Pregnant woman, young son killed in Gaza by Israeli airstrike

GAZA STRIP: Afnan al-Ghanam of Gaza had her first child during war, 13 months ago, while the family was still living at home.
She was about to give birth again in the spring — this time, while living in a squalid tent camp. But at least a tenuous ceasefire had brought a relative calm.
Then, before dawn on Tuesday, an Israeli airstrike smashed into the family's tent. Al-Ghanam, who was seven months pregnant, and Mohammed, her young son, were both killed.
They were among more than 400 Palestinians, most of them women and children, killed when Israel launched a surprise bombardment across the Gaza Strip, according to the territory's Health Ministry. Israel said it struck Hamas targets to force the militant group to free hostages and relinquish control of Gaza.
"This is their bank of targets," said al-Ghanam's husband, Alaa Abu Helal, as he held Mohammed's little body, wrapped in cloth, at the morgue of Nasser Hospital in the southern city of Khan Younis. "He was born during the war in difficult conditions and also martyred in the war."
"Their targets are innocents, pure. They have barely seen life," he said, fighting his tears.
Israel's aerial assault shattered the ceasefire that began in mid-January and stunned Palestinians who had finally had a breather to start trying to rebuild their lives after 15 months of bombardment, ground offensives, dispersal and hunger.
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