In Gaza, thousands of unexploded Israeli bombs and shells remain buried under rubble, threatening lives long after the airstrikes have stopped. Experts warn of a “silent killer” that continues to claim civilian lives and block reconstruction efforts across the war-torn enclave.
                                 
                                
                                    
                                                                                    
In Gaza, a hidden catastrophe continues long after the airstrikes end. Thousands of unexploded Israeli bombs and shells lie buried beneath collapsed homes, schools, and hospitals, creating a “silent killer” crisis that endangers families returning to rebuild their lives.
Humanitarian organizations report that unexploded munitions have caused numerous civilian and child casualties, making daily survival a constant risk. The scale of contamination is so vast that experts warn Gaza faces one of the most severe post-conflict explosive hazards in modern history.
The presence of these deadly remnants not only threatens lives but also blocks reconstruction, disrupts access to water and healthcare, and deepens the humanitarian emergency. Global agencies and human-rights groups stress the need for urgent international coordination, demining support, and stronger accountability mechanisms to protect civilians and prevent further tragedy.
This ongoing danger highlights the devastating long-term human cost of modern warfare where the explosions may stop, but the suffering continues beneath the rubble.
                                                                            
                                 
                                                                                                                                                            
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