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'Daddy went to heaven' — Gaza's children mourn parents killed by Israeli bombardment [NSTTV]

GAZA: When 7-year-old Laila al-Sultan wakes up at night, she shouts for her father, killed in the same Israeli airstrike that injured her leg in a Gaza war thought to have deprived thousands of Palestinian children of one or both parents.

She and her brother Khaled, 4, roll around on the floor of the shanty they now live in amid a tent city of homeless people, facing up to a life with no father as their mother struggles to cope in the rubble of a ruined enclave.

"The house collapsed on us and Daddy went to heaven and he is very happy," said Khaled, bouncing up and down on Laila's lap as they sat.

Laila has an ungainly metal brace attached to her injured leg and scars on her face and foot. The children play among the lines of laundry strung between tents on the sand of Rafah.

The hardship — and fear in a conflict where intense Israeli bombing of civilian areas continues — is made worse by their sadness. Laila described a father she loved "as much as there are fish and skies and everything", and who used to take her to the park and the zoo.

In another tent in Rafah, Ahmed al-Saker, 13, cried as he stoked a fire under a cooking pot and recalled his father, killed in a strike on their house.

"He used to sing to me at bed time and hug me and hold me before I slept," he said, wiping away tears.

Three months of war have been devastating for the children of Gaza. Health authorities in the Hamas-run territory have estimated that about 40 per cent of those confirmed killed, a figure they now put at 23,357, were aged under 18.

Most of those who survive have lost their homes. They live in shelters in schools, in tents or shanties, or crammed into still-standing houses, whole families living in single rooms. With very little food in Gaza, children are always hungry.

Fears for the future especially mark Gazan children who lost a parent. Already forced to grow up by war, they now have to bear an extra burden of work in their hard new life in the rubble. --REUTERS

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