unscheduled disassembly, however... and lift off... sort of. space x's starship rocket takes off from boca chica in texas, but says it has lost contact with the booster and is "apresuming rocket failure. " hello, i'm christian fraser. a un—run school in northern gaza appears to have been hit. it is believed the school was being used as a shelter for displaced people. details are unclear at the moment. the hamas—run health ministry says there were two strikes in the region of the jabalia refugee camp. it says at least 80 people were killed in the two blasts. in the second blast, the health ministry says 32 people from one family — including 19 children were killed. of course, we don't have eyes in the jabalia refugee camp so we can't independently verify those numbers. bbc verify has gelocated some footage posted online to the school. the weather conditions evident in the footage match the forecast from today and no previous versions of the video have been found online. much is too graphic to show but many people including women and children — are seen with severe injuries or lying motionless on the floor in different parts of the building. in the last hour a spokesman for the israel defense forces told me they had seen the images and were looking into it but he couldn't confirm it was the idf. also today... hundreds of people have been leaving gaza city's al—shifa hospital on foot. doctors say israeli forces had issued — by loudspeaker — an order to evacuate. the israeli military has denied this. it said it had agreed to expand and assist an evacuation, following a request by the hospital's director. we've had these pictures in from central gaza. newsagency afp says they show palestinians evacuated from al—shifa hospital, heading south walking down rubble strewn streets. tanks and bulldozers are close by. some of the people are holding or waving white flags. afp's reporter says the crowds included the sick and injured. we don't know how far from the hospital this video was recorded. the israeli military says hamas has a command centre in tunnels below al—shifa, something hamas denies. as well as patients and medical staff, large numbers of displaced people are sheltering in the hospital. our middle east correspondent, tom bateman, has more from jerusalem. gaza's biggest hospital, al—shifa. a report from the scene said an evacuation of many remaining staff and patients was instructed this morning. the israeli military denies it's ordered people out — calling it a request from the hospital — but saying there is an expanded evacuation. israeli tanks surround the compound. the army claims it is a hamas command centre. it has yet to show evidence of this, but has shown pictures of some weapons it says it found this week. many inside, badly wounded, will not be able to move. a british surgeon who has worked frequently in gaza has had contact with doctors at al—shifa over recent weeks. they are working under the most appallingly hostile conditions. the patients that are being evacuated, it is almost inconceivable to me that they will survive. this notion that they will be evacuated to a safe area is a ludicrous notion, if you ask me. the roads are almost impassable, there are no functioning hospitals in gaza at the moment. near another hospital in northern gaza, bodies were gathered from what residents say was heavy israeli bombardment overnight. and in the south, supposedly safer, more scenes of destruction. at least 32 people were killed here in the city of khan younis, say doctors. now israel is warning parts of the city will become a new focus of its war with hamas, telling some of the displaced from the north to move again. people fear more devastation like that of last night. translation: their bodies are in pieces. three missiles hit the building. they had nothing to do with the militants and no militants were there. they were all children and girls. aid groups are worried about disease spreading now, with gaza's humanitarian crisis deepening. people desperate for bread. the un says they face the immediate possibility of starvation in gaza after the supply chain for aid collapsed. now, to get it moving again, two tankers of fuel a day will enter after us pressure on israel. but relief groups say it is still not enough. meanwhile, there are growing worries about the potential for a security collapse in gaza, with few signs of a plan after the fighting. the americans do not want israeli boots on the ground in the long term. there may have to be a transitional period where security is provided for gaza. that's something we have to look at. but when it comes to the future of gaza, in ourjudgment, it has to be under palestinian governance. an israeli leaflet drop took place over southern gaza. they offer incentives and protection for information about the hostages held by hamas. in israel, marchers reached jerusalem, demanding the return of nearly 240 captives, including children and the elderly. their destination is the office of prime minister benjamin netanyahu, who is under growing pressure. six weeks after the hamas attacks that sparked this war, the bloodshed and uncertainty only intensifies. tom bateman also updated us on the situation injabalia. well, this is a un school in the north, injabalia refugee camp very far north in the gaza strip. now, remember that those un facilities had early on in the war become designated shelters for palestinians. and they're not reinforced buildings — they're schools — but they were the designated shelters and supposed to be, you know, so—called deconflicted, so civilians were inside. now, what's happened over the past weeks is, as the un has had to focus its operations on the south of the gaza strip because the north has become the operational focus of the fighting, of the war — and is effectively being split from the south of the gaza strip — the un had to abandon, formally, its operations in the north of the strip. so it said it wasn't formally able to offer any services to those many, many tens of thousands of people sheltering in schools. this is one of those schools. it's had people sheltering in it and what appears to have happened is, as you say, we see images that are still being verified by the bbc but appear to show many casualties in one of those schools in jabalia refugee camp. now, we were in contact this morning with a doctor at the indonesian hospital, which is very close by. he described, in his words, a "hard attack" by israeli forces in the area. they had had many bodies coming in. so it seems that if this is the same event that there are many casualties, potentially, in