victims were among “dozens” killed by Hamas snipers, including women and children, because “they do not want citizens to leave.”

The video is fueling disturbing speculation that Hamas has been killing Gaza citizens and attempting to blame their deaths on Israeli airstrikes.

Taha says the man shooting the video from the bicycle is saying “Airstrikes? Does this look like airstrikes?” in Arabic.

Israel has faced mounting pressure to broker a temporary ceasefire with Hamas in recent days, including from President Biden and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, following a prolonged military campaign in Gaza that began when terrorists i💜nvaded Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,400 people.


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Israel-Hamas war: How we got here

2005: Israel unilaterally withdraws from the Gaza Strip more than three decades after winning 𓄧the territory from Egypt in the Six-Day W🌱ar.

2006: Te♛rrorist gr𓃲oup Hamas wins a Palestinian legislative election.

2007: Hamas seizes coꦉntrol of Gaza in a civil war.

2008: Isra🍨el launches military offensive agains🦩t Gaza after Palestinian terrorists fired rockets into the town of Sderot.

2023: Hamas launches the biggest attack on Israel in 50 years, in an early-morning ambush Oct. 7, fi🍸ring thousands of rockets and sending dozens of militants into Israeli towns.

Te𒀰rrorists killed more than 1,200 Israelis, wounded more than 4,200, and took at least 200 hostage.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was quick to announce, “We are at war,” and vowed Hamas would pay “a price it has never known.”

The Gaza Health Ministr💞y — which is controlled by Hamas — reported at least 3,000 Palestinians have been killed and more than 12,500 injured since the war began.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been unequivocal in rejecting pleas for a “humanitarian pause” to the fighting, saying he would accept no temporary ceasefire that doesn’t include a release of the approximately 200 hostages captured by Hamas in the initial wave of attacks.

This week the US H🐟ouse of Representatives passed a $14.3 billion aid package to🌳 help Israel continue its fight against Hamas.