
Iranian missile strike damages Israeli hospital
Soroka hospital in the southern city of Beersheba has been hit by a ballistic missile, Israeli officials have said, after Iran launched its latest wave of retaliatory strikes on the country. The medical centre has more than 1,000 beds and provides services to the approximately 1 million residents of Israel's south. In Tel Aviv, a high-rise building showed extensive damage after several missiles targeted the city, wounding at least 40 people
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
6 hours ago
- Telegraph
Ukrainian girl, 7, with rare cancer who flew to Israel for a cure is killed by Iranian strike
A seven-year-old Ukrainian girl who was diagnosed with a rare cancer and moved to Israel in hope of a cure has been killed by an Iranian air strike. Nastya Buryk died alongside members with her family in Bat Yam last week when a missile fired by the Islamic regime struck their apartment block. Nastya, her mother, grandmother and two brothers, were all killed in the blast on June 13, the first night of Iran's barrage, it was reported by Israeli news outlet Ynet. Her father, Artem, who is fighting against Russian invaders in Kyiv, remains alive. She had been undergoing treatment for lymphoblastic leukaemia, a rare cancer that attacks blood and bone marrow. Nastya, from Odesa, was first diagnosed in 2022 and underwent chemotherapy in Ukraine. Her condition improved but she later relapsed. 'On August 29, 2022, we heard the terrible news: 'Your daughter has cancer,'' her mother Maria Peshkureva wrote on social media. 'Since that day, I have been living in a parallel reality, where the main thing is to save. To breathe. To not give up.' As her health worsened, her family searched for more specialist treatment and, thanks to charitable donations, they sought medical care in Israel, where Nastya had a bone marrow transplant. The procedure was unsuccessful and her leukaemia returned. Earlier this year, her family turned to a new treatment in Israel, while her grandmother, Olena, 60, and two brothers, Konstantin and Ilya, nine and 13, flew from Ukraine to be with her. Both of the boys attended a local school. Nastya's father, who joined Ukraine's 95th Airborne Assault Brigade in 2022, recorded videos from the front line to appeal for donations as the cost of his daughter's care escalated. Her family believed they would be safer in Israel than Odesa, which has suffered deadly shelling from Russian forces. Ukraine's embassy in Israel said: 'On June 14, five Ukrainian citizens, including three minors, were killed in a massive Iranian missile attack on Israel, with a missile hitting a residential building in the city of Bat Yam. 'Ukrainian diplomats and consuls are in close contact with the police and other services to identify and organise the process of returning the bodies of the dead.' The attack on Bat Yam also killed four other people and injured more than 100. Since June 13, Iran has fired missiles at Israel every day in response to Israel's 'pre-emptive strike' on the regime's nuclear facilities on June 12.


Times
9 hours ago
- Times
Wards ‘completely demolished' after Iran hits Israeli hospital
Doctors and nurses on the ground floor at Soroka Medical Center, southern Israel, were preparing to treat their first patients of the day when the air raid sirens wailed. Then an Iranian ballistic missile crashed into the roof. 'We heard a massive boom and the door blew in,' a healthcare worker said. When they had recovered, she and her colleagues sprinted up flights of stairs to the wards, where bedridden patients were terrified. 'We had to carry them down … to the shelters,' another hospital employee said. The missile destroyed the top floors of the building at the rear of the hospital in Beersheba, 60 miles from Jerusalem. An Israeli soldier at the scene shrugged when asked what she had seen. 'It's all destroyed there,' she said. Oscar, an elderly patient in a wheelchair outside the hospital, was waiting to be taken to safety. 'It was chaos,' he said. 'Nurses were crying, patients were crying, it felt as if the whole room was shaking.' Shlomi Kodesh, the hospital director, said 40 people were slightly injured in the attack and several wards were 'demolished'. Hospital staff said most patients had already been moved to safe spaces. Jonathan, a member of the Israel Defence Forces (IDF), said the upper two floors of the building 'were empty' when the missile hit. The Israeli military has accused Iran of deliberately aiming a missile strike at the hospital. Iran earlier claimed it targeted a military site close to the hospital, not the hospital itself. • However, Brigadier General Effie Defrin, an Israel Defence Forces spokesman, said on Thursday: 'Let there be no doubt, the Iranian regime deliberately and maliciously fired at the hospital and population centre with the intent to harm civilians. This is state-sponsored terrorism and a blatant violation of international law.' The head of the World Health Organisation, which has repeatedly criticised Israel for bombing hospitals in Gaza, condemned the Iranian missile attack as 'appalling'. Israel has defended its bombing of hospitals in Gaza as the only way to destroy what it claims are Hamas bases underneath medical facilities. The United Nations said Israel had not provided sufficient evidence in many cases. AMIR COHEN/REUTERS Israel Katz, the defence minister, accused Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, of giving the order to attack the hospital. 