Palestinians seek slivers of safety as Israel battles Hamas in south
Gaza city
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[December 07, 2023]
By Bassam Masoud and Dan Williams
GAZA/JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Israel battled Hamas militants in the Gaza
Strip's biggest cities on Thursday and said it had attacked dozens of
targets, leaving Palestinians struggling to survive in a situation the
United Nations described as "apocalyptic".
Gazans crammed into Rafah on the border with Egypt, heeding Israeli
leaflets and messages saying that they would be safe in the city. But
medics and relatives said Israeli air strikes had killed 17 people in a
house there on Wednesday sheltering some of those displaced from further
north.
"The house was targeted by three rockets. They targeted women and
children, as you can see, and the guests who were told the south would
be safe," said Bassam al-Hobi, a member of the family that was hit,
gesturing to bodies wrapped in white cloth, some small, lined up on the
ground and surrounded by mourners.
As well as the 17 dead, three were missing and others wounded, he said.
Elsewhere in Rafah, medics said four people had been killed while
traveling in a rickshaw on Thursday.
Israel said militants had fired at least one rocket from Rafah and that
it had killed a number of gunmen in southern Gaza's largest city, Khan
Younis, including two militants who emerged firing from a tunnel.
Hamas' armed wing, al-Qassam Brigades, said combat was fierce after
troops entered the heart of Khan Younis on Wednesday in a new phase of
the war, which is now entering its third month.
Palestinian health officials said an Israeli air strike had killed two
people in Khan Younis on Thursday morning, while in central Gaza, medics
said four people had been killed in a house in Nusseirat refugee camp
overnight.
Those who escape violence face an increasingly desperate struggle to
survive.
Hundreds of people packed a road in central city of Deir al-Balah,
waiting for food outside a U.N. compound that had yet to open, a video
posted by Ramy Abdu, founder of the Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights
Monitor, showed.
The U.N. Palestinian Refugee Agency (UNRWA) said 1.9 million people - 85
percent of Gaza's population - had been displaced, its shelters were
four times over capacity, and there was not enough aid to meet "the
overwhelming needs".
The Palestinian death toll in the eight weeks of warfare reported by
Gaza medics was at 16,015, including 43 reported by one hospital on
Tuesday and 73 by another on Wednesday.
Gaza's health ministry has not released overall casualty figures since
Monday, and it and the U.N. say hundreds of people are unaccounted for
under rubble.
BOMBING AND GUNBATTLES
Residents in Gaza City in the north reported all-night bombing and
fierce gunbattles in Shejaia, east of the centre, and the Jabalia
refugee camp further north, where Qatar-based Al Jazeera Media Network
said 22 relatives of its Gaza correspondent Moamen Al-Sharafi had been
killed.
Another district, Sabra, was also bombed, locals said.
Israel said it had raided a Hamas compound in Jabalia, killing several
gunmen and discovering tunnels, a training area and weapons. In Shejaia,
the armed wing of Hamas-allied Islamic Jihad, Al-Quds Brigades, said
their fighters had hit Israeli tanks.
In Khan Younis, Israeli forces had encircled the house of Hamas leader
Yahya Al-Sinwar, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday
evening.
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Israeli soldiers take part in trainings at the Israeli-occupied
Golan Heights amid ongoing cross-border hostilities between Israel
and Hezbollah at Israel-Lebanon border December 6, 2023. REUTERS/Gil
Eliyahu
"His home may not be his castle, and he can escape, but it's only a
matter of time before we get him," he said.
Israel's move into Khan Younis followed a ground incursion into Gaza
City in the north to root out Hamas militants who had attacked
Israel and taken hostages on Oct. 7 and was accompanied by some of
the heaviest bombing of the war.
The surprise incursion by Hamas fighters who rampaged through
Israeli towns killed 1,200 people, with 240 people taken hostage,
according to Israel's tally.
The Israeli military says 88 soldiers have been killed in ground
incursions into Gaza that began on Oct. 20 and that about a third of
the reported Palestinian toll consisted of combatants, without
saying how that estimate was reached.
In Geneva, the U.N. human rights chief said the situation in Gaza
was "apocalyptic" with the risk that serious rights violations were
being committed by both sides.
The U.N. has been unable to distribute aid in every part of the Gaza
Strip except for the Rafah governorate for the past four days, it
said in its daily humanitarian report on Thursday.
In Rafah, about 13 km (8 miles) south of Khan Younis, most of those
displaced from elsewhere were sleeping rough as the U.N. had only
managed to hand out a few hundred tents, the U.N. humanitarian
office said on Wednesday.
While some aid had entered Gaza from Egypt through the Rafah
crossing, the surge in hostilities since a week-long truce collapsed
on Dec. 1 was hindering distribution, the report said.
Displaced civilians were also fleeing to the desolate area of Al
Mawasi on Gaza's southern Mediterranean coast. Israel had declared
the area safe but accused militants on Thursday of firing 12 rockets
from there, leaving its status unclear.
The former Bedouin village lacks shelter, food and other
necessities, according to refugee organisations.
A Palestinian who fled there, Ibrahim Mahram, said five families
were sharing a tent.
"We suffered from the war of cannons and escaped it to arrive at the
war of starvation," he told Reuters. "We divide one tomato between
all of us."
NEW CEASEFIRE EFFORT AT UN
Palestinian medics say Gaza's hospitals are overflowing with dead
and wounded, many of them women and children, and supplies are
running out.
Leaders of the Group of Seven nations, including Israel's close ally
the United States, called for further humanitarian truces to address
the humanitarian crisis and minimise civilian casualties.
A senior Hamas official told Reuters mediators were still exploring
opportunities for a truce and reiterated its demand that Israel
cease its attacks.
The U.N. Security Council received a UAE-drafted resolution on
Wednesday demanding an "immediate humanitarian ceasefire", with a
vote sought on Friday.
(Additional reporting by Maggie Fick in Beirut, Dan Williams and
Henriette Chacar in Jerusalem, Emma Farge in Geneva, Nayera Abdallah
and Reuters bureaux; Writing by Cynthia Osterman and Miral Fahmy and
Philippa Fletcher; Editing by)
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