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Tag: Israeli army

  • Palestinian groups hand over more remains to Red Cross in Gaza Strip

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    Militant Palestinians in the Gaza Strip have handed over another body to staff of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

    The remains are those of a hostage abducted from Israel, Hamas and Islamic Jihad said on Tuesday.

    The Red Cross staff are on their way to representatives of the Israeli army with a coffin, the military said, adding that the identity of the remains must then be clarified at a forensic institute in Tel Aviv.

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    Before the handover, there were still three dead hostages in Gaza, including a Thai national kidnapped from Israel.

    Israel and Hamas agreed on the handover of bodies as part of the ceasefire agreement in October.

    According to the agreement, for every Israeli hostage whose remains are handed over, Israel must hand over the remains of 15 deceased Gaza residents.

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  • Palestinians: Injuries following incidents in the Gaza Strip

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    Despite the current ceasefire, several people have been injured, some seriously, following incidents in the southern part of the Gaza Strip, Palestinian sources reported on Saturday.

    Four people were injured in an Israeli airstrike on a vehicle in Nuseirat in the centre of the Gaza Strip on Saturday evening, according to medical sources in the coastal area.

    The Israeli army confirmed an attack in the city. This was reportedly aimed at members of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad terrorist organization (PIJ). They had allegedly been planning an attack on Israeli soldiers.

    Earlier, one person was seriously injured by Israeli shelling north-west of the southern city of Rafah, sources at the nearby Nasser Hospital reported.

    The area is under Israeli military control. When asked, the Israeli army said it was investigating the report.

    The Palestinian Red Crescent said two people were also injured in an Israeli air strike on a vehicle in the town of Bani Suhailam near Khan Younis. An Israeli military spokesman said he was aware of the report but could not confirm such an incident in the area.

    The Hamas-controlled health authority said 93 Palestinians have been killed since the ceasefire came into effect on October 10. Many of the deaths occurred about a week ago.

    The Israeli army confirmed that two soldiers were killed in attacks in the south of the Gaza Strip last Sunday. Israel then carried out the heaviest air strikes since the start of the ceasefire. According to hospital reports, 44 Palestinians were killed.

    Since then, the situation has calmed down considerably. However, there are still isolated incidents.

    The Israeli army said it has fired on individuals who entered and approached soldiers beyond the so-called yellow line. The Israeli military has withdrawn to behind this line as part of the ceasefire agreement and controls the territory there.

    The information provided by both sides cannot currently be independently verified.

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  • Israeli military sources say 800,000 people have fled Gaza City

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    Some 800,000 Palestinians have now left Gaza City due to the ongoing ground offensive by the Israeli army, Israeli military sources said on Monday.

    In the days prior, Israel had estimated that some 700,000 people had fled.

    Before the start of the latest offensive by the Israeli army, around 1 million residents and internally displaced people lived in the city.

    The figures could not initially be independently verified. There are currently no up-to-date Palestinian estimates on the number of people who have fled the city.

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    Eyewitnesses confirm that people continue to flee from the area to the south of the Gaza Strip. However, they said that the numbers have decreased.

    Israel's army began a highly controversial ground offensive in Gaza City about two weeks ago, aiming to dismantle the Palestinian Islamist organization Hamas there. This triggered a mass exodus.

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  • Hamas demands Israel halt attacks, warns hostages’ lives at risk

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    The Palestinian militant organization Hamas has urgently called on the Israeli army to cease its attacks on Gaza City for 24 hours.

    The lives of two Israeli hostages are in real danger, according to a statement from the military wing of Hamas, the al-Qassam Brigades.

    The troops must also immediately withdraw to an area south of Street 8 in Gaza City so that an attempt can be made to “extract” the two hostages. This, they said, is a warning.

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    The demand for a halt to the attacks is to take effect from 6 pm (1500 GMT), the statement said.

    The al-Qassam Brigades had earlier stated that contact with the two hostages had been lost in the last 48 hours due to the intense Israeli attacks in the city.

    It was initially unclear whether Israel would comply with the demand.

    The relatives of the 48 remaining hostages - including 20 still alive - have repeatedly warned of the danger a ground offensive in Gaza City poses to their loved ones.

