Israel keeps pressure on last two refugee cities, kills 18, health
officials say
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[February 03, 2024]
By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Ibraheem Abu Mustafa
DOHA/GAZA (Reuters) - Israeli air strikes killed 18 Palestinians in
Rafah and Deir Al-Balah, Gaza health officials said on Saturday, in the
last two Gaza Strip cities where troops had not been deployed, adding to
residents' fears Israel would expand its ground operation.
Health officials said an Israeli air strike on a house in Rafah, where
more than half of Gaza's 2.3 million residents are now homeless, killed
14 people including women and children.
The Israeli military did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
Israel's Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said forces would now press on to
Rafah on Gaza's southern edge.
Tens of thousands have arrived in Rafah in recent days, carrying
belongings in their arms and pulling children on carts, since Israeli
forces last week launched one of their biggest assaults of the war to
capture nearby Khan Younis, the main southern city.
"The place turned black, I couldn't see what's in front of me. It was
all dust and dirt. I was touching my surroundings, I was looking for my
mobile to use the flashlight to look for my children, where are they? I
found them under the rubble," said Ahmed Bassam Al-Jamal, whose son was
killed.
"I cried for help and people came. I got out Yamen, the first one, he
was the only one I can see, the rest were still under the rubble. They
pulled out Yamen, Eileen and Sila and they pulled out their mother (all
alive). We could not find Bassam, we were looking for him, but he was
buried, we could not save them, I swear we couldn't," Jamal said, as he
bade farewell to his dead son at the hospital.
In the central Gaza Strip city of Deir Al-Balah, the second major
concentration of displaced people, medics said four people were killed
in an air strike on a house earlier on Saturday.
In nearby Khan Younis, residents said the army blew up a residential
district near the city centre.
The Gaza health ministry said heavy Israeli bombardment around the
city's two main hospitals continued to undermine healthcare systems and
endanger the lives of staff, patients, and displaced people who have
taken shelter there.
On Friday, the Palestinian Red Crescent Society said four people were
killed by Israeli gunfire directed against the Al-Amal Hospital.
In Gaza City, residents and militants said fighting continued against
Israeli forces. Health officials said two people were killed by sniper
fire. Israeli forces carried out arrests in the southern suburb of Tel
Al-Hawa.
Israel launched a war on Hamas, the militant group which rules the Gaza
Strip, after an October onslaught on southern Israel by Hamas militants
who killed 1,200 people and took 253 people hostage into Gaza, more than
100 of whom are still captive, according to Israeli tallies.
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View of Rafah, southern Gaza Strip November 6, 2023 in this handout
satellite image. Maxar Technologies/Handout via REUTERS
Israeli officials say they aim to eliminate Hamas, which has vowed
to repeat its October attacks, and repatriate the hostages, many of
whom are women and children.
Gaza health authorities, who do not differentiate between militants
and civilians in their tallies, say more than 27,000 Palestinians
have been confirmed killed since the start of the war, 107 of them
in the past 24 hours, with thousands more feared lost amid the
ruins.
The Israeli military said its forces killed dozens of Palestinian
gunmen in northern Gaza.
"During targeted raids in the northern and central Gaza Strip over
the last day, IDF troops killed dozens of terrorists and destroyed
numerous anti-tank missile launchers," the Israel Defense Forces
said.
Hamas, Islamic Jihad, and other smaller militant groups said in a
separate statement their fighters engaged in fierce battles with the
army in the north and the south of the Gaza Strip.
"The more the occupation forces remain on the ground, the more we
will get to them," one Palestinian militant official said.
"A martyr falls, another rises and takes the rifle, and we are ready
to fight for many more months," he told Reuters.
Asked about Israel saying it killed 10,000 militants, he said, "This
is for public consumption in the occupation entity. It is fiction."
CEASEFIRE PROPOSAL
Mediators are awaiting a response from Hamas to a proposal for the
war's first extended ceasefire, drafted last week with Israeli and
U.S. spy chiefs and communicated by Egypt and Qatar. It was unclear
when Hamas leaders would visit Cairo to respond.
A brief November truce lasted just one week, when militants freed
110 women, children and foreign hostages in exchange for
Palestinians held in Israeli jails.
On Friday, Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh, who is leading negotiations
with Qatar and Egypt, said he spoke to the chief of the Islamic
Jihad, an ally of Hamas, and the leader of the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, to discuss the ceasefire proposal.
A Hamas statement said the discussions stressed that: "Any
negotiations should lead to a complete end to the aggression, the
withdrawal of the occupation army outside the Gaza Strip, the
lifting of the siege," as well as reconstruction, provision for
Gaza's basic needs and a full exchange of captives.
However, Israel says Hamas must be eradicated before it pulls its
troops out or frees detainees, and its main ally, the United States,
has not publicly set any goals that call that into question.
(Reporting and writing by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Doha; additional
reporting by Emily Rose in Jerusalem, Ibraheem Abu Mustafa in Gaza;
Editing by Giles Elgood)
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