Afghan Voice Agency (AVA): According to the BBC, which reviewed these images and whose latest data is from November 8, the Israeli army's activities in the demolition and destruction of buildings and infrastructure in Gaza continue on a large scale.
According to the report, neighborhoods that have come under the control of the Israeli army have been completely razed to the ground within a month of the ceasefire. This destruction has been concentrated in particular in the areas of Abbasan al-Kabeera, east of Khan Yunis, and al-Byouk, near Rafah.
Satellite images show that more than 1,500 buildings that were intact after the ceasefire have been bulldozed in the so-called “Yellow Line,” the area to which the Israeli army withdrew as part of the first phase of Trump’s plan to end the Gaza war, an area that covers more than half of the Gaza Strip.
In addition, demolitions continue in the Shuja’iya neighborhood and around the Indonesian hospital in eastern Gaza City.
H.E. Hellyer, an expert at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), described the actions as “a clear violation of the ceasefire,” adding that “Washington is unwilling to accept this reality.”
According to official figures, 245 Palestinians have been killed and 627 injured since the ceasefire was signed on October 10. The Gaza Civil Defense Force also announced that it had pulled the bodies of 532 more martyrs from the rubble of destroyed buildings in various parts of the Gaza Strip.
The ceasefire agreement, which came into effect on October 10, 2025, ended two years of devastating war in the Gaza Strip. In addition to destroying about 90 percent of civilian infrastructure, the war resulted in the martyrdom of more than 69,000 Palestinians and the injury of more than 170,000 people, most of whom were women and children. The United Nations has estimated the cost of rebuilding the Gaza Strip at about $70 billion.