    People are seen outside a building damaged in an Israeli air strike. Hasan Alzaanin/TASS via ZUMA Press/dpa

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  • Thousands of Palestinians flee as Israeli bombs rain down on Gaza City

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    The Israeli army has subjected Gaza City to its most punishing attacks in two years of war, sending thousands of residents fleeing under bombs and bullets amid fears they might never return, with the United Nations chief calling the offensive “horrendous”.

    “Gaza is burning,” Israeli Minister of Defence Israel Katz said on X, as columns of vans and donkey carts laden with furniture, and people on foot carrying the last of their worldly possessions, steamed down the coastal al-Rashid Street against a backdrop of black smoke rising from the destroyed city.

    Many had pledged to stay in the early days of Israel’s takeover plan. But as the military accelerated the pace of its deadly bombing campaign, turning high-rises, homes and civilian infrastructure to rubble, those able to afford the journey are heading south, with no guarantees of a safe zone for shelter.

    On Tuesday, the army killed at least 91 people in the city, with health authorities reporting that one of its bombs hit a vehicle carrying people about to escape on the coastal road.

    At least 17 of the city’s residential buildings were destroyed, including Aybaki Mosque in the Tuffah neighbourhood to the east, which was targeted by an Israeli warplane.

    As the bombs rained down, the Israeli army continued to destroy areas in the north, south and east of the city with explosive-laden robots.

    Earlier this month, the rights group Euro-Med Monitor said the army had deployed 15 of these machines, each one capable of destroying up to 20 housing units.

    Tanks push into the city

    About 1 million Palestinians are known to have returned to Gaza City to live among the ruins after the initial phase of the two-year war, but reports on how many remain vary.

    An Israeli army official estimated on Tuesday that approximately 350,000 had fled. But Gaza’s Government Media Office said 350,000 had been displaced to the centre and the west of the city, with 190,000 leaving it altogether.

    Either way, those who left faced a bleak future in the south, where the already cramped al-Mawasi camp, filled with people forcibly displaced from the eastern parts of Rafah and Khan Younis, has itself been hit by Israeli strikes.

    The Government Media Office noted a trend of reverse displacement, saying on Tuesday that 15,000 had returned to Gaza City after witnessing the dire conditions at al-Mawasi.

    As people fled, the Israeli military released aerial footage showing a large number of tanks and other armoured vehicles pushing further into Gaza City.

    The Israeli army admitted on Tuesday that it would take “several months” to control Gaza City.

    “No matter how long it takes, we will operate in Gaza,” army spokesman Effie Defrin said, as fighting raged in the enclave’s largest urban hub.

    At least 106 people were killed across Gaza since dawn on Tuesday, according to medical sources.

    ‘Specific intent’ to destroy Palestinians

    Amid the brutal offensive, the United Nations Commission of Inquiry on Tuesday concluded that Israel’s war on Gaza is a genocide, a landmark moment after nearly two years of war that has killed at least 64,964 people.

    Among its findings, it drew on the public statements of Israeli officials to show that Israel had the “dolus specialis” of genocide, or the “specific intent” to destroy Palestinians as a people.

    Palestine’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs welcomed the report. “The situation in Gaza today portends a humanitarian catastrophe that cannot tolerate any leniency or delay,” it said on X.

    International criticism of Israel is growing, with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Tuesday calling the war morally, politically and legally intolerable.

    France’s Foreign Ministry urged Israel to stop its “destructive campaign, which no longer has any military logic, and to resume negotiations as soon as possible”.

    Irish President Michael D Higgins condemned “those who are practising genocide, and those who are supporting genocide with armaments”.

    “We must look at their exclusion from the United Nations itself, and we should have no hesitation any longer in relation to ending trade with people who are inflicting this on our fellow human beings,” he said.

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  • Israel bombs more Gaza City high-rises after forced evacuation orders

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    The Israeli army has bombed another high-rise in Gaza City after telling Palestinian residents to evacuate or face being killed amid its ongoing siege and imposed mass starvation in the enclave.

    The Israeli military designated more high-rise towers as targets in a map released on Saturday. Shortly after releasing the map, it bombed the 15-storey Soussi Tower, which is located opposite a building belonging to the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) in the Tal al-Hawa neighbourhood.

    “These attacks are causing panic amongst the people, especially considering the time they are given to evacuate. Half an hour or an hour is not enough time for people to escape from these buildings,” Al Jazeera’s Hani Mahmoud said, reporting from Gaza City.

