The messages of fear that trickled out while Gaza was disconnected

Getty Images People search through buildings that were destroyed during Israeli air raids in the southern Gaza Strip on October 28, 2023 in Khan Younis, Gaza.Getty Images
A man searches through the rubble of a destroyed building

A voice note arrives from a journalist in a city in central Gaza, where lines of communication have been almost completely eliminated.

Mid-way through the audio, a loud explosion thuds in the background.

"The situation is very dangerous," he says, adding that many people don't know what happened to their relatives overnight.

The WhatsApp voice note, sent from the city of Deir al-Balah on Saturday, provided one of few insights available into what was happening in Gaza that day - and how civilians were coping with Israel's intensified air strikes and expanded ground operations.

Internet monitoring group NetBlocks said there had been a "collapse in connectivity" in the enclave. The blackout meant people couldn't contact their friends or family - or even ambulances to pick up the injured.

On Sunday, connectivity was returning to the territory. But on Saturday, most people in Gaza were unreachable: WhatsApp messages remained on one grey tick, showing they had been sent but not received. Calls went straight to answerphone messages.

In the last communication we had with a professor in Gaza on Friday, he told us he was too scared to follow Israeli evacuation orders and move south, in case his family were caught in a strike on the journey. We could not contact him on Saturday.

But a small number of people in Gaza have foreign SIM cards that can pick up Israeli or Egyptian masts - and the BBC was able to establish limited contact with several of them on Saturday.

That included the journalist in Deir al-Balah, who described the atmosphere as both tense and confused.

"Some people believe nothing is happening because they are not receiving news updates through messages. They are feeling some comfort," he said.

"Others are so nervous because they lost [contact with] all their loved ones."

Mohammed Saber/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock Smoke rises during Israeli airstrikes on northern Gaza, 28 October 2023Mohammed Saber/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock

Further north, in Gaza City, the BBC was able to speak to a different journalist on a short phone call. The man, who asked not to be named, described the bombing overnight as "brutal".

"We didn't expect that we would see morning," he said, adding that heavy bombing had hit "streets, governmental buildings, open fields, the beach".

The exact scale of injuries and deaths since Friday night is not known. Photos and video footage on Saturday showed mass destruction and residents trying to pull people from the debris.

In one image that is too graphic to show, a man was seen carrying the body of a toddler.

In a separate video posted on Instagram, a badly wounded man was rushed out of a building as crowds shouted desperately for an ambulance.

Instead, they put the man into the back of a truck.

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In a patchy voice note, photographer Shebab Younis - who posted the video - described the situation around him as "catastrophic".

"We have lost contact with people who have been targeted or injured," he said.

"When there is bombardment of houses, the situation has become really very hard because of the lack of communications and internet services. All this is negatively impacting a large number of medical facilities and public service buildings when there are bombings in their areas."

Challenged on whether Israel had cut communication in Gaza, Mark Regev, a senior Israeli government advisor, told the BBC on Saturday it was "standard behaviour to disrupt the communications of your enemy", likening it to what he said the UK and US had done in previous conflicts.

The United Nations said the blackout had put the civilian population "in grave danger".

"Ambulances and civil defence teams are no longer able to locate the injured, or the thousands of people estimated to be still under the rubble," UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk said.

"Civilians are no longer able to receive updated information on where they can access humanitarian relief and where they may be in less danger. Many journalists can now no longer report on the situation."

On Sunday, some people in Gaza were able to speak to the outside world again.

But on Saturday, most people there were, in the words of one of our contacts, "disconnected from the planet".

Additional reporting by Muath Al Khatib