Israel destroys second high-rise in Gaza City ahead of threatened ground offensive

By Guardian - William Christou and agencies - Sun 7 Sep 2025 13.31 BST
Residents say military gave them 20 minutes to evacuate 15-storey building before attacking. A second high-rise building in Gaza City has been destroyed by Israel in as many days as the military carried out further attacks ahead of a threatened ground offensive.
The 15-storey Sousi Tower was brought down on Saturday by war planes shortly after an evacuation was issued, with footage posted to social media by the Israeli defence minister.
Strikes overnight on the city also killed 14 people, local health officials said, including a strike on a school in southern Gaza City sheltering displaced Palestinians.
Israel had on Saturday issued evacuation warnings for two high-rises in Gaza City and surrounding tents. Avichay Adraee, a military spokesperson, claimed without providing evidence that the buildings were targets because Hamas had infrastructure inside or near them. Hamas said the allegations were âbaseless liesâ and that the high-rises were residential towers.

Residents of Sousi Tower said the Israeli army gave them about 20 minutes to grab their belongings and flee before warplanes razed the building to the ground.
âSuddenly, we were sitting at home and people started shouting,â Aida Abu Kas, a resident, told the Associated Press, recalling the panic and confusion rippling through the building. âSome said it was a lie and other said it was real. We went out and didnât know what to do.â
Israel Katz, Israelâs defence minister, posted a video to social media of the Sousi Tower collapsing in an enormous cloud of smoke along with the words: âWe continue.â On Friday, he had posted the evacuation order on X, saying: âThe gates of hell are being unlocked in Gaza City.â

Israel attacked and destroyed the Mushtaha Tower in Gaza City on Friday. Photograph: Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto/Shutterstock
On Friday, Israel hit Mushtaha Tower, a local landmark that housed dozens of families, claiming that Hamas militants used it for surveillance without providing any evidence. Hamas denied those claims.
The destruction of the towers has contributed to growing unease in Gaza City as residents weigh whether to give in to Israelâs displacement orders or stay put. Tens of thousands have already left the city as Israel has stepped up its bombardment, and the roads leading south have been packed with residents carrying their belongings in carts and trucks.
Other residents have decided they will not yet leave, distrustful of the safe zone announced by Israel. Israel has in the past carried out strikes in safe zones, including al-Mawasi, as well as killed people evacuating along routes the Israeli military designated as passages to safe zones.
âSome say we should evacuate, others say we should stay,â said Abdel Nasser Mushtaha, 48. âBut everywhere in Gaza there are bombings and deaths,â he added, pointing in particular to the strikes on al-Mawasi.
âIt no longer makes any difference to us,â said his daughter Samia Mushtaha, 20. âWherever we go, death pursues us, whether by bombing or hunger.â
Gaza civil defence agency spokesperson Mahmud Bassal told AFP that 56 Palestinians had been killed by Israeli fire on Saturday, including 19 near an aid distribution centre in the north. The Israeli military requested precise timeframes and coordinates to look into the reports.
The military has also issued evacuation warnings to civilians in certain areas of Gaza City. Israel has been threatening a new assault on the territoryâs largest city for weeks, without issuing a timeline.
âFrom this moment, it is announced that the al-Mawasi area is a humanitarian zone and steps will be taken to provide better humanitarian services there,â a leaflet that was dropped over Gaza City on Sunday read.

A man carries a child killed in an Israeli attack to al-Shifa hospital to be prepared for burial on Saturday. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
As the Israeli military continued to strike Gaza City, its foreign minister, Gideon Saar, urged Hamas to lay down its arms and surrender.
âWe will be more than happy to reach this objective with political means,â Saar told reporters in Jerusalem on Sunday. His Danish counterpart, Lars Løkke Rasmussen, urged Israel to âchange courseâ and stop its campaign on Gaza City.
The senior Hamas official Bassem Naim told Reuters that it would release all of the remaining Israeli hostages it held if Israel ended the war and withdrew from Gaza, but said the group refused to lay down its arms.
Israel has faced mounting domestic and international pressure to end the nearly two-year war in which at least 63,000 Palestinians, mostly civilians, have been killed, according to Gazaâs health ministry. The figure does not include the tens of thousands believed to be buried under the rubble or killed by indirect consequences of the war.
Thousands demonstrated in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem on Saturday evening to call for a ceasefire and hostage release deal. In Tel Aviv, protesters unfurled a massive banner saying: âPresident Trump, save the hostages now!â
Israel has said that it is now aiming for a total end to the war in Gaza rather than a ceasefire. It is demanding that Hamas disarm and step away from government in the strip, as well as release all the hostages.
Hamas delivered its own ceasefire proposal three weeks prior â a version of the deal drafted by the US that Israel had previously agreed to â but Israel has yet to respond.
