Israel presses Gaza assault, comms blackout hits rescue efforts
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[December 27, 2023]
CAIRO/GAZA/
JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Israeli forces pummeled central Gaza by land, sea
and air on Wednesday and a telecommunications outage in much of the
enclave hit efforts to reach Palestinian casualties, after Israel's
military chief said the war on Hamas would grind on for months.
Reflecting Israeli resolve to wipe out Hamas despite growing global
calls for a ceasefire, Israel's Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi said the
11-week-old war would last "many months" and there were no "magic
solutions" or "shortcuts".
In central Gaza's Al-Maghazi district, five Palestinians were killed in
one air strike, medics said, while to the north in Gaza City health
officials said the bodies of seven Palestinians killed overnight arrived
at Al Shifa Hospital.
Residents also reported heavy fighting east and north of Al-Bureij
district and in the nearby village of Juhr Ad-Deek, where they said
Israeli tanks are stationed.
Israel's military on Wednesday reported three more soldiers killed in
action in Gaza, bringing total military losses in the enclave since
ground operations began on Oct. 20 to 166. Nearly 21,000 Palestinians
have been killed by Israeli strikes, according to Gaza's health
ministry.
Israeli intensified its raids this week, particularly in a central area
just south of the waterway that bisects the Gaza Strip. The Israeli army
told civilians to leave the area, though many said there was no safe
place left to go.
The World Health Organization released footage taken mostly on Monday
and Tuesday at several Gaza hospitals, with WHO emergency medical team
coordinator Sean Casey saying Gaza's health capacity was 20 percent of
what it was 80 days ago.
'IT'S A BLOODBATH'
"There's blood everywhere in these hospitals at the moment," said Casey,
adding that nowhere in Gaza was safe.
"We're seeing almost only trauma cases come through the door and at a
scale that's quite difficult to believe, it’s a bloodbath as we said
before, it's carnage.”
The Israeli military said it was continuing to strike what it called
terror targets in Gaza, at one point using its navy to hit suspects
deemed to pose a threat to ground troops.
In the Shejaia district of Gaza City an Israeli attack on militant
fighters on foot caused secondary explosions, indicating the area was
rigged with explosives to attack soldiers, a military statement said.
The Palestinian Red Crescent reported a complete loss of communication
with its teams working in the Gaza Strip due to the disruption of
telecommunications and internet services.
It said in a statement that the VHF radio communication network, the
sole means of communication during the blackout, sustained damage from
artillery shelling that hit part of its headquarters in Khan Younis,
posing a challenge for emergency medical teams trying to reach the
wounded and injured.
"We are gravely concerned about the continued bombardment of Middle Gaza
by Israeli forces, which has claimed more than 100 Palestinian lives
since Christmas Eve," U.N. Human Rights Office spokesperson Seif Magango
said on Tuesday.
Since Hamas killed 1,200 people and captured 240 hostages on Oct. 7 in
the deadliest day in Israeli history, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu has responded with an assault that has laid much of
Hamas-ruled Gaza to waste.
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Displaced Palestinians, who fled their houses due to Israeli
strikes, shelter in a tent camp, amid the ongoing conflict between
Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Rafah in the
southern Gaza Strip, December 26, 2023. REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa
As well as the reported 21,000 Palestinian dead, thousands more are
feared to be buried under rubble. Nearly all the enclave's 2.3
million people have been driven from their homes, many several
times.
Gaza authorities buried 80 unidentified Palestinians on Tuesday
whose bodies were handed over by Israel through the Kerem Shalom
border crossing, the health ministry said.
According to the Islamic Waqf, or religious affairs ministry, the
bodies were collected from the northern part of the Gaza Strip.
Israel says it is doing what it can to protect civilians, and blames
Hamas for putting them in harm's way by operating among them, which
Hamas denies. But even Israel's closest ally the United States has
said it should do more to reduce civilian deaths from what President
Joe Biden has called "indiscriminate bombing".
Six people were killed in the West Bank city of Tulkarm in an
Israeli raid, the Palestinian health ministry said.
US-ISRAELI TALKS ON WAR 'DAY AFTER'
In Washington, White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan
and Israel's Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer discussed
planning for what happens when the war ends, including governance
and security in Gaza.
The two also discussed efforts to bring home the remaining hostages
and a transition to a different phase of the war to focus on Hamas
leaders when they met on Tuesday, a U.S. official said.
The United States has pressed Israel in recent weeks to scale down
its war to a more targeted operation. But Washington is still seen
in the region as a supporter of Israel and U.S. forces have been
attacked by Iran-backed militants in the Middle East.
In an interview with Egyptian TV, Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas said Israel intended to stay in Gaza after the war
"but the whole world does not agree with it".
He said the U.S. could "order" Israel to agree that Gaza become part
of a future Palestinian state.
There are growing signs the conflict is spreading.
Yemen's Iran-backed Houthi militia claimed responsibility for a
missile attack on Tuesday on a container ship in the Red Sea and for
an attempt to attack Israel with drones. The attacks are a response
to Israel's assault on Gaza, the militia says.
An Israeli airstrike killed a senior leader of Iran's Revolutionary
Guards in Syria on Monday.
(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Cairo, Bassam Masoud in Gaza, and
Emily Rose, Dan Williams and Maayan Lubell in Jerusalem; Writing by
William Maclean; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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