Israeli Strike on Gaza Police Post Kills 15-Year-Old Boy, Wounds Officers
Zero Signal Staff
Published May 5, 2026 at 11:48 PM ET · 14 days ago

Al Jazeera, Reuters, Quds News Network
An Israeli strike on a police post in Gaza killed a 15-year-old boy and wounded officers on May 5, according to multiple news reports from Al Jazeera, Reuters, and Quds News Network.
An Israeli strike on a police post in Gaza killed a 15-year-old boy and wounded officers on May 5, according to multiple news reports from Al Jazeera, Reuters, and Quds News Network.
The Details
Al Jazeera reported that a 15-year-old Palestinian boy named Mahmoud Sahweil was killed when an Israeli strike hit a Gaza police station and injured officers. The outlet reported that Sahweil had been selling bread to support his family.
Reuters reported that an Israeli strike targeted a police station in northern Gaza on May 5, killing a 15-year-old child. The outlet also cited the Hamas-run Interior Ministry as saying that some policemen were wounded.
Quds News Network, in a report republished by Countercurrents, said an Israeli drone strike hit a security point on Jalaa Street in Gaza City. That report said at least one Palestinian was killed and that others were injured, while the site was set on fire.
The central casualty claim—that one child was killed in the strike and that police or security personnel were among the wounded—was corroborated across the three reports.
The descriptions of the struck site varied among the sources. Al Jazeera and Reuters described the site as a police station, while Quds News Network described it as a security point on Jalaa Street. Israeli forces were named by the reports as responsible for the strike, which hit the Gaza police and security post.
Context
Reuters framed the strike as part of continuing Israeli attacks in Gaza after a ceasefire period marked by repeated violations and renewed fighting risk.
Quds News Network-linked reporting said Israeli attacks on police posts have contributed to insecurity in Gaza during the ceasefire period.
What's Next
No further details about official responses, subsequent strikes, or planned investigations were included in the available reports.
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