Israel carries out new raids in Gaza as Netanyahu visits U.S
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[July 24, 2024]
By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Mohammad Salem
CAIRO/GAZA (Reuters) - Israeli forces carried out new raids in the Gaza
Strip on Wednesday, hours before Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was
due to address the U.S. Congress.
The latest Israeli attacks destroyed homes in towns east of Khan Younis
in southern Gaza and thousands of people were forced to head west to
seek shelter, residents said.
The Palestinian Civil Emergency Service said it had received distress
calls from residents trapped in their homes in Bani Suhaila, east of
Khan Younis, but were unable to reach the town.
Israel's military, which is trying to eradicate the Islamist militant
group Hamas after the Oct. 7 attack on Israel, said it had been
operating in areas from which fighters had been able to fire rockets
into Israel and attack Israeli troops.
Gaza health officials said Israeli military strikes in the past 24 hours
had killed at least 55 people, the latest casualties in a war that
health authorities in the enclave say has killed more than 39,000
Palestinians.
"Where should we go? Shall we cross into the sea?" said Ghada, who has
been displaced with her family six times during the war, said from Hamas
City in northwestern Khan Younis.
"We are exhausted, starved, and want the war to end now, now not an hour
later. Every day means more families are wiped off the registration
book," she told Reuters via a chat app.
Local residents said they had been ordered to head west towards a
designated humanitarian area, but that the area was now unsafe.
Israeli forces also carried out airstrikes on several areas of central
and northern Gaza Strip, killing and wounding several Palestinians,
health officials said.
Residents of Rafah, near the border with Egypt, said Israeli forces had
blown up several houses in the west of the city.
PALESTINIANS CRITICIZE U.S.
Hamas-led fighters triggered the war on Oct. 7 by storming into southern
Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking 250 captives, according to
Israeli tallies. Some 120 hostages are still being held though Israel
believes one in three are dead.
Some Palestinians who gathered at a hospital in Khan Younis before
funerals criticized the United States, Israel's most important
international ally, for welcoming Netanyahu.
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Israeli soldiers travel in a military vehicle, amid the Israel-Hamas
conflict, by the Israel-Gaza border, in Israel, July 23, 2024.
REUTERS/Amir Cohen/File Photo
The Israel leader was due to address Congress later on Wednesday and
to meet President Joe Biden at the White House on Thursday.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said he would meet
Netanyahu in Florida on Friday.
"The United States is a main partner in what is happening in Gaza.
We are being killed because of the United States. We are being
slaughtered by American planes, American ships, American tanks, and
American troops," said Kazem Abu Taha, a displaced resident from
Rafah.
A senior Hamas official, Sami Abu Zuhri, told Reuters: "The Congress
invitation to Netanyahu to make a speech gives legitimacy to the
crimes of the war of genocide in Gaza. Receiving a war criminal is a
shame to all Americans."
Israel has rejected accusations brought by South Africa at the
U.N.'s top court that its military operation in Gaza is a state-led
genocide campaign against Palestinians. It has reacted angrily to a
decision by the International Criminal Court's prosecutor to seek an
arrest warrant against Netanyahu.
Netanyahu said this week a deal to release Israelis held captive in
Gaza could be near. But Hamas officials said Netanyahu was stalling
and that they had not seen any change in the Israeli stance that
would allow an agreement to be reached.
Hamas wants a ceasefire agreement to end the war in Gaza. Netanyahu
says the war cannot end before Hamas is eradicated.
(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Cairo and Mohammad Salem in Gaza,
Additional reporting by Washington bureau, Editing by Timothy
Heritage)
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