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KHAN YOUNIS, Gaza Strip (AP) — Medics in Gaza warned Sunday that thousands could die as hospitals packed with wounded people run desperately low on fuel and basic supplies. Palestinians in the besieged coastal enclave struggled to find food, water and safety ahead of an expected Israeli ground offensive in the war sparked by Hamas’ deadly attack.
Israeli forces, supported by a growing deployment of U.S. warships in the region, positioned themselves along Gaza’s border and drilled for what Israel said would be a broad campaign to dismantle the militant group. A week of blistering airstrikes have demolished entire neighborhoods but failed to stem militant rocket fire into Israel.
The Gaza Health Ministry said 2,329 Palestinians have been killed since the fighting erupted, more than in the 2014 Gaza war, which lasted over six weeks. That makes this the deadliest of the five Gaza wars for both sides. More than 1,300 Israelis have been killed, the vast majority of them civilians killed in Hamas’ Oct. 7 assault. This is the deadliest war for Israel since the 1973 conflict with Egypt and Syria.
Hospitals are expected to run out of generator fuel within two days, according to the U.N., which said that that would endanger the lives of thousands of patients. Gaza’s sole power plant shut down for lack of fuel after Israel completely sealed off the 40-kilometer-long (25-mile-long) territory following the Hamas attack.
In Nasser Hospital, in the southern town of Khan Younis, intensive care rooms are packed with wounded patients, most of them children under the age of 3. Hundreds of people with severe blast injuries have come to the hospital, where fuel is expected to run out by Monday, said Dr. Mohammed Qandeel, a consultant at the critical care complex.
There are 35 patients in the ICU who require ventilators and another 60 on dialysis. If fuel runs out, “it means the whole health system will be shut down,” he said, as children moaned in pain in the background. “All these patients are in danger of death if the electricity is cut off.”
Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, the head of pediatrics at the Kamal Adwan Hospital in northern Gaza, said it did not evacuate despite Israeli orders. There are seven newborns in the ICU hooked up to ventilators, he said. “We cannot evacuate, that would mean death for them and other patients under our care.”
Patients keep arriving with severed limbs, severe burns and other life-threatening injuries. “It’s frightening,” he said.
The Shifa hospital in Gaza City, the territory’s largest, said it would bury 100 bodies in a mass grave as an emergency measure after its morgue overflowed, with relatives unable to bury their loved ones. Tens of thousands of people seeking safety have gathered in the hospital compound.

Gaza was already in a humanitarian crisis due to a growing shortage of water and medical supplies caused by the Israeli siege. With some bakeries closing, residents said they were unable to buy bread. Israel has also cut off water, forcing many to rely on brackish wells.
Israel has ordered more than 1 million Palestinians — almost half the territory’s population — to move south. The military says it is trying to clear away civilians ahead of a major campaign against Hamas in the north, where it says the militants have extensive networks of tunnels, bunkers and rocket launchers. Hamas urged people to stay in their homes.
The U.N. and aid groups say the mass exodus within Gaza, along with Israel’s complete siege, will cause untold human suffering. The World Health Organization said the evacuation “could be tantamount to a death sentence” for the more than 2,000 patients in northern hospitals.
The military said Sunday that it would not target a single route south between 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., again urging Palestinians to leave the north en masse. The military offered two corridors and a longer window the day before. It says hundreds of thousands have already fled south.
The U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees says an estimated 1 million people have been displaced in Gaza in a single week.
The U.S. has been trying to broker a deal to reopen Egypt’s Rafah crossing with Gaza to allow Americans and other foreigners to leave and humanitarian aid amassed on the Egyptian side to be brought in. The crossing, which was closed because of airstrikes early in the war, has yet to reopen.
Israel has said the siege will only be lifted when the captives are returned.
Hundreds of relatives of the estimated 150 people captured by Hamas in Israel and taken to Gaza gathered outside the Israeli Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv late Saturday, demanding their release.
“This is my cry out to the world: Please help bring my family, my wife and three kids,” said Avihai Brodtz of Kfar Azza. Many expressed anger toward the government, saying they still have no information about their loved ones.
In southern Israel, residents of the town of Sderot, one of several communities targeted in the Hamas rampage, were boarding buses for other parts of the country to escape continuing rocket fire. Thousands have already left under a state-sponsored program that puts them in hotels elsewhere in the country.
“The kids are traumatized, they can’t sleep at night,” Yossi Edri told Channel 13 before boarding a bus.
The military said Sunday an airstrike in southern Gaza had killed a Hamas commander blamed for the killings at Nirim, one of several communities Hamas had attacked in southern Israel. Israel said it struck over 100 military targets overnight, including command centers and rocket launchers.