    The Israeli military said in a statement, without offering evidence, that the buildings struck were used by Hamas to gather intelligence to monitor the locations of the Israeli army. It also said armed Palestinian groups planted “numerous explosive devices” and dug a tunnel in the area.

    Gaza’s Government Media Office rejected the claims and called them “part of a systematic policy of deception used by the occupation to justify the targeting of civilians and infrastructure” and forcibly displace Palestinians from their homes. It said 90 percent of Gaza’s infrastructure has been destroyed by Israel.

    The targeted buildings were near the 12-storey Mushtaha Tower, which on Friday was similarly bombed and razed to the ground, as Israel moves to seize Gaza City despite international criticism.

    At least 68 Palestinians were killed and 362 wounded across the Gaza Strip by the Israeli military over the past day, the enclave’s Ministry of Health said on Saturday afternoon.

    The toll includes 23 aid seekers killed and 143 wounded by Israeli forces. At least six more Palestinians also died of Israeli-induced starvation, bringing the total number of starvation deaths during nearly two years of war to 382, including 135 children.

    At least 64,368 Palestinians have been killed and 162,367 wounded by Israel since the start of the war in the aftermath of the Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel on October 7, 2023.

    Israel declares new ‘humanitarian zone’, bombs the area

    Sources at Nasser Hospital, located in southern Gaza’s Khan Younis, told Al Jazeera that at least two Palestinians were killed and many wounded in an Israeli air strike on a tent housing displaced people in the al-Mawasi area.

    While this area was designated as a “humanitarian” or “safe” zone by the Israeli army early in the war, it has been repeatedly bombed, leading to the deaths of hundreds of displaced civilians.

    Hours before the latest bombings, the Israeli army had announced the establishment of another similar zone in al-Mawasi, which runs along Gaza’s Mediterranean coast. It claimed the area will have infrastructure such as field hospitals, water lines, desalination facilities and food supplies.

    Palestinians mourn the loss of loved ones killed by the Israeli military on September 6, 2025 [Hamza ZH Qraiqea/Anadolu]

    Reporting from central Gaza’s Deir el-Balah, Al Jazeera’s Hind Khoudary said Palestinians do not trust the so-called humanitarian area as tents in similar zones have been attacked by Israel many times before and nowhere is safe.

    But people in Gaza City have few options: If they stay, they risk being killed, and if they leave, they face dangers on the road and may have to spend considerable money to move their belongings south.

    Those who have returned to their homes in Gaza City’s Zeitoun neighbourhood, where Israeli forces withdrew recently after weeks of ground assaults, have found everything they owned destroyed.

    “What we have built in 50 years was flattened in five days,” resident Aqeel Kishko told Al Jazeera. “Nothing remains standing – buildings, roads and infrastructure. We are walking not only on ruins but also on dead bodies of our loved ones.”

    Nohaa Tafish said it would be impossible for Gaza’s largest urban centre to be revived.

    “What would people return to? There is nothing to return to,” she said.

    Ahmed Rihem also had his home in Gaza City reduced to rubble. “It is as if the entire Zeitoun neighbourhood was hit with a nuclear bomb,” he said.

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  • ‘Fields of rubble’: Israel, destroying Gaza City, kills 78 across enclave

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    Israel has stepped up its destruction of Gaza City as it plans to seize Gaza’s largest urban centre and forcibly displace around one million Palestinians to concentration zones in the south, as it killed at least 78 people across the besieged enclave since dawn, including 32 desperately seeking food.

    On Sunday, in Gaza City, the Palestinian Civil Defence reported a fire in tents near al-Quds Hospital after Israeli shelling. At least five people were killed and three wounded when a residential apartment was hit near the Remal neighbourhood.

    Ismail al-Thawabta, director of Gaza’s Government Media Office, said the Israeli army is also using “explosive robots” in residential areas and forcibly displacing Palestinians in Gaza City.

    In a statement on X on Sunday, al-Thawabta said the army has detonated more than 80 such devices in civilian neighbourhoods over the past three weeks, calling it a “scorched-earth policy” that has destroyed homes and endangered lives.

    He said more than one million Palestinians in Gaza City and the north of the enclave “refuse to submit to the policy of forced displacement and ethnic cleansing” despite the destruction and starvation caused by the Israeli assault.