the strike there. as tom said, still a lot that we don't know about what is happening in jabalia. earlier i spoke lt col peter lerner, a spokesman for the israel defense forces about these attacks. i cannot confirm this incident is the idf, but we are seeing images like you are seeing images on social media and we are looking into it. i cannot confirm at this stage that this is idf, but we are looking into it. fair enough. let's talk about the al—shifa hospital. there are conflicting reports today, the director of the hospital says they were ordered by loudspeaker to evacuate, i have seen your statement that says you were responding to an evacuation request. how can you interpret those two contradictory statements? i think we need to listen to what the administrator was speaking. on our statement we issued a recording of the conversation between our officer and the administration of the hospital that actually says very clearly, "we are asking to leave." so from our perspective, there is no question. we have been encouraging people to leave the hospital premises for many weeks now. precisely to get them out of harm's way. we have seen last night again when they approached us and said they would like to leave because of the military presence in the compound, we said we would co—ordinate it for the morning and that is what we have been doing since this morning. it is important to get people out of harm's way. that is what the idf has been trying to do since the beginning of this conflict. it is a huge challenge for any professional military operating in such a hostile environment where terrorists utilise tunnels to come out and launch rpgs and they do it from places like hospitals, like schools, like mosques. wherever they can take advantage of the humanitarian and civilian arena. but clearly some patients cannot be moved, so serious are their injuries. we are told around 120 remain, including premature babies. there are five medical staff. we have spoken to the world health organization in the last hour who say they have no details that the israel defense forces are providing support and medical care to those who are left behind. what can you tell us, because effectively now, given that there has been this evacuation, you are responsible for those patients, are you not? the medical staff, some medical staff, have remained in the hospital to care for those that couldn't go. i can say that over the last few days, and including over last night, we have maintained a flow of supplies, of food supplies, medical supplies, into the hospital to support those that are remaining. of course we have medical personnel also within our forces in order to facilitate if their needs be, but we have not been approached by the hospital staff. but you would lend that support if it was asked for? that is the right thing to do. i can't imagine we would do anything else. in terms of the operation, you have been there now for three or four days in the complex, we have seen pictures of the weapons that lucy williamson who you took in saw in the mri room, we have seen a tunnel on the western perimeter of the complex, you told us before that you had good intelligence there was a command centre beneath this hospital. why is it proving so difficult to show the world the evidence? it is not difficult. it is just a timely operation. the situation is that hamas have, for the last 16 years, been building its terrorist infrastructure in, around and beneath hospitals. and what we are doing is being very cautious in order not to jeopardise our force security. we don't want to rush into a tunnel that could be booby—trapped. we are revealing more and more of this infrastructure every day that goes by. we are seeing how deep into the belly of this war machine it goes. once we have a safe access, once we have more visuals, we will of course reveal those to the world. i understand the need and the pressure and the understanding that the media want to see it now, immediately, but the matters of war and operational security sometimes aren't necessarily in sync with the need of the media battle space. this is a challenge that we face. the unrwa communication director has been in touch with her staff in gaza today when communications were finally restored, they say they have recieved no fuel this week to distribute the aid coming across. there is barely enough to pump the water and sewage. who is going to feed the 1.5 million people who are displaced if they are not? i am actually receiving reports of unrwa bringing fuel trucks into gaza in order to be able to distribute food and humanitarian aid. they say they have none. she has given us an interview this morning saying that they have received no fuel in the past few days in order to be able to restore their operations. that is really concerning, because fuel has gone in under the un banner, so that is concerning what you are saying to me. i will have to look into that. we know that we have been supplying fuel for the un in orderfor them to enable and conduct their food distribution capabilities in the south of gaza. so what you are saying to me is extra in the concerning. peter lerner there. just to bring you news of a statement from philippe les renee who is the commissioner general of unrwa, the palestinian un agency that looks after palestinians in the gaza strip. he said that he has received horrifying images and footage of scores of people killed and injured in an attack on a mac to school in the north of gaza. these attacks cannot become commonplace, he says. there must stop. a humanitarian ceasefire cannot wait any longer. i am going to bring you some of that footage that we have seen. obviously we need to be very careful with it because it is pretty graphic. you see a lot of dead bodies in the video so we are going to have a quick look at that and we will show you what we can. that is after the spot. some crucial european championship qualifiers taking place to secure the letter to the tournament in germany next year. one match already under way. wales recovering from a bad start in our mania. equalising on the stroke of half—time. they need to win this one, wales, to keep their fate need to win this one, wales, to keep theirfate in their own hands. if they win this game and beat turkey on tuesday they will qualify stop it is 1—1 at the moment. that matches into the second half. latvia play croatia, the other match in that group. elsewhere in group b you will see that france are playing gibraltar. and benevolence are playing the republic of ireland. all of those matches are kicking off on