In the north, meanwhile, Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon fired an anti-tank missile toward an Israeli army post and Israel responded with artillery fire. Israel’s Magen David Adom rescue service said a 40-year-old man was killed, without giving his nationality. Israel later closed off areas up to 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) from the border and ordered civilians within 2 kilometers (1.25 miles) to shelter in safe rooms.

Israel and Hezbollah, which fought a devastating war in 2006, have traded fire along the border several times since the start of the latest Gaza war.
Israel has called up some 360,000 military reserves and massed troops and tanks along the border with Gaza. Israelis living near the Gaza border, including residents of the town of Sderot, continued to be evacuated. Militants in Gaza have fired over 5,500 rockets since the hostilities erupted, many reaching reaching deep into Israel, as Israeli warplanes pound Gaza.
In a televised address Saturday night, Israel’s chief military spokesman, Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari said “we are going to attack Gaza City very broadly soon,” without giving a timetable for the attack.
When asked at a press briefing whether Israel would treat civilians who stay in the north as combatants, Lt. Col. Richard Hecht, another army spokesman, said: “That’s why we’ve encouraged people not involved with Hamas to move south.”
U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said late Saturday that the U.S. was moving a second carrier strike group, the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower, to the eastern Mediterranean, in a show of force meant to deter Hamas allies like Iran and Hezbollah from seeking to widen the war.
Hamas remained defiant. In a televised speech Saturday, Ismail Haniyeh, a top official based abroad, said that “all the massacres” will not break the Palestinian people.
Hamas spokesperson Jihad Taha told The Associated Press in Beirut that Israel “does not dare to fight a ground battle,” because of the captives. He alluded to the possible entry of Hezbollah and other regional players in the battle should Israel launch a ground invasion but declined to say whether they had made any concrete commitments.
Kullab reported from Baghdad, Krauss reported from Jerusalem. Associated Press writers Julia Frankel in Jerusalem, Abby Sewell in Beirut and Samy Magdy in Cairo contributed to this report.
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Tel Aviv — The uncle of twin babies who miraculously survived alone for 14 hours after their parents were slain by Hamas militants in southern Israeli described Friday the agonizing hours of not being able to reach the infants.
“We woke up to literally hell,” said Dvir Rosenfeld, who lived in the Kfar Aza kibbutz, the site of one of the deadliest scenes, when Hamas gunmen invaded southern Israel from Gaza in the early morning hours of Oct. 7.
Rosenfeld hid with his wife and child in a shelter. But his sister, Hadar Berdichevsky, was murdered trying to feed her twin boys.
Rosenfeld believes she was likely killed when she left her own shelter.
“I know for sure that is what happened,” Rosenfeld said. “She went out to bring the bottles, because they said that there were bottles on the floor. And when she did, they just got into her apartment.”
Hadar’s body was found in the kitchen. Her husband, Itay Berdichevsky, was found between the beds of their 10-month-old babies, who survived.
“I know that Itay died trying to protect them,” Rosenfeld said. “And I can’t imagine what he been through knowing his wife just got murdered, and his two sons are next to him, and he’s the only thing between the terrorists and the babies.”
The twins were alone for 14 hours before they were rescued.
“And we got, like, messages from the neighbors,” Rosenfeld said. “They’re hearing the twins crying, crying for 14 hours, crying because they basically stayed alone. No food, no water, no nothing.”
Rosenfeld explained that no one could leave their shelters and go to the twin babies because Hamas militants were still waiting outside.
“Their neighbor tried a couple of times (to reach them), but every time he did, the terrorists just got into his house and tried to kill him as well,” Rosenfeld said. “I met him outside, and he cried and asked me for forgiveness because he couldn’t help.”
Rosenfeld said he wanted to rush to their aid.
“I wanted to leave the shelter and go there, like, if not my wife,” Rosenfeld said. “She told me like, ‘With all due respect, I understand, it hurts. But if you do it, they’ll live with no uncle, and he’ll (Rosenfeld’s son) live with no father.’”
Israeli military secret agents finally rescued the babies.
“They were all wet because of the sweating and the crying,” Rosenfeld said. “So they changed then the diapers. They took clothes from the neighbors, because they didn’t know where the clothes are. So from the photo, you see, the pink. We didn’t know where the pink came from.”
Rosenfeld took CBS News to meet the twins, Roi and Guy, whose parents have not yet been buried.
The Rosenfelds always believed there would be twins in this generation.
“Because it skips a generation and comes from the mother,” Rosenfeld said. “And my grandfather, he had two pairs of sisters, twins.”
Rosenfeld’s grandfather’s sisters all died in the Holocaust, he disclosed, which makes the survival of these twins an even bigger miracle.
Donations have been pouring in for the family, including strollers, car seats and toys. But most importantly, the twin boys are surrounded by a large and loving family.
“They’ll be raised with a lot of love, and a lot of stories about their parents,” Rosenfeld said. “…I think what’s important is to tell them that their parents were heroes.”
