Israeli forces push into Gaza from north and south
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[May 13, 2024]
By Nidal al-Mughrabi
CAIRO (Reuters) -Israeli forces pushed deep into the ruins of Gaza's
northern edge on Monday to recapture an area where they had claimed to
have defeated Hamas months ago, while at the opposite end of the enclave
tanks and troops pushed across a highway into Rafah.
With some of the most intense fighting for weeks now taking place on
both the northern and southern edges of Gaza, hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians have again taken flight, and aid groups warn that a
humanitarian crisis could sharply worsen.
Israel described its latest return to the north, where it pulled out
most of its troops five months ago, as part of a "mop-up" stage of the
war to prevent fighters from returning, and said such operations had
always been part of its plan. Palestinians say the need to keep fighting
amid the ruins of previous battles is proof Israel's military objectives
are unattainable.
In sprawling Jabalia, the biggest of Gaza's eight camps built 75 years
ago to house Palestinian refugees from what is now Israel, tanks pushed
towards the heart of the district. Residents said tank shells were
landing at the centre of the camp and air strikes had destroyed clusters
of houses.
Thick clouds of black smoke from explosions could be seen rising over
northern Gaza from the Israeli border on Sunday.
Israeli troops are seeking to wipe out Hamas, which has said it is
committed to Israel's destruction. The militant group burst into Israel
on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 and taking more than 250 hostages, by Israeli
tallies.
The Palestinian death toll in the war has now surpassed 35,000,
according to Gaza health officials who fear many more bodies are lost
under the rubble. The fighting has laid waste to the coastal enclave and
caused a deep humanitarian crisis, with the Gaza health ministry warning
in a statement on Monday that the medical system is on the verge of
collapse due to a shortage of fuel to power generators and ambulances.
Palestinian health officials on Monday said they had so far recovered 20
bodies of Palestinians killed in the overnight air strikes on Jabalia,
while dozens were injured.
At the opposite end of Gaza in Rafah, against the border fence with
Egypt, Israel stepped up aerial and ground bombardments on the eastern
areas of the city, killing people in an air strike on a house in the
Brazil neighborhood.
Israel ordered residents out of the east of the city last week, and
extended that order to central areas in recent days, sending hundreds of
thousands of people, most of whom are already displaced, fleeing for new
shelters.
Residents said Israeli air and ground bombardments were intensifying and
tanks had cut off the main north-south Salahuddin Road that divides the
eastern part of the city from the central area.
"The tanks cut the Saladuddin road east of the city, the forces are now
in the southeast side, building up near the built-up area, the situation
is dreadful and the sounds of explosions never stopped," said Bassam,
57, from the Shaboura neighborhood in Rafah.
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An Israeli tank maneuvers near the Israel-Gaza border, amid the
ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group
Hamas, in Israel, May 12, 2024. REUTERS/Amir Cohen/ File Photo
"People continue to leave Rafah, even far away near the western
areas as no place looks safe now and also because people do not want
to escape at the last minute should tanks make sudden incursions and
moving out becomes too late," he told Reuters via a chat app.
UNRWA, the main United Nations aid agency in Gaza, estimated that
about 360,000 people had fled the southern city since the Israeli
military gave its first evacuation order a week ago.
BOMB SHIPMENT ON HOLD
The assault on Rafah has caused one of the biggest splits in
generations between Israel and its main ally the United States,
which put some deliveries of weapons on hold for the first time
since the war began. Washington has said Israel must not assault
Rafah without a plan in place to protect civilians there, which it
has yet to see.
Jack Lew, the U.S. ambassador to Israel, signaled on Sunday that the
Rafah incursion was still on a scale that Washington considers
acceptable.
"The president was clear in the interview he gave the other evening
that what Israel has done so far hasn't crossed over into the area
where our disagreements lie," Lew told Israel's Channel 12 TV,
without elaborating on what that area entails.
"I'm hoping we don't end up with real disagreement."
Hamas' armed wing said its fighters were engaged in gun battles with
Israeli forces in one of the streets east of Rafah, and in the east
of Jabalia.
In Israel, the military sounded sirens several times in areas near
Gaza, warning of potential Palestinian cross-border rocket and or
mortar launches.
Hamas and the armed wing of Islamic Jihad said in a joint statement
that they fired mortar bombs against Israeli forces massing up
inside the Rafah crossing, the sole checkpoint linking Gaza to
Egypt, which Israel captured last week.
Late on Saturday, the Israeli military said forces operating in
Jabalia were preventing Hamas, which rules Gaza, from
re-establishing its military capabilities there.
"They were bombing everywhere, including near schools that are
housing people who lost their houses," Jabalia resident Saed, 45,
told Reuters via a chat app on Sunday. "War is restarting, this is
how it looks in Jabalia."
(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Cairo; Additional reporting by
Dan Williams and Tala Ramadan; Writing by Lincoln Feast and Sharon
Singleton; Editing by Peter Graff, Stephen Coates and Raju
Gopalakrishnan)
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