A 27-YEAR-OLD aid worker and her two young children were killed by an Israel last week.
Tasneem, a psychologist with Oxfam Ireland-linked aid organisation Juzoor, and her two children, five-year-old Sham and three-year-old Suleiman were killed when an Israeli airstrike struck an apartment building on Saturday.
Tasneem was pregant when the strike occurred. Her husband was critically injured following the airstrike and is currently in intensive care.
The couple had already lost their son, Muslam, in a previous attack last year.
Tasneem joined Juzoor in January 2025. According to humanitarian organisation CARE, she worked at a school shelter for displaced people in Al-Daraj neighborhood of Gaza City, supporting children who lost their homes, and many of whom lost parents and friends or sustained life changing injuries.
Despite knowing the risks, Tasneem chose to remain in Gaza City to continue serving her community.
Oxfam Ireland CEO Jim Clarken described Tasneem as “a dedicated humanitarian, working under unimaginable conditions to support others”.
“Words cannot express the depth of our sorrow and outrage at the deliberate killing of Tasneem, her two young children, and her unborn baby,” Clarken said.
“Her loss is a devastating blow to all of us at Oxfam.”
Since October 2023, the World Health Organization (WHO) has documented over 720 attacks on healthcare institutions in Gaza, with at least 1,580 health workers killed and as yet unknown numbers arrested and detained by Israel.
The UN has also recorded 540 aid workers killed in Gaza since October 2023.
“The deliberate targeting of aid workers and the destruction of clinics providing life-saving care to pregnant women, children, and the sick is not only a violation of international law – it is a war crime and symptom of a continuing two-year genocide perpetrated by the Israeli state and supported by Western nations supplying weapons, military training and intelligence,” Clarken added.
Oxfam said the killing came amid a wave of attacks on humanitarian organisations.
In recent days, Israeli strikes destroyed the offices of Al Ataa, a women’s association, and multiple Palestinian Medical Relief Society (PMRS) facilities, including its main medical centre in northern Gaza.
PMRS, which had been treating thousands of patients daily, said the destruction of its remaining centres has left communities without access to vital services, including maternal healthcare, nutrition support, and specialist treatments.
The group said the losses amounted to “a message of extermination” and forced it to suspend mobile medical teams due to the risks.
Gaza city evacuation
The UN’s humanitarian agency OCHA reported that nearly 400,000 people have been displaced from the city since mid-August, while Israel said more than 700,000 have fled the area.
The UN previously estimated around one million people lived in Gaza City and its surroundings.
The Gaza Health Ministry says more than 65,500 Palestinians, mostly civilians, have been killed by Israel since October 2023, with over 167,000 wounded.
More than 20,000 of the dead are children, according to Oxfam.
Oxfam and other aid organisations have urged the international community to impose accountability measures, including sanctions, to protect humanitarian workers and civilians.
“Aid workers must never be targets,” Clarken said. “The impunity must be stopped for the survival of Gaza.”