'Such a man can no longer be allowed to exist,' he said. The barrage also hit a residential area of Tel Aviv and a financial district close to the city. Health officials said more than 240 people were taken to hospital across Israel, with four in a serious condition. Binyamin Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, said in Beersheba the threat of missiles from Iran, as well as its nuclear programme, would be eliminated. 'Iran will pay a heavy price,' he added. More than 20 people have been killed in Israel by Iranian missiles since last week. Among them was a seven-year-old girl from Odesa, Ukraine, who was being treated for blood cancer. Another four family members were also killed. Nastia Borik, her mother, Maria, 30; her grandmother, Olena, 60; and two of her cousins, Konstantin Totvich, nine, and Illia Peshkurov, 13, were killed when Iranian missiles hit the city of Bat Yam on June 14. Their identities were not immediately reported. The girl's father, Artyom, is reportedly fighting at the front in Ukraine. He had helped raise money for his daughter to fly to Israel for treatment. The Ukrainian embassy in Israel confirmed that five of its citizens had died in the attack. Thursday's Iranian attacks came after several days of relative calm in Israel that had led to hopes among locals that Tehran was running out of ballistic missiles. As the war continued Netanyahu assured Israelis: 'With God's help, we will win.' Ultra-orthodox Jews, however, see the conflict as evidence of the impending end of the world. 'This is the start of the end of days,' said Meriev, a woman who lives near the hospital in Beersheba. 'After this war, God will send a new temple.'


Daily Mirror
10 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Girl, 7, dies in Iran missile strike while in Israel for cancer treatment
The family of seven-year-old Nastya Buryk were staying in Bat Yam in Israel while she underwent cancer treatment when their appartment block was hit by a missile A seven-year-old girl has tragically died this week after getting caught up in the Iran missile strike. Israel has been launching missiles at Iran in an attempt to cripple its nuclear capabilities since last Friday, and US President Donald Trump was thinking about getting involved. But, Trump dramatically stepped back from the brink last night as Britain prepared to take part in peace talks with Iran. Yesterday Iranian missiles crashed into a major hospital in southern Israel and hit residential buildings near Tel Aviv, wounding at least 240 people, around 15km away a missile also struck Bat Yam where the family of a young girl were staying while she underwent treatment. Nastya Buryk, from Odesa in Ukraine, was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer on August 29, 2022 and she underwent her first course of chemotherapy in Ukraine. Nastya's condition improved, but then she suffered a relapse. She needed more specialist treatment, so with some help from charitable donations, but largely self-funded, her family decided to try and seek treatment in Isal in December 2022. In Israel, Nastya underwent a bone marrow transplant. Sadly, the procedure did not work, and the leukaemia returned. But a new treatment to encourage the failed bone marrow transplant to work offered Nastya's family hope again. Earlier this year Nastya's mother Maria decided to give the new treatment a chance. Nastya's grandmother Olena, 60, flew out to Israel to lend her support. She brought with her two of Nastya's cousins, Konstantin and Ilya, aged nine and seven, who enrolled in local infant schools, reports MailOnline. Should the UK get involved in the Iran-Israel conflict? Take our poll below, and if you can't see it - click here But last week tragedy struck when Israel launched a surprise attack on Iran, with the aim of destroying its nuclear and ballistic missile threat. One week on there continus to be intensifying conflict between Iran and Israel,as both nations continue to exchange fire in what has become the region's most volatile standoff in years. Last night, Iran boasted that all its nuclear material had been moved to 'a safe place' before Israeli missiles struck its nuclear sites. Iranian commander Mohsen Rezaei said: "'Israel hit Natanz, Isfahan, Khandab, and Arak, but they were already evacuated. All the materials have been moved to a safe place." Iran retaliated with volleys of missiles and drones at Israel. On the first day of the barrage, June 13, one of those missiles struck the apartment block in the coastal city of Bat Yam where Nastya's family had been staying. Nastya, her mother, grandmother and the two boys, were all tragically killed in the blast. Only Nastya's father Artem, who is fighting on the front line in Kyiv, remains alive.