saturday. everton say they'll appeal — after the english premier league handed out its biggest sanction to a football club for breaking financial fair play rules. their 3—2 win over crystal palace last weekend continued their rise up the table — but the ten point deduction they've now been given leaves them joint bottom in the table, two points from safety. their next game is against manchster united after the international break. former player pat nevin believes the club will be galvanised in their battle to stay up. it is draconian, but what can they do now? they have to deal with it. we will appeal as we have done. if they don't win the appeal they have got a battle on their hands. that battle on their hands, i still think they are well capable of winning, purely because the teams around them are not terrible but everton are in good form and i have watched them twice so far this season and there are a team that are capable of winning enough points to secure their place. after all the fuss over drain covers on the streets of las vegas, qualifying went ahead as planned as ferrari's charles leclerc claimed pole for sunday's first grand prix since 1982 around the famous strip and landmarks. le clerc was quickest in all 3 sessions of qualifying and he would have beenjoined on the front row by carlos sainz, had one of the loose drain covers, not damaged his car in friday practice, that eventually led to a 10 place grid penalty, so he starts in 12th and that means its world champion, max verstappen, who'll start, in second. australia prepared at the stadium on saturday in pursuit of their six world cup title.— world cup title. india are the favourites — world cup title. india are the favourites on _ world cup title. india are the favourites on home - world cup title. india are the favourites on home soil, - world cup title. india are the - favourites on home soil, unbeaten so far. the australian captain is confident that his side can go all the way. confident that his side can go all the wa . ., u, confident that his side can go all the wa. ., ., ~ ., confident that his side can go all thewa. ., ., ., the way. you can make a case for either side- _ the way. you can make a case for either side. the _ the way. you can make a case for either side. the good _ the way. you can make a case for either side. the good thing - the way. you can make a case for either side. the good thing is - the way. you can make a case for| either side. the good thing is that i think we have got six or seven quys i think we have got six or seven guys that won it in 2015, so we know that feeling. even more of the guys that feeling. even more of the guys that were there in the t20 world cup, a different format but pretty much everyone or at least a dozen of the 15, have won a world cup and know what it takes and know that feeling. they won't be afraid to go out there and be brave and take the game on. wallace walla ce we nt wallace went top of the leaderboard needing an eagle. still checked it out from the sans inches from the hole for another birdie there. wallace is on 16 under par and will take a one—shot lead into the final day ahead of tommy fleetwood and victor hoffman. ourfull day ahead of tommy fleetwood and victor hoffman. our full leaderboard is on the bbc sport website. i will have more later but for now, back to you, christine. we are following the news of the two strikes in the jabalia camp in northern gaza. two of them, we are told, and both of them in schools. one of them that we definitely know it is a un shelter. we have had a statement in the last few minutes from the commissioner general of unrwa, philippe les renee who says he has received horrifying images and footage of scores of people who were killed and injured in this attack. i would were killed and injured in this attack. iwould presume were killed and injured in this attack. i would presume that he is looking at the pictures that i am about to show you. just a health warning on these, there are some very graphic images in these videos of women and children who have been killed. if you have children in the room, you may want to avert their eyes. let me bring up what we have got because we have obviously covered the worst of it. itjust gives you an impression of what we are talking about here because this is on the first floor of the school that was being used by displaced palestinians. you will see there is evidence of shrapnel around the first floor. there are things to say about this, first of all the building appears largely to be intact, but you can see the chaos and you can see that there are children who are standing among the bodies that are lying around. very young children standing around bodies that are lying around this complex. in this particular room, and i have looked at that picture, we had to cut it there, but in those rooms you see bodies on the floor, lots of bodies, in one particular room. in the last room where the cameraman goes, what you see is a lot of furniture that seems to have been thrown to one side of the room. and the bodies are in obviously a state of disorder, so they are twisted, some of them have quite severe injuries. it looks, and i am no expert, but it looks as if there has been a blast of some kind in and around that complex, but we can't tell you where that blast came from, who fired it, all of that of course will have to be investigated. suffice to say, from what the bbc verify have looked at, and we have already reported that the weather is consistent with the weather in northern gaza today, we have seen no film, no footage of this kind on social media previously, so it does look as if it has been filmed today and it does look as well as if there are a good many people who have been killed in that attack wherever it came from. the idf said they are investigating and of course we will bring you any response from them as and when we get it. let's move on. here in the uk — the number of people in bradford's pakistani community who have married a cousin has fallen sharply in the past ten years, according to a new study. ten years ago researchers found that about 60% of babies in the northern uk city's large pakistani population had parents who were first or second cousins, but new follow—up research of mothers finds the figure's dropped to 46%. with me is our reporter anisa khadri1. i think ithinka i think a lot of people when they think about marriage among cousins, and it happens in many different societies, always turn to the idea of genetics and what happens to children that are born to those families. , ., , children that are born t