Displaced pack Gaza hospitals, others flee as Israeli troops and Hamas
fighters clash
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[November 09, 2023]
By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Maytaal Angel
GAZA/JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Israeli forces fought Hamas militants among
ruined buildings in the north of the Gaza Strip on Thursday, inching
their way closer to two big hospitals as the plight of civilians in the
besieged Palestinian territory worsened.
Thousands more Palestinians were fleeing from the embattled north to the
south along a perilous frontline path after Israel told them to
evacuate, residents say.
But many are staying in the north, packed into the Al Shifa Hospital and
al-Quds Hospital as ground battles rage around them and more Israeli air
strikes rain down from above.
Israel says its Hamas foes have command centers embedded in the
hospitals.
In Paris, officials from about 80 countries and organizations were
meeting to coordinate humanitarian aid to Gaza and find ways to help
wounded civilians escape the siege, now in its second month.
Aid agencies called for an immediate ceasefire.
"We cannot wait a minute more," said Jan Egeland, Secretary General of
the Norwegian Refugee Council, calling Israel's actions "collective
punishment".
"Without a ceasefire, lifting of siege and indiscriminate bombarding and
warfare, the hemorrhage of human lives will continue."
His calls were echoed by the United Nations and the International Red
Cross, although Isarel and its main backer the United States reject a
full ceasefire.
Israel unleashed its assault on Gaza in response to a cross-border Hamas
raid on southern Israel on Oct. 7 in which gunmen killed 1,400 people,
mostly civilians, and took about 240 hostages, according to Israeli
tallies.
It was the single worst day of bloodshed in Israel's 75-year history and
drew international condemnation of Hamas and sympathy and support for
Israel.
But Israel's retaliation in the Hamas-ruled enclave has caused great
concern as a humanitarian catastrophe has unfolded.
Palestinian officials said 10,569 Gaza residents had been killed as of
Wednesday, about 40% of them children, in air and artillery strikes
while basic supplies are running out and areas laid waste by unrelenting
Israeli bombardments.
Residents in Gaza City, a Hamas stronghold, said Israeli tanks were
stationed around the area. Both sides reported inflicting heavy
casualties on one another in intense street battles.
Israel, which has vowed to wipe out Hamas, says 33 of its soldiers have
been killed in its ground operation as they advanced into the heart of
Gaza City.
Israeli troops had secured a Hamas military stronghold called Compound
17 in Jabalya in northern Gaza after 10 hours of combat with Hamas and
Islamic Jihad militants above and below the ground, the Israeli military
said on Wednesday.
It said troops killed dozens of militants, seized weapons, exposed
tunnel shafts and discovered a Hamas weapons manufacturing site in a
residential building in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood.
Israeli military footage showed soldiers walking through rubble into a
building where one wall had been blasted away, finding
weapons-manufacturing equipment, instruction manuals and a tunnel shaft.
Nearby was a girl's bedroom with pink walls, pink wardrobes and three
little beds.
The armed wing of Hamas said it had killed a greater number of Israeli
soldiers than the military has announced, and had destroyed dozens of
tanks, bulldozers, and other vehicles. It released footage of fighters
firing anti-tank rockets and scoring direct hits to vehicles.
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Israeli soldiers operate amid the ongoing ground invasion against
Palestinian Islamist group Hamas in the northern Gaza Strip,
November 8, 2023. REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun
NOWHERE TO RUN TO
Thousands of Palestinians have sought refuge at Al Shifa hospital
inside Gaza City despite Israel's orders to evacuate the area it has
encircled. They are sheltering in tents in the hospital grounds and
say they have nowhere else to go.
The U.N. humanitarian office OCHA said Israeli had again told
residents of the north to move southwards, opening a four-hour
corridor for the fifth consecutive day. About 50,000 people left the
area on Wednesday, it said.
Clashes and shelling around the main road continued, the OCHA said,
endangering evacuees. Corpses lay alongside the road, while most
evacuees were moving on foot as the Israeli military had told them
to leave vehicles, it said.
One resident, who asked not to be named, said he had crossed with
his wife and six children including two adult daughters after having
initially taken shelter in Gaza City from their home in Beit Hanoun
close to the frontier with Israel.
"There are no taxis and you can only take a small amount with you.
You have to hold your ID card in your hand and raise it as you go
past the Israeli tanks and then walk several more kilometers
searching for a lift," he said.
Huge numbers of displaced people from among Gaza's 2.3 million
population are already crammed into schools, hospitals and other
sites in the south.
Fighting close to Al Shifa would pose a challenge for Israeli
forces, said Shalom Ben Hanan, a former top official in Israel's
Shin Bet security service, given troops may need to evacuate
civilians who ignored warnings to leave.
"They (Hamas) will shoot at us and will fight with us from the
hospital," he told Reuters in Jerusalem. "We will pay a high price
for it."
Although the fighting is concentrated in the north, southern areas
have also come under regular attack.
In Khan Younis, Gaza's main southern city, residents picked through
the rubble and twisted debris of a building destroyed by an Israeli
air strike, hoping to find survivors, on Thursday morning, witnesses
said.
CEASEFIRE CALLS
The conference in Paris, attended by Arab nations, Western powers,
G20 members and NGO groups such as Doctors Without Borders, was
discussing measures to alleviate the suffering in Gaza but without a
pause in the fighting expectations are low.
President Emmanuel Macron, as he opened the conference, called for a
humanitarian pause.
"The situation is serious and getting worse each day," he said.
Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh, whose Palestinian
Authority has limited self-rule in the Israeli-occupied West Bank
but was driven out of Gaza by Hamas in 2007, was present at the
conference. Israel was not invited.
"How many Palestinians must be killed for the war to stop," Shtayyeh
asked. "Is killing 10,000 people in 30 days enough?"
The PA says the Gaza Strip is an integral part of what it envisions
for a future Palestinian state. Israeli officials have said they do
not intend to occupy Gaza after the war, but have yet to articulate
how they might ensure security. Israel withdrew its forces from Gaza
in 2005.
(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza, Maytaal Angel, Emily Rose
and Maayan Lubell in Jerusalem, Rami Amichay in Tel Aviv, Matt
Spetalnick and Humeyra Pamuk in Washington, and other Reuters
bureaus; Writing by Angus MacSwan; Editing by Peter Graff)
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