As of Friday, the death toll in Israel from the Hamas attack has risen to at least 1,300, with another 3,200 wounded, according to Israeli Defense Forces.
In the Gaza Strip, at least 1,900 people have been killed in the Israeli military’s counterattacks, and more than 7,600 wounded, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry.
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GAZA CITY, GAZA—The complicity of each and every Palestinian in the violent actions of their militant ruling authority was reportedly on full display Friday morning when dying Gazans received justified criticism for not using their last words to condemn Hamas. For example, instead of issuing a full-throated denunciation of the violent attacks by Hamas that have left over 1,300 Israelis dead, one dying woman holding her 6-year-old son who had just been killed in a bombing is said to have doubled down by telling her child she loved him. According to reports, such barbarism on the part of Palestinians was on full display across the Gaza Strip, where many men of fighting age could not muster a single world of reproof for Hamas’ actions while they coughed up blood. In war-ravaged Gaza City, a dying reporter was heard blatantly begging for help instead of labeling Hamas a terrorist organization. At press time, the Israeli Defense Forces Twitter account underscored the massive surge of contempt they were contending with by posting a video that featured the shocking savagery of a Palestinian corpse that refused to condemn Hamas even when kicked.
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United Nations — As it continues to conduct relentless airstrikes on the Gaza Strip in the wake of the surprise Hamas attacks, the Israeli military informed the United Nations late Thursday night that the entire population in northern Gaza should evacuate south almost immediately.
Stephane Dujarric, a U.N. spokesperson, told CBS News that liaison officers with the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) informed the U.N. just before midnight local time Thursday that the entire population north of Wadi Gaza should “relocate to southern Gaza within the next 24 hours.”
According to the U.N., about 1.1. million people live in northern Gaza.
The U.N. “considers it impossible for such a movement to take place without devastating humanitarian consequences,” Dujarric said, and it “strongly appeals for any such order, if confirmed, to be rescinded avoiding what could transform what is already a tragedy into a calamitous situation.”
The U.N. response “to Israel’s early warning to the residents of Gaza,” Israel’s U.N. Ambassador Gilad Erdan said, was “shameful” and ignores the brutality of the attack on Israel.
Early Friday local time, the IDF ordered Gaza City’s hundreds of thousands of residents to move farther south in the Gaza Strip for their “own safety.”
In response, Hamas called on Palestinians to stay put in their homes, according to The Associated Press.
“This is chaos, no one understands what to do,” the AP quotes Inas Hamdan, an officer at the U.N. Palestinian refugee agency in Gaza City as saying.
According to the latest numbers from the U.N., at least 338,000 Gaza residents have been displaced since Hamas invaded southern Israel on Oct. 7, prompting retaliatory airstrikes by Israel on Gaza.
About 300,000 Israeli soldiers have amassed outside the border of the Gaza Strip. Israel Defense Forces international spokesperson Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus on Wednesday did not explicitly say Israel was preparing a ground assault of Gaza, but noted the troops, along with tanks, armored vehicles and other artillery, were “making preparations for the next stage of the war which will come when the timing is opportune and fit for our purposes.”
Israeli officials said Thursday that at least 1,300 people have been killed in the Hamas invasion, and at least 2,800 more wounded.
At least 1,537 Gaza residents have been killed in Israel’s counterattacks, including 500 children, and another 6,600 wounded, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.
Since the Hamas invasion, Israel has issued a complete blockade on Gaza, with no food, water, gas, medicine or electricity allowed in, putting the region on the brink of a humanitarian crisis.
— Jordan Freiman contributed to this report.
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Near Kibbutz Re’im, Israel — In the scrubland of southern Israel is strewn the aftermath of a dance party that became a bloody massacre.
Thousands of people were gathered for the Supernova trance music festival, around three miles from the border with the Gaza Strip, when in the early morning hours of Oct. 7, after a night of dancing in the Negev Desert near the Kibbutz Re’im, Hamas gunmen arrived with murder on their minds.
As partygoers ran for their lives, they were cut down. Israeli officials said at least 260 people were killed in the massacre, and others were taken captive to be held as hostages.
Young people who had come for celebration were slaughtered. Several days on, mattresses, tents and blankets still remain, along with clothing, food and even toiletries.
LEON NEAL / Getty Images
CBS News spoke to some men who had returned to collect their belongings Thursday. It was hell, they said.
“It’s too much to talk about, it’s too much,” one of them said as they quickly drove away.
A motorbike belonging to one of the militants also remains, along with the stench of death. The Israeli military also intentionally left the dead body of a militant at the scene of the massacre.
Israeli Defense Forces soldiers remain at the festival site to guard the area in the event of another attack, and to clean up the carnage.
While CBS News was at the scene, several shots rang out and CBS News crews were told to take cover. Following several minutes of confusion, soldiers surrounded a man and took him into custody for questioning.
