Palestinian rescuers at the site of an overnight Israeli air strike on Gaza brushed away debris early on Wednesday to gradually reveal a motionless head and arm, the latest victim of a bombardment that has reportedly killed thousands.
As the rescuers scraped off more rubble, the rest of the body slowly emerged, a member of the Nasr family whose house in the southern city of Khan Younis was hit by bombing early on Wednesday, killing nine people according to residents.
"Our neighbors died. Everywhere you look there is a martyr," said Eyad al-Ateyle, a neighbor who said the strike blasted him awake at 2 a.m. before he managed to get out of his home with his wife and child through a thick fog of dust.
Israel's mounting assault has killed nearly 8,800 Palestinians according to Hamas-controlled health authorities in the enclave, mostly in air and artillery strikes like the one that hit the Nasr family home.
The military has said that although it has told civilians to move south, it will strike at any Hamas target throughout the strip while taking feasible precautions to mitigate harm.
The offensive, in response to the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas terrorists who Israel said killed 1,400 people and abducted 240, now includes a ground invasion that is expected to intensify the violence.
More than half of Gaza's population is already displaced, crammed hospitals lacking electricity and medicine are turning away the injured and gravediggers are running out of cemetery places.
On Tuesday an Israeli strike, targeting a senior Hamas commander at the Jabalia refugee camp in north Gaza killed dozens of people according to hospital authorities, leaving a moonscape of craters.
At the morgue in Khan Younis, where the bodies of the Nasr family killed elsewhere in the city were taken, a group of men and boys stood watching as more dead arrived by ambulance.
Bodies were lifted onto stretchers and taken below to the morgue. A young boy stood silently peering through the railings. Angry family members of some of the dead cried "With our souls and our blood we redeem you martyrs."
Inside, workers cleaned dust and blood from the dead and swaddled them in white shrouds to be taken away for burial. Of the 15 bodies in the morgue when Reuters visited on Wednesday morning, four were children.
"Every day there are dead and every day there are children or women among them," said a doctor there, who asked not to be named for fear of reprisals.
Israel has blocked off electricity, water and fuel supplies into Gaza, and only a tiny trickle of food and medicine is getting in through the Rafah crossing with Egypt.
Lacking petrol, many people are turning to donkey carts to get around. In Khan Younis, Farida Abu Azzam was taking her husband to hospital for his cancer treatment. "This is our only means of transportation now," she said.
By the roadside cars and taxis stood gathering dust. A donkey cart owner, Akram al-Qara, said he was running a regular route from Khan Younis city center to the hospital, charging passengers one shekel (25 US cents) each.
Hospitals hold the injured and sick
Many of the injured cannot even find a place in hospital. The lucky ones who find a bed must leave before they are healed.
The director of the Turkish Friendship Hospital in northern Gaza, which mostly treats cancer patients, said on Wednesday that it had gone out of service because of lack of fuel. Israel has said there is enough fuel in Gaza to supply hospitals but that Hamas is using it for military purposes.
In a shelter for displaced people in a UN school in Khan Younis, Salwa Najar stood by her son Majed's bedside, wiping his face.
He can only move his head after being injured by Israeli shelling when he went with his brother to tend the family's small flock of sheep, she said. Majed's brother was killed and she screamed when she found out, she said.
A cousin had taken them to Hilal Hospital in Khan Younis, the biggest city in the southern part of the tiny enclave. But they were told there was no room.
"Where are the people supposed to go?" Najar asked, her face puffy from weeping.
The school classroom where Majed lay had been turned into a makeshift ward for the injured, with other wounded people lying in beds around the walls - but without proper medical help.
At Nasser Hospital the director Nahed Abu Taeema said they were even turning away people who badly needed medical intervention. "Gaza hospitals are crowded with injured people who are filling the hospital beds," she said.
"Those requiring advanced surgery can't be helped here."
($1 = 4.0257 shekels)