One day after they buried their brother, the al-Abadla siblings found his leg about 200 meters away from where he was killed by what they believe was an drone strike in Gaza. Ahmed Saeed Masoud al-Abadla, 29, who had Down syndrome, had been displaced for around nine months, living in a tent in Mawasi al-Qarara in Gaza’s Khan Younis along with his mother and married brother, Feras. Before going missing for three days, Ahmed wanted to return to his home in Qarara to inspect the damage during an Israeli incursion into the southern Gaza Strip.

“Ahmed had exceptional cognitive abilities for someone with his condition. When he joined the Right to Life School as a child, he received a certificate proving that he was one of the smartest children with Down syndrome,” his brother, Feras, told Middle East Eye. Before his death, Ahmed was staying with his family in the tent where they took shelter after being displaced during the war.

"We lived on Street 2 in al-Qarara but were displaced from our home since the beginning of the war," he said. The al-Abdala family were forced to leave their home during hostilities on 10 October, then returned during the truce in November, before being displaced twice more until they ended up in the Mawasi area of Qarara. 'He communicated well with others, and his speech was clear.

He had many friends and was dearly loved by his family and the neighborhood' On 2 July, the Israeli army began its invasion of Khan Younis, intensifying its attacks follow.