    Footage posted on Instagram by Palestinian journalist Faiz Osama and verified by Al Jazeera showed the moments that followed an Israeli aerial attack on the Sabra neighbourhood, in the southern part of Gaza City.

    In the footage, as plumes of smoke rise to the sky, a child can be seen screaming with a wound to the leg. A man also lays on the ground with what appears to be a head injury.

    The video also shows the destruction left by the strike after residential buildings were flattened by the explosion.

    Israel’s forces have carried out sustained bombardment on Gaza City since early August as part of a deepening push to seize the area in the latest phase of its nearly two-year genocidal war.

    On Friday, the Israeli military said it had begun the “initial stages” of its offensive, declaring the area a “combat zone”.

    ‘Fields of rubble’

    Reporting from Gaza City on Sunday, Al Jazeera’s Hani Mahmoud said intensifying Israeli attacks have been turning parts of Gaza City, once teeming and crowded with residential buildings, into “fields of rubble”.

    “There is non-stop heavy artillery targeting the Zeitoun area and Jabalia, where we are seeing the systematic demolition of homes. There is hardly any fighting going on, but heavy artillery and bulldozers are moving from one street to the other, destroying all of these residential clusters,” he said.

    “The majority of people in those areas do not have the luxury to pack up and leave because there is no safety anywhere.”

    Another Palestinian journalist was also killed on Sunday. A source at al-Shifa Hospital told Al Jazeera that Islam Abed was killed in an Israeli attack on Gaza City and that she worked for Al-Quds Al-Youm TV channel.

    The Government Media Office said the “number of martyred journalists has risen to 247″ since the war began. Other tallies have put the number of journalists and media workers killed at more than 270.

    On Monday, five journalists – one of whom worked for Al Jazeera – were among at least 21 people killed in an Israeli attack on Nasser Hospital in southern Gaza’s Khan Younis.

    ‘Life is difficult, so we will stay in our home’

    Many residents in Gaza City are opting to stay put despite Israel declaring it a “combat zone”.

    It was Gaza’s most populous city before the war began, home to about 700,000 people. Then hundreds of thousands fled under Israel’s forced evacuation threats before many returned, joined by thousands of other displaced from the south, during a January-to-March ceasefire, which Israel broke.

    Fedaa Hamad, who was displaced from Beit Hanoon, said she has “no plans to leave” Gaza City this time despite Israel’s latest warning.

    “We are tired from the first displacement. Where are we going to go? Is there a place in the south? We cannot find it,” she said.

    Akram Mzini, a resident of Gaza City, said he would not leave “because displacement is very difficult”.

    “We were displaced to the south before, and displacement in the south is not simple and it is costly,” he said. “Life is difficult, so we will stay in our home, and whatever God wants will happen.”

    Elsewhere in Gaza on Sunday, an Israeli attack on the centre of Deir el-Balah killed at least four people, Al Jazeera Arabic reported.

    Earlier, medical sources said an Israeli bombardment killed at least one person and wounded several in the city, located in the central part of the Gaza Strip.

    Israeli forces have killed at least 78 Palestinians across Gaza since dawn, including 32 aid seekers, according to medical sources.

    Since the war began, Israel has killed at least 63,459 people and wounded 160,256. A total of 1,139 people were killed in Israel during the Hamas-led October 7, 2023, attacks, and about 200 were taken captive.

    On Sunday, Israeli army chief Eyal Zamir held a situation assessment meeting with his top commanders, saying the military must “initiate” more attacks to surprise and reach its targets anywhere.

    Many more reserve soldiers will assemble this week “in preparation for the continued intensification of the fighting against Hamas in Gaza City”, Zamir was quoted as saying by the military.

    Meanwhile, the armed wing of Hamas said its fighters successfully attacked two invading Israeli military vehicles in Gaza City on Saturday.

    The Qassam Brigades said a Merkava tank of the Israeli army was hit with a Yassin-105 shell, while a D9 military bulldozer was targeted with an explosive device on a street southwest of the Zeitoun neighbourhood of the besieged area.

    As global condemnation against the situation grows, in the largest attempt to break the Israeli blockade of the Palestinian territory by sea, the Global Sumud Flotilla left the Spanish port city of Barcelona on Sunday.

