Jordan says southern Gaza hospital badly damaged by Israeli shelling
nearby
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[January 17, 2024]
By Arafat Barbakh, Tyrone Siu and Nidal al-Mughrabi
GAZA/ISRAEL-GAZA BORDER/DOHA (Reuters) - Israel stepped up its assault
on Khan Younis in southern Gaza on Wednesday, pushing tanks westwards
and prompting accusations from Jordan that its field hospital in the
city had been badly damaged by nearby shelling.
The Jordanian army said it held Israel responsible for a "flagrant
breach of international law" in what it said was the damage to the
facility as a result of Israeli shelling in the vicinity. There was no
immediate comment from the Israeli military.
People in and around another hospital, Nasser, fled as tanks approached
the district overnight following an Israeli army statement that it had
come under fire from the area. Hamas militants deny using health
facilities for military operations.
Palestinian health officials said seven people were killed by Israeli
air strikes that damaged homes near the hospital.
Many of the Nasser hospital staff have left for shelters further south,
with just one doctor for more than 100 burn victims remaining, Sean
Casey, World Health Organization emergency medical teams coordinator in
Gaza, said on Jan. 9.
Only about a third of Gaza's hospitals remain operational and some only
partially.
Explosions from shelling and air strikes sounded further west in Khan
Younis as the Israeli tanks moved on, with lines of thick black smoke
rising from bomb sites. Witnesses said tanks and bulldozers had damaged
a cemetery there before retreating to the city centre again.
Israel said it had killed six Palestinian fighters, including the
southern district Hamas officer in charge of interrogating suspected
spies.
The military said the killing of counter-espionage officer Bilal Nofal
"significantly impacts the terrorist organization's capacity to develop
and enhance its capabilities" in a statement summarizing its latest
operations.
Further south in Rafah, where hundreds of thousands of people have moved
on Israeli advice, people cried over several shrouded bodies, including
of a young girl, Masa.
"We were asleep and then we found the missiles falling on us. We got up
and couldn't see anything. We started checking on each other. The girl
was martyred," said her aunt, Tahreer Shoman, adding that her siblings
had been wounded but survived.
Israeli forces fought their way to the centre of Khan Younis more than a
month ago and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said on Monday intense
military operations in the south were drawing to a close, weeks after
similar statements about northern Gaza.
Fighting raged in densely populated Jabalia in northern Gaza on
Wednesday however, a day after Israeli tanks stormed back into parts of
the north they had left last week.
Israel announced was scaling back its operations in northern Gaza in
early January as part of what it said would be a more targeted approach
in its war against Hamas militants after operations that have flattened
entire residential districts.
COMMUNICATIONS BLACKOUT
Communications were down across Gaza on Wednesday for a sixth day,
leaving its Palestinian inhabitants, most of whom have been forced to
flee several times, unable to receive warnings on social media from the
movement of Israeli forces.
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Palestinians stand in a line as they wait to receive food amid
shortages of food supplies, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel
and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Rafah in the southern
Gaza Strip January 17, 2024. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem
The lack of local mobile phone signals also robs people trapped in
the rubble left by Israeli air strikes of the means to call for
help.
Palestinian health officials said 163 Gazans had been reported
killed over the past 24 hours, taking the death toll to 24,448 in
Israel's war on Gaza, now in its fourth month.
Israel reported two more soldiers killed, taking the toll since it
began ground operations in Gaza to 193.
Israel says it has killed 9,000 Hamas militants and has vowed to
"eliminate" the Palestinian enclave's Hamas rulers after gunmen
stormed into southern Israel and killed 1,200 people and captured
240 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.
Around half of the hostages were released in an October truce during
which some Palestinian prisoners were also freed.
Israel has said the only way to secure the release of the rest of
the hostages is military pressure on Hamas, which is sworn to
Israel's destruction. But more indirect negotiations have been
taking place behind the scenes.
A U.S. official said "intensive discussions" had taken place in
Qatar about the possibility of another deal.
"We're hopeful that it can bear fruit and bear fruit soon, because
there's still, you know, over 100 — about 140 hostages still being
held," White House national security spokesman John Kirby said on
Tuesday.
Qatar and France have brokered a separate deal with Israel and Hamas
to deliver urgent medication to some 45 Israeli hostages held by the
group in Gaza in return for humanitarian and medical aid for the
most vulnerable civilians.
The aid left Qatar for Egypt on Wednesday and was due to be taken
across the Rafah border crossing later in the day.
WEST BANK VIOLENCE
The conflict has spread to the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where
more than 300 Palestinians have been killed and thousands arrested
in raids Israel says are aimed at rooting out militants there.
The Israeli military said its forces had eliminated a "terrorist
cell" during a precise air strike on a car near the Balata camp in
the city of Nablus.
The military said it had killed Abdullah Abu-Shalal, the "head of
terrorist infrastructure" of the camp, who it said had planned an
imminent, large-scale terrorist attack with his cell members. Four
other cell members were also killed, it said.
The Palestinian Red Crescent said earlier that its teams had been
prevented from reaching the wounded.
Hours later, four people were killed in an air strike in Tulkarm,
location of one of the main crossing points between the West Bank
and Israel and a frequent target of Israeli military operations
since the Gaza conflict began.
(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Doha, Arafat Barbakh in Gaza,
Tyrone Siu at the Gaza-Israel border, southern Israel, Dan Williams
in Jerusalem and Clauda Tanios in Dubai; writing by Philippa
Fletcher; editing by Sharon Singleton)
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