The Government Media Office in Gaza reported that from October 10 to November 10, the Israeli regime breached the ceasefire at least 282 times, continuing its aggression through aerial assaults, artillery shelling, and ground incursions.
It said occupation forces opened fire on civilians 88 times, raided residential areas 12 times, bombed Gaza 124 times, and destroyed homes and properties on 52 occasions.
The regime also detained 23 Palestinians during the same period.
Despite the supposed truce, Israel has continued blocking essential humanitarian aid, choking Gaza’s access to food, medicine, and fuel, while demolishing homes and vital infrastructure.
The ceasefire, announced after US mediation, was based on a 20-point plan presented by Washington on September 29, notably excluding any Palestinian participation.
It outlined an end to hostilities, full entry of aid, prisoner exchanges, and the staged withdrawal of Israeli forces.
However, the Israeli regime refused to attend the October 13 signing ceremony, casting doubt on the US-led effort.
In practice, the ceasefire exists only on paper.
According to Al Jazeera’s analysis, the Israeli regime has attacked Gaza on 25 of the past 31 days, leaving only six days without recorded bombings or killings.
Yet Washington continues to insist the ceasefire “is holding.”
Since the truce took effect at noon on October 10, at least 242 Palestinians have been killed and 622 wounded, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health.
The bloodiest days—October 19 and 29—saw the regime massacre 154 people in two waves of attacks, including 52 children.
Israeli forces claimed “retaliation” after two of their soldiers were killed, prompting massive air raids across the Strip.
From October 7, 2023, through November 10, 2025, at least 69,179 Palestinians, including over 20,000 children, have been killed and more than 170,000 injured.
Despite the ceasefire’s promise of unrestricted humanitarian aid, Israel continues to starve Gaza’s population.
The World Food Programme says only half of required food shipments are arriving, while Palestinian aid groups say it’s closer to one-quarter.
Out of 15,600 expected aid trucks, only 4,453 entered Gaza as of November 6.
Israeli checkpoints and prolonged inspections have stalled deliveries, while more than 350 essential food items remain banned—including meat, dairy, and vegetables—forcing Gaza’s population to survive on snacks and soft drinks.
Under the ceasefire, Hamas was to release all remaining captives in exchange for Palestinian prisoners and the return of bodies held by both sides.
By November 10, Hamas had freed 20 living captives and returned 24 bodies, while Israel handed back 300 Palestinian bodies, many showing signs of torture.
Legal experts note that while ceasefires are designed to halt hostilities, the Israeli regime’s continued bombardment and starvation of civilians constitute flagrant breaches of political and humanitarian obligations—violations that expose the hollowness of Washington’s so-called “peace plan.”