    The flotilla’s launch comes after the United Nations-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) declared a state of famine in Gaza this month.

    The Global Sumud Flotilla, which describes itself as an independent group not linked to any government or political party, did not say how many ships would set sail or the exact time of departure, but Swedish campaigner Greta Thunberg spoke of “dozens” of vessels.

    Sumud means “perseverance” in Arabic.

    Two previous attempts by activists to deliver aid by ship to Gaza were blocked by Israel.

    Mohamad Elmasry of the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies told Al Jazeera that while the flotilla was “an important act of symbolic resistance … ultimately, they will be intercepted”.

    “This is not going to solve the famine,” he said. “What’s going to solve the famine, ultimately, is governments doing their job to stop genocide and deliberate starvation programmes.”

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  • Israeli strike destroys prestige Qatar-funded Gaza complex

    Israeli strike destroys prestige Qatar-funded Gaza complex

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    At almost exactly the same time Israeli negotiators pulled out of deadlocked truce talks in Qatar on Saturday, Israeli jets sent a prestige Doha-funded housing development in the Gaza Strip up in smoke.

    Hamad City is named for the former emir of the Gulf petro-state, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani, who laid the foundation stone on a visit 11 years ago.

    Inaugurated in 2016, it was still among the newest projects in the Gaza Strip, the housing complex in the city of Khan Yunis boasting an impressive mosque, shops and gardens.

    The first flats — more than 1,000 of them — were provided to Palestinians whose homes were destroyed in the war between Israel and Hamas two years earlier.

    On Saturday it happened again, a day after a Qatar-brokered pause in the current war between Israel and Hamas expired.

    First their phones pinged around noon with an “immediate” evacuation order SMS sent by the Israeli army, which says the system is aimed at minimising civilian casualties.

    Around an hour later, five Israeli air strikes rained down on the neighbourhood in the space of just two minutes.

    Bombs slammed into the pale apartment blocks one by one, reducing them largely to rubble and sending a huge pall of black smoke into the sky, as people fled and cries of ‘help!’ and ‘ambulance!’ rang out.

    “At least we got through it,” 26-year-old Nader Abu Warda told AFP, amazed he was still alive.

    – No phones –

    The Israeli military has divided the Gaza Strip into 2,300 “blocs” and is now sending SMS messages to residents telling them to leave before they launch the strikes which they say will “eliminate Hamas”.

    Around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, died in the Islamist movement’s October 7 assault on southern Israel and some 240 were taken hostage, according to Israeli authorities.

    The Hamas-led Gaza Strip government says Israel’s campaign has killed more than 15,000 people, also mostly civilians, since it was launched eight weeks ago.

    The United Nations humanitarian agency, OCHA, has highlighted that the warning messages do not indicate where the recipients should go.

    Ibrahim al-Jamal, a civil servant in his 40s, said he does not have any “internet, any electricity or even a radio to receive information” and that he has “never seen this map” setting out the different blocs.

    “Many people in Gaza have never heard of it and it wouldn’t matter anyway as the bombings are taking place everywhere,” he said.

    Humanitarian bodies say the most vulnerable in Gaza are the estimated 1.7 million displaced people.

    Many of them do not have access to phones and have to rely on warning leaflets dropped by planes, not visible from inside an apartment.

    – ‘Go where?’ –

    According to the Gaza Strip’s Civil Defence emergency and rescue organisation, in recent weeks “hundreds of displaced families” had been taking refuge in 3,000 apartments at Hamad City.

    Mohammed Foura, 21, already displaced once from Gaza City, told AFP that half an hour before the strike he had been warned by other residents to flee.

    They shouted “get out, get out”, he said, as families piled their belongings into cars or carried them away in enormous bundles.

    Nader Abu Warda fled Jabalia, near Gaza City, at the start of the war and no longer knows which way to go or what to do.

    He, his wife and three children had been staying in a friend’s apartment in the complex.

    “They told us ‘Gaza City is a war zone’, now it’s Khan Yunis,” he said. “Yesterday, they were saying ‘evacuate the east of Khan Yunis’. Today, they say ‘evacuate the west’,” he added, visibly exasperated.

    “Where are we going now, into the sea? Where are we going to put our children to bed?”

    yh-az/sbh/har/slb/dr

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