Israeli forces storm Khan Younis hospital in bloodiest fighting of 2024
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[January 22, 2024]
By Bassam Masoud, Nidal al-Mughrabi and Dan Williams
GAZA/DOHA/JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Israeli forces, advancing deep into
western Khan Younis in Gaza's bloodiest fighting of the new year so far,
stormed one hospital and placed another under siege on Monday, cutting
the wounded off from trauma care, Palestinian officials said.
Troops advanced for the first time into the al-Mawasi district near the
Mediterranean Coast, west of Khan Younis, the main city in southern
Gaza. There, they stormed the Al-Khair hospital and were arresting
medical staff, Gaza health ministry spokesman Ashraf al Qidra told
Reuters.
There was no immediate word from Israel on the situation at the
hospital. The military spokesperson's office had no comment.
The Palestinian Red Crescent said tanks had also surrounded another Khan
Younis hospital, al-Amal, headquarters of the rescue agency, which had
lost contact with its staff there.
Qidra said at least 50 people were killed overnight in Khan Younis,
while the sieges of medical facilities meant dozens of dead and wounded
were beyond the reach of rescuers.
"The Israeli occupation is preventing ambulance vehicles from moving to
recover bodies of martyrs and the wounded from western Khan Younis," he
said.
The Israeli military spokesperson's office had no immediate comment on
the situation at Al-Khair hospital.
Israel says Hamas fighters operate from in and around hospitals, which
Hamas and medical staff deny.
"Hamas embeds its operation within and under hospitals and other medical
facilities," said Elad Goren of COGAT, the Israeli defence ministry
branch that coordinates with the Palestinians. "A particular effort led
by a dedicated team has been put on making sure that civilians have
access to medical care."
Residents said bombardment from air, land and sea was the most intense
in southern Gaza since the war began in October, as Israeli tanks surged
across Khan Younis from the east towards the Mediterranean coast.
Video filmed from afar showed scattered civilians wandering a ghost
city, crowded with tents with abandoned laundry flapping on lines, as
gunfire rattled and columns of smoke rose into the sky.
Israel launched an offensive last week to capture Khan Younis, which it
now says is the principal headquarters of the Hamas militants
responsible for the Oct. 7 attacks on southern Israel that killed 1,200
people, according to Israeli tallies.
The newest phase of the war has brought fighting deep into the last
corners of the enclave now packed with those who fled bombardment. At
least 25,295 Gazans have been killed since Oct. 7, Gaza health
authorities said in an update on Monday.
The majority of Gaza's 2.3 million residents are now penned into Rafah
just south of Khan Younis and Deir al-Balah just north of it, crammed
into public buildings and vast camps of tents made from plastic sheets
lashed to wooden frames.
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A general view of a tent camp housing displaced Palestinians, as
smoke rises in the distance due to an Israeli ground operation in
Khan Younis, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the
Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, as seen Rafah in the southern Gaza
Strip, January 22, 2024. REUTERS/Ibraheem Abu Mustafa
BURIED IN HOSPITAL GROUNDS
At Nasser Hospital, the only major hospital still accessible in
Khan Younis and the largest still functioning in Gaza, video showed
the trauma ward overwhelmed with wounded being treated on a floor
splashed with blood. Relatives wailed, surrounding small wounded
children being treated several to a bed.
Men were digging graves inside the hospital grounds because it was
no longer safe to venture out to the cemetery. Authorities said 40
people were buried in the hospital grounds. A man placed the tiny
body of a toddler wrapped inside a white shroud into a shallow hole
in the sand.
"It's very difficult to leave the complex and go to any cemetery
and bury them because we're under siege and anyone who leaves the
complex is targeted," said Abdelkarim Ahmad, participating in the
burials.
"Last night we lived through a horrifying night - the shelling
wouldn't stop for even one minute. Buildings would shake with us
inside, shrapnel would fall on us."
The Israeli military made no mention of the huge battle in Khan
Younis in a morning update, giving details of combat only in other
areas.
The storming of western parts of Khan Younis is the culmination of
a battle that Israeli officials have depicted as their last
large-scale ground assault before they shift to more targeted
operations to eradicate Hamas.
Israel says it will not stop fighting until it annihilates Hamas.
But Palestinians and some Western military experts say that
objective may be unachievable given the group's diffuse structure
and deep roots in Gaza, which it has ruled since 2007.
Though Israelis overwhelmingly support the war, a growing,
outspoken number led by relatives of the remaining hostages say the
government should do more to reach a deal to free them, even if that
means reining in its offensive.
About 20 relatives of hostages stormed a parliamentary committee
session in Jerusalem on Monday, demanding the lawmakers do more to
try to free their loved ones.
One woman held up pictures of three family members held in Gaza:
"Just one I'd like to get back alive, one out of three!" she cried
after pushing into the Knesset Finance Committee discussion.
Sami al-Zuhri, head of Hamas' political unit in exile, told Reuters
on Monday Hamas was open to "all initiatives and proposals, but any
agreement must be based on ending the aggression and the
occupation's complete withdrawal" from Gaza.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday he would make no
deal that left Hamas unvanquished. "I reject outright the terms of
surrender of the monsters of Hamas."
(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Doha and Bassam Masoud in Gaza;
writing by Peter Graff; editing by Mark Heinrich)
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