“There was a person who was arrested,” Lt. Masha Michelson, an IDF spokesperson, told CBS News. “He had a knife, everything’s under control, that’s why we have forces here securing us.”
There are fears that militants could still be hiding inside Israel.
“There’s a high alert there for a reason; 260 people were butchered here less than a week ago,” Michelson said. “And that’s why the forces are here, to make sure that it’s safe to come back here.”
The death toll from the Hamas assault on Israel has crossed the 1,200 mark, with at least 2,800 more wounded.
Israel’s retaliatory strikes have left at least 1,537 people dead in Gaza, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.
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The Israel-Hamas war continued to claim the lives of thousands early Wednesday as Israel conducted relentless airstrikes in the Gaza Strip and bombarded the Palestinian territory.
Hamas kept launching rockets into Israel, some of which broke through the nation’s Iron Dome air defense system, and aid it will not negotiate for the release of hostages while Gaza is under siege. The militant group, which carried out a highly coordinated terror attack that took Israel by surprise on Saturday and prompted immediate retaliation from Israeli officials, has taken more than 100 hostages, including women, children and some Americans, according to Israeli officials.
MOHAMMED ABED/AFP/Getty
Saturday’s attack by Hamas prompted immediate retaliation from Israel, as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared, “We are at war.” Photographs from Gaza City and nearby Jabalia show harrowing scenes of smoke plumes and fireballs billowing up from the ground, with partially collapsed buildings lining charred streets and others reduced to huge piles of rubble. Satellite images, provided by Maxar Technologies to the Associated Press, capture the scope of the devastation across the Gaza Strip.
Satellite image ©2023 Maxar Technologies via AP
Israeli airstrikes attacked hundreds of targets in Gaza on Tuesday and overnight into Wednesday, the Israel Defense Forces said in a social media post. Israel has said it is targeting weapons storage centers and infrastructure used or occupied by Hamas militants, but the United Nations reports that at least a dozen health facilities in the territory have also been hit in the bombings.
Satellite image ©2023 Maxar Technologies via AP
Death tolls across Israel and Palestine continued to rise on Wednesday, five days after the Palestinian militant group Hamas launched a massive and brutal attack on Israel from the Gaza Strip. Hamas controls the Gaza Strip, a narrow enclave that runs for about 25 miles along a stretch of the Mediterranean Sea between Israel and Egypt, which has been blockaded by the Israeli military since Hamas took over in 2007. Gaza is one of the most densely populated places in the world and houses about 2.3 million people.
At least 950 people, including at least 140 children, have been killed by Israel’s retaliatory airstrikes in the Gaza Strip since Saturday, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. At least 5,000 others, most of whom are women and children, were wounded in Gaza, the health ministry said in a social media post.
Satellite image ©2023 Maxar Technologies via AP
Israel’s latest round of bombings in the blockaded Palestinian territory came on the fourth consecutive day of hostilities between Israel and Hamas. As Israel bombarded the territory on Tuesday and stationed 35 battalions in the surrounding areas in preparation for a possible ground invasion, according to military officials, the country has also cut off electricity, fuel, food and water into Gaza.
Many of its residents have been unable to escape the bombardments, Palestinian journalist Hassan Jaber told CBS News. “There is no safe place in Gaza,” he said, adding that many Palestinians do not have access to bomb shelters and some could face starvation within days. Jaber said there was no electricity or water.
Satellite image ©2023 Maxar Technologies via AP
“There are no shelters or bunkers or safe routes or safe zones in Gaza,” Gaza resident Omar Ghraieb told CBS News over the phone on Tuesday.
“We are a family of five people and these unfortunate events unfolded so very fast… We didn’t really have enough time to actually stock up enough on food, medicine and water,” Ghraeib said. “We are having three to four hours of electricity every 24 hours.”
Satellite image ©2023 Maxar Technologies via AP
More than 1,200 people have been killed in Israel since Hamas attacked early Saturday, and at least 2,700 more were injured, a spokesperson for the Israeli military said on Wednesday. Most of the dead were civilians although the toll also included members of the military. Israeli military and civilian officials confirmed reports to CBS News on Wednesday of “a massacre” on a kibbutz near the border with Gaza. An emergency responder said he witnessed victims within the kibbutz being beheaded, some of whom were children.
The U.S. State Department said on Wednesday it can “confirm the deaths of at least 22 U.S. citizens” amid the violence in Israel and Gaza.
President Joe Biden called the weekend assault by Hamas “an act of sheer evil” and has pledged U.S. support to Israel, saying that at least 14 Americans were dead and 20 were unaccounted for. The State Department did not issue any new information about unaccounted for Americans. American citizens are also among those being held hostage by Hamas, Mr. Biden said.
“We extend our deepest condolences to the victims and to the families of all those affected,” a State Department spokesperson